Plants: in small dense cushions or turfs, yellow-green to dark olivaceous, hoary. Stems: 5â15 mm, sparsely branched, julaceous. Leaves: crowded, broadly oval to obovate, appressed-julaceous throughout stem, 0.4â0.9 mm excluding awn, apex rounded-obtuse, lamina 1-stratose to rarely 2-stratose in bands, awn length highly variable, 0.2â1.3 mm, hyaline; costa in transverse-section flat, not keeled; proximal cells quadrate to short-rectangular, 12â25 à 10â15 µm, often appearing lax; mid leaf cells oval to irregularly rhomboidal, mostly 1.5â2:1 or more, 7â20 µm; distal cells longer, irregularly elongate-rhomboidal, somewhat hyaline. Sexual: condition autoicous or sometimes cryptoicous; perichaetial leaf lamina to 1.3 mm, awn 1.2â2 mm. Seta: 0.2â0.4 mm. Capsule: yellow-brown turning red-brown with age, ovoid, 0.7â1 mm; operculum short-rostrate, 0.4â0.5 mm. Phenology: Capsules mature springâsummer depending on elevation. Habitat: Widespread and locally common on dry sandstone or limestone rock, rarely metamorphic rock, open arid to semi-arid shrub, woodland communities, grasslands Elevation: moderate to high elevations (typically below 2000 m but ranging from 200-2800 m) Distribution: Alta., Ariz., Calif., Colo., Iowa, Kans., Minn., Mont., Nebr., Nev., N.Mex., Okla., S.Dak., Tex., Wis., Wyo., Mexico, South America (Bolivia), Asia (China, possibly Kazakhstan, Mongolia, Russia).
Discussion: Jaffueliobryum wrightii is the most widespread species of the genus, extends farther south and west than J. raui in the flora area, and is typically found at somewhat lower elevations in drier and hotter regions than the latter. Because of its unusual disjunct distribution and its calciphile ecology, further studies using ecological, morphological, and DNA data would be of considerable interest. Like J. raui, this species also occurs in the Driftless Area of Iowa, Minnesota, and Wisconsin.