Anastrophyllopsis subcomplicata
(Lehm. & Lindenb.) Váňa & L.Söderstr.Terrestrial, lithophytic, a low epiphyte or on logs, yellow-brown to reddish brown to deep red. Gemmae common, pale, polygonal, typically with 6 blunt projections. Leaves oblate-ovate to reniform in outline, bilobed, 0.8–1.8 mm long, 1–1.8 mm wide, insertion extending to stem midline dorsally, entire or obscurely crenulate, plane at margin; lobes 0.3–0.45 of the total leaf length, broadly to narrowly acute, apiculate or acuminate, usually unequal with the lobe attached to the ventral side of stem larger. Leaf cells quadrate to rectangular, 10–23 µm long and 10–20 µm wide away from base, toward base larger and more elongate, to 45 µm long and 20 µm wide, striately papillose, with distinct trigones away from margins, sometimes confluent at base, cells wall more evenly thickened near margins, with 2–5 (–6) oil bodies; oil bodies ellipsoid to spherical, coarsely granular, pale smokey grey. Female bracts closest to perianth dentate, bifid with additional lobules, sometimes more symmetric and plicate, larger than leaves, to c. 2 mm long and 2.1 mm wide; bracteoles absent. Perianth ovoid-cylindric, plicate for most of length, with c. 6–7 main plicae, 2.2–3.8 mm long, 0.8–1.1 mm wide, ciliate at mouth.
Recorded in Victoria from a single site near Powelltown. Also Tas, New Zealand and southern South America.