Microphylls are photosynthetic flaps of plant tissue with a solitary, unbranched vein. They are most promiently found on the spore-bearing vascular plants, such as horsetails, though gymnosperms also possess them (as nonphotosynthetic sporophylls protecting their reproductive structures). They are considered evolutionary relics, and are theorized to have evolved from enations, flaps of veinless vascular tissue, whereas "true" leaves (megaphylls), are theorized to have evolved from flattened photosynthetic stems with flaps of webbing connecting them [1] (http://comenius.susqu.edu/bi/202/Journal/Vol8/number4/Geckospub.html). Microphylls are often small in size (though not always -- ancient lycophyte trees had very large microphylls), and generally don't contribute much in the way of photosynthesis. As a matter of fact, the microphylls on the fertile shoot of a horsetail (the reproductive structure of the plant) don't contain any chloroplasts at all.
Microphyll refers to the leaves of the Lycopodiophyta.
They are a defining feature of the lycopodiophytes (clubmosses), in contrast to the megaphylls (leaves with multiple, branching vascular traces) of the other vascularplants.
In addition to having a single unbranching vascular trace, microphylls also occur only with the simplest type of stem vasculature, a protostele in which stems contain a single strand of vascular tissue.
If, as a result of these surveys, microphyll woodland habitat downstream of the Project mine and process area is determined to be adversely impacted by the Project, appropriate additional mitigation measures may be required by the BLM and shall be implemented by the Applicant.
BLM may require the Applicant to acquire title to off-site private lands with comparable microphyll woodland habitat, in a location acceptable to the BLM and the Applicant, to compensate at a 3:1 ratio for adverse impacts to microphyll woodland habitat not otherwise compensated for which cannot be mitigated through application of these additional mitigation measures.
Microphyll woodland vegetation within the permanent diversion channels shall be established during early mining operations and managed and monitored throughout the life of the Project.