Plants: medium-sized to very large, green, brownish yellow, brownish to blackish red, or red. Stems: irregularly branched to pinnate, ± in one plane; hyalodermis at least partially present, central strand weak or rarely absent; pseudoparaphyllia broad, foliose; rhizoids or rhizoid initials on stem, at or just below leaf insertions; axillary hair distal cells 2–9(–11), hyaline. Stem: leaves ovate-lanceolate to broadly ovate, sometimes almost orbicular, gradually or abruptly narrowed to apex, suddenly curved distally, sometimes indistinctly so or ± straight, concave or strongly concave, not or hardly plicate; base not or hardly decurrent; margins entire proximally, finely denticulate or ± entire near apex; apex obtuse, apiculate, acute, or acuminate; costa single or double, short or ending beyond mid leaf, rarely ecostate; alar cells differentiated, few, short- to long-rectangular, strongly inflated, hyaline, walls thin, region distinctly delimited, small, transversely triangular, from margins at most 50% distance to costa; medial laminal cell walls thin to strongly incrassate, porose or not. Sexual: condition dioicous or autoicous; inner perichaetial leaves plicate; vaginula with paraphyses present. Capsule: with annulus separating; exostome external surface reticulate or partly, rarely entirely, cross striolate basally, margins slightly dentate distally. Spores: 12–21 µm. North America, South America, Eurasia, s Africa, Pacific Islands (New Zealand, Papua New Guinea), Australia, Antarctica.
Species 3 (3 in the flora). Scorpidium is characterized by a hyalodermis of inflated, thin-walled epidermal cells, which is present in at least part of the stem circumference. Unlike Hamatocaulis, Scorpidium has at least a weak central strand, except in very weak plants. These plants have small alar regions consisting of a few (2–20) inflated and thin-walled cells that are sharply delimited from the surrounding cells. Their stem leaves are normally smooth and, like those of Hamatocaulis, from an erectopatent to patent base suddenly curved distally, except in most expressions of S. scorpioides. Scorpidium is found in mineral-rich to intermediately mineral-rich and normally nutrient-poor habitats. When mineral-rich, these habitats are mostly rich in calcium.