Jökull


Jökull - 01.01.2004, Side 3

Jökull - 01.01.2004, Side 3
Theories on migration and history of the North-Atlantic flora: a review last century, Thoroddsen (1905–1906) introduced the idea that the highest parts of the coastal mountains in Iceland had remained ice-free during the maxi- mum extent of the one major glaciation that he rec- ognized. Nearly three decades later, Lindroth also supported the idea, based on entomological studies in southeast Iceland (Norðdahl, 1991 and references therein). Based on geomorphological evidence, the Icelandic geologist Sigurdur Thorarinsson (1937) ar- gued that large parts of northwest and north Iceland were unglaciated during the last glacial period. Scandinavia The Norwegian geologist Hansen (1904) proposed a theory of a broad ice-free margin along the Norwegian Atlantic coast, where a large number of plant species could have survived the last glacial period. Hansen also believed that he could trace a more or less con- tinuous line of moraines in the fjord-districts of Nor- way, which marked the outer border of the last large ice-sheet along the Norwegian Atlantic coast (Dahl, 1955). Later it was shown that this line marks a cer- tain stage during the deglaciation of Norway and not the outer boundary of the last ice-sheet (Nordhagen, 1963). In 1912, the geologist Vogt claimed that the outermost Norwegian islands of Lofoten, Værö and Röst, had been ice-free during the last glacial pe- riod (Nordhagen, 1963). Although some early geol- ogists believed that ice-free areas existed during the last glacial period, the glacial survival theory also re- ceived strong criticism from several Norwegian and Swedish Quaternary geologists who demanded proof for the existence of ice-free areas. Other geologists did not totally denounce the “refugium theory” but preferred to remain uncommitted (Nordhagen, 1963). A MATURATION OF IDEAS - IS GLACIAL SURVIVAL THE ANSWER? The North Atlantic Biota and their History was the ti- tle of a symposium held at the University of Iceland, Reykjavík in 1962 (Löve and Löve, 1963). Biologists participating in the symposium almost unanimously agreed that the observed distribution of certain Scan- dinavian plant species could not be explained unless they had survived in ice-free refugia at least during the last glacial period. The tabula rasa theory, claiming that all plants immigrated after the last glacial period, had few proponents. Three botanical arguments were primarily for- warded in support of the glacial survival theory: 1. The west-arctic element, 2. The alpine endemic element and 3. The special disjunction of the alpine flora. 1. The West-Arctic Element Dahl (1955) discussed some plant/geographic patterns which were difficult to reconcile with the tabula rasa theory. The west-arctic element is of special interest. This comprises plant species found in Iceland, Scan- dinavia, Greenland and North America (a few occur- ing also in Novaya Zemlya and Svalbard) but miss- ing in the Alps, Ural Mountains, and Asia. Dahl felt it was difficult to explain the west-arctic element in the Scandinavian mountain flora by migration from the south or east after the last glacial age. No similar west-arctic elements have been found in the Alps, but why did these plants not migrate to the Alps if they lived along the margins of the ice in central Europe through the ice age (Dahl, 1955)? As Blytt (1881) and others pointed out, the plant/geographic connections within Greenland, Iceland, Scotland and Scandinavia are so close that direct migration across the Atlantic Ocean was very likely (Dahl, 1955). In Scandinavia, the west-arctic element includes about 30 species. About half of these species are represented in Iceland and about 40% in Spitzber- gen (Dahl, 1955). They show several distinct distri- bution patterns, e.g. species which have their western limits in Greenland (e.g. Arenaria pseudofrigida) and in eastern North America (e.g. Pedicularis flammea). Other species reach as far as the Alaska/Beringia re- gion (e.g. Campanula uniflora) and some have a high arctic distribution, connecting Svalbard with northern Greenland (e.g. Minuartia rossii) (Dahl, 1955, 1998). 2. The Alpine Endemic Element According to Dahl (1955), the glacial survival theory is important to explain endemism in the Scandinavian JÖKULL No. 54 3
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