Jökull


Jökull - 01.12.1969, Side 158

Jökull - 01.12.1969, Side 158
hk g/ho HEYUPPSKERA I loo kg of hektara. Fig. 11. Average yield oí hay in 100 kg per hectare for the whole of Iceland (1943- 1967) and years of substantial winter kill- ing of grass. when sea ice lias been land-fast in the latter part of winter, and also most in those districts where sea ice has come right upto the coast. Winter killing causes, and has caused, great havoc to cultivated land, especially to level hayfields. Such winter killing is frequently mentioned in the older sources, ancl then nearly always in connection with the colder weather associatecl with sea ice. During the last three sea ice years damage from winter killings has been very substantial, and in some areas it has been responsible for an almost complete failure of the crop. With an increase in the arrival of sea ice, together with colder weather, we may therefore expect even more widespread damage through winter killing. SEA ICE AND AGRICULTURE We have mainly been concerned above with the effects of sea ice on vegetation and at- temptecl to describe how changes in tempera- ture may affect the growth of grass. So far, Icelandic agriculture has largely been basecl on the use of the annual grass crop for livestock, and the nation has to a greater or lesser extent lived off the livestock products. If there is a de- finite correlation between the arrival of sea ice and annual temperature on the one hand, and between temperature and grass growth on the other, the correlation will be obvious between grass growth and the well-being of livestock, and consequently the well-being of the farmers also. In other words, the sea ice has, through its influence on weather and grass growth, a 1 54 JÖKULL 19. ÁR considerable effect on the state of livestock. This correlation may be shown further by a comparison between the number of livestock in the country at clifferent periods and the frequency of ice years during the same periods. The graph (Fig. 12) compares the numbers of livestock in Iceland and the frequency of sea ice years. This shows definitely some correla- tion between the arrival of sea ice ancl the numbers of livestock. It is, for instance, parti- cularly noticeable that during the cold period after 1860, when the graph shows the pre- sence of much sea ice, there is also a de- crease in the numbers of livestock in Iceland. Much of the 20th century is ice-free, but the increase in livestock is due not only t.o the milder climate but also to the great improve- ment in farming technique and methods over previous centuries. Bergthórsson (1966) has shown that, with a deterioration in weather and a clecrease in mean temperature for 10 months of the year, the period in which both horses and sheep have to be fed indoors is lengthened. In the old records, the correlation is also obvious be- tween sea ice years and a decline in the numb- ers of cattle, horses and sheep. It is, therefore, natural to ask, how close this correlation is ancl how far the mean annual temperature needs to fall in order that such a situation be created in forthcoming years. Did the sea ice formerly liave such a big effect on the mean temperature of certain, specific months or even of the whole year that it caused a decline in livestocks, or was the misfortune due merely to more primitive farming methods? Would we, with the aid of modern technology,
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