The Botany of Iceland - 01.12.1912, Side 121

The Botany of Iceland - 01.12.1912, Side 121
MARINE ALGAL VEGETATION 107 connected with each other tlian thej' are with the remaining asso- ciations, which also are mutually very closely connected. In this way the community may he divided into two belts, of which the first comprises the two first-mentioned associations, and the second the remaining four. The Pelvetia- Fucus - spiralis-belt is narrow. It is situated in the upper part of tlie littoral zone, at, and just below, lowest high-water mark, i. e. flood-mark at neap-tide. It has only one layer of vegetation, as tliere is no undergrowth wortli men- tioning, and it is entirely devoid of epipliytes; it is submerged in normal conditions for a very short time. The second, the Fucus-belt is broad; it occurs in the lower part of the upper littoral zone, just above low-water mark of neap-tide. The vegetation occurs in two, and sometimes in three, layers and epiphytes are present in abundance. The vegetation is submerged much longer than in the íirst belt. Thus, these two belts differ so greatly that they cannot be treated together. The Pelvetia-Fucus-spiralis-belt. This belt is of common occurrence, and its vegetation is luxuriant in S. and SW. Iceland, but in the other parls of the country is sparse and devoid of Pelvetia. This belt is not continuous except along sliort distances, and its vertical lieight is inconsiderable; but tlie breadth may sometimes be fairly considerable, especiallv on very gently sloping coasts. It grows on rocky coasts, and in places where these consist of a talus of debris the vegetation is distributed in patches wliich is a natural consequence of the surface, tlie limit of the association being rather sharply defined downwards. Petvetia and Fucus spiratis do not grow intermixed, but occur in two pure and distinct associations. They gnnv luxuriantly on exposed coasts; in the most exposed parts of the coast, however, they seem to recede. Thus, tliis belt was either absent from, or was poorly re- presented on tlie most exposed points at the extremity of Snæfellsnes and of the Vestmannaeyjar and at the extreme end of Reyðarfjörður; but there occurred in its place surf-forms of Fucus inftatus (f. ex- posita and f. dendroides). The Pel vetia-association (Fig. 3) always occurs highest of all. As already mentioned it is found in S. and SW. Iceland only, but there it occurs in great abundance in many places; in some places its vegetation is poor, and sometimes only a few scatlered individuals are found. This is more particularly the case in places where Petvetia
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The Botany of Iceland

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