The Botany of Iceland - 01.12.1912, Side 140

The Botany of Iceland - 01.12.1912, Side 140
126 H. JÓNSSON small pools, often forms a continuous fringe, the upper branches either reaching to or lying on the surface of tlie water. In such pools Chœtomorpha tortuosa sometimes occurs in fair abundance loose upon the surface of the water; its íilaments are usually densely matted together. Fucus inflatus f. linearis grows even more socially. At times it is almost tlie dominant species in the smaller pools, although, ralher frequently, several other species are found intermingled with it. Tliis form is a biological variety of Fucus inflatus which, in the pools, exists evidently under less favourable circumstances; lliis is one cause of its small size and feeble structure, although anotlier is that it is not exposed, to any extent worthy of mention, to the beat of the waves. Rosenvinge has especially shown this to be the case as regards Greenland. Rosenvinge explains the frequent occurrence of tliis form in the pools by the fact that the eggs of F. inflatus are carried into the water-filled depressions by the move- ment of the water and accumulate there. This explanation is un- doubtedly correct, and, as Rosenvinge points out, all intermediate stages between the feeble pool-form and tlie typical form can be demonstrated. To any one who has seen this endless variation in nature, it seems so certain tliat it is due to the influence of outside factors, that experimental proof is almost superlluous. The uppermost pools are generally extremely poor in species; and, besides those already mentioned, only Enteromorpha inlestinalis occurs in any great abundance. Wliere the coast is exposed, the uppermost pools may, however, have a resemblance to the lower ones of the upper littoral zone — a natural consequence of the exposure. On more exposed parts of the coast a fringe of small Monostroma Grevillei is often found, almost on the surface of the water itself. At one place in E. Iceland I took the temperature of such a submerged plant-covering, and the thermometer showed 20° C. (June 13). The vegetation was also somewhat injured, and evidently did not prosper under these conditions. High up on a rocky coast to the south of Vattarnes in E. Ice- land, I came across a pool-vegetation. I did not measure the alti- tude of the spot, but I do not think that I was greatly mistaken in estimating it at 70—100 feet above sea-level. As regards the place, I noted in my dairy — “High rocky coast, land-plants grew round the alga-pools. The water in the pools must be replenished with rain and heavy surf, which soinetimes fail for long periods during
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The Botany of Iceland

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