The Botany of Iceland - 01.12.1912, Page 186

The Botany of Iceland - 01.12.1912, Page 186
172 H. JÓNSSON The Fruiting Period. In the table given below is indicated the time at which the species have been found in fruit. A + sig- nifies that the greater part of the individuals in the samples gathered were fruiting; a signifies that fruiting and sterile individuals occurred in almost equal abundance, or sometimes that onljr a few fruiting individuals occurred; a — signifies that only sterile indi- viduafs of tlie species were found. In the majority of the annual species the fruiting period coincides with the vegetative stage, and thus growing vegetative shoots and sporangia are frequently found on the same individual. These species fruit comparatively quickly and the young, or purely vegetative, stage is of short duration. The fruiting period extends over spring and summer probably in the case of the majority of the species. They do not, however, behave similarly in this respect in the different coastal districts. Urospora Wormskioldii, Monostroma Grevillei, M. undulatum, Ectocarpus tomentosoides and Litosiphon fili- formis are all decidedly spring plants at Reykjavík, but in E. Ice- land tliey liave been found bearing fruit far into the summer. Leathesia difformis is a decidedly summer species at Reykjavík, it has been observed fruiting in June, July, August and even into September, but it was dying away in the iniddle of September. At Reykjavík its life-period coincides with its fruiting-period, but in N. Iceland it has been gathered in a sterile condition in September. This species appears to behave in the same manner on the west coast of Sweden (Kylin, 45) as at Reykjavík. Moreover the fact may be emphasized that at tlie lalter place Enteromorpha Linza is usually a summer and autumn species. With regard to the perennial species, it happens both that the vegetative growth and the fruit-formation is simultaneous, and also that the two stages occur at different times. A purely vegetative, young stage, more prolonged than in the annuals, is found in several of the perennials; thus, I think that I have seen indications of Alaria and Laminaria species being in a purety vegetative stage throughout tlie tirst year and perhaps Ionger. Kylin (45, p. 274) divides the perennial species into three groups according to their life-activity: — Group 1 includes species which carry on vegetative and repro- ductive work all the year round. Group 2. Species which carrj' on vegetative work the whole year, but reproductive work only l'or a part of the year.
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