The Botany of Iceland - 01.12.1914, Side 130

The Botany of Iceland - 01.12.1914, Side 130
314 THORODDSEN Markhlidar........................ 250 metres Burfell near Thjórsárdal........... 300 — Skridufellsskogur.................. 220 — Tungufellsskogur................... 260 — Haukadalsheidi.....................J380 — Uthlidarhraun...................... 320 — Laugardalsskogar................... 280 — Thingvallaskogar................... 200 — Botnsskogui........................ 200 — Skorradalur........................ 150 — Svinadalur......................... 200 — Husafellsskogur.................... 260 — Hvitársida......................... 300 — Although it is possible that birch coppices may be met with in some places at a somewhat higher level yet the limits will be approximately those given above. On the north-western pe- ninsula, birch coppices occur mostly on the southern side at the head of the valleys and fjords which extend upwards from Breidifjördur and face llie sun; but the birch coppices extend hardlv anywhere higher than 200—300 metres, and usually occur at far lower levels. There is also a good deal of birch coppice at the branch-fjords of Arnarfjord, in Dyrafjord and at the southern fjords of Isaijardardjup, especially at Hestfjördur. North of Isaíjardardjup I nowhere saw birch coppices proper, although a few individuals of Betula odorata occur in sotne places in Adalvik; nor are birch cop- pices known to occur on the east coast from Cape Nord to Stein- grimsfjord. To the birch region belongs also Sorbus aucuparia which occurs as scattered individuals both in the birch coppices and outside them; I do not tliink the mountain ash extends so far up as does the bircli; I did not observe it at liigher altitudes than on Sluttnes in Myvatn, 290 metres above sea-level. Betula nana occurs now and then in birch woods, but grows most commonly on heather moors and in bog-lands; it rarelv forms coppices proper. It extends higher on the mountains than Betula odorata; I found it, for instance, in Sydri Pollar, 729 metres above sea-level. Juniperus communis is fairly common in birch coppices and on heather moors; the highest altitude at wliich I found it was in Yxnadalur near Odádahraun, 488 metres above sea-level. The heather moor is closely associated
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The Botany of Iceland

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