The Botany of Iceland - 01.12.1928, Side 25

The Botany of Iceland - 01.12.1928, Side 25
THE AERIAL ALGÆ OF ICELAND 349 freely over the country in most places. Even in the woods, which only cover very small areas and consist of quite low trees or bushes, there can hardly be much shelter in the winter. Whether it is the mechanical effect of the wind or its desiccating power, or both in conjunction, that decide the issue, can hardly be determined with certainty as long as sure data concerning the force of the wind and the degree of moisture in the atmosphere are not to liand. As known, these two kinds of meteorological data are the most diffi- cult to ascertain, just as also the local conditions of quite small areas may play an extremely important part. It might be expected that deep mountain ravines would afford shelter from the wind, and this is undoubtedly the case; but steep ravines are not very common in Iceland where, on the contrary, the broad U-shaped valleys prevail. I saw a narrow ravine sheltered from the wind in the so-called »Stóra Gjá« to the east of Mývatn, but as tliere were neither trees nor woodwork of any description there, I had no opportunitj^ of observing how algæ might have developed on these substrata. It is a characteristic fact that most of the samples of algal vegetation from woodwork come from Isa- fjörður, which lies in a very deep valley surrounded by high moun- tains on all sides, and from Reykjavík where the high and com- paratively closeljr built houses will be able to afford some degree of shelter. I may further point out that the highest mountain regions of Norway present a similar lack of tliis community of algæ (Strom 1926, p. 17). In a thesis (Nr. 7) in his doctors dissertation (1910) Helgi Jónsson makes the following statement: »The cold itself does not seem injurious to liibernating plants in cold climates, whereas desiccation by frequent, stormy winds is extremely fatal.« True, this statement is made witli reference to the phanerogams only, but there can hardly lie any doubt that it applies equally lo the aerial algæ. 2. Brickwork. The old farms of Iceland were all built of turf and wood, but recently brick-built houses have become inore and more common. On the lower part of the walls layers of green algæ are often met with and seem to me to occur with as great frequency as in Den- mark. Evidently the algæ find better life-conditions on the walls than
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The Botany of Iceland

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