The Botany of Iceland - 01.12.1932, Qupperneq 7

The Botany of Iceland - 01.12.1932, Qupperneq 7
FUNGI OF ICELAND 455 nists Svend Andersen has, during several journeys in Iceland, collected a herbarium of ílowering plants and vascular cryptogams, which he has kindly lent me for examination in regard to fungi. The mycologist N. Fabritius Buchwald visited Iceland in the summer of 1923 and brought home a collection of 23 Icelandic species of fungi (among which was one new species for Iceland). These he has kindly sent me for examination. On my journey in Iceland in 1922 my general purpose was the investigation of fungi, while my special object was to make a study of the Agaricaceae, the determination and description being made in the field from fresh material. The colours were determined by comparison with colour charts; other macroscopical characters were noted down in the field. Microscopic characters were examined by means of a travelling microscope, and in addition, material of all the species was brought back in alcohol so that the microscopical characters could subsequently be revised. The main list of Icelandic fungi contained in this work is a result partly of my own observations of fungi in Iceland and partly of rny study of all the earlier lists of Icelandic fungi and of the material on which they are based. The greater part of this material is in the Botanical Museum of Copenhagen, and I have tested the determination of the listed species by means of it, and, in so far as errors were found, I have corrected them. This brings up the number of known species of fungi in Iceland to 802, including, however, some few species of Agaricaceae which I have not been able to identify with known species, while, on the other hand, I have not had sufficient material to establish them as new species. Icelandic Localities investigated in Search of Fungi. Large parts of the highlands in the interior are covered with ice, and still greater areas liave a covering either of unweathered or of only slightly weathered lava, so that these regions are almost devoid of vegetation. It is chiefly the depressions, the erosion valleys, and the lower coast stretches of the fiords which harbour the vegetation necessary for the development of fungi. The collectors, therefore, have mainly confined their investigations to such tracts. Thus the Icelanders Ólafur Daviðsson and Stefán Stefánsson have almost exclusively examined the fiord and river valleys of N.W. Iceland, while HelgiJónsson has especially investigated the
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The Botany of Iceland

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