The Botany of Iceland - 01.12.1932, Qupperneq 8

The Botany of Iceland - 01.12.1932, Qupperneq 8
456 POUL LARSEN S. W. country, but also a sraaller area in the east country. The finds of C. H. Ostenfeld are mainly derived from the north, north-west and west country, and Chr. Gronlund has visited both the east, north and west country. — My own investigations in the summer of 1922 began in the first part of June in S. W. Iceland, viz. in the country round Reykjavík, Hafnarfiörður and Þingvellir. In the latter part of June I continued with the part round Borgar- Qörður, especially the birch copses near Borg and Norðtúnga. But my main area of investigation was N. E. Iceland, the region between the Ofiord Valley and the east coast of Iceland, viz. the 0fiord Valley itself and the F'njóskadalur running parallel to it, the depression near Mývatn with Laxádalur, Jökulsá á Heiði from Grímstaðir to Möðrudalur, Jökulsá á Brú, Lagarfljót with Iceland’s largest birch copse, and finally the region round Seyðisfjörður. As will appear from this survey, the south country is the least explored part of Iceland as regards fungi. The extensive bare sands along the southern coast of the country cannot, however, be expected to add to the number of species, for even though there is some dune vegetation here, a similar vegetation occurs on the extensive range of dunes along Jökulsá á Heiði. The few samples of the vege- tation of sands and dunes derived from Helgi Jónsson’s collec- tion show in the main the same fungi as those occurring on the plants collected by me on dunes in the interior round Grímstaðir near Jökulsá á Heiði. And the homefields of the farms in the south country bear mainly the same vegetation as the homefields in the rest of the country, and must therefore be supposed to harbour much the same fungi. On the whole, such large areas of Iceland have now been investigated that all the different forms of vegetation are repre- sented, and an addition to the number of species is more likely to be made through a more thorough examination of details than by enlarging the area of investigation. The Special Conditions of Environment offered to Fungi in Iceland. Though the fungus flora is greatly dependent on the rest of the vegetation, we cannol infer from this that the more luxuriant the vegetation of a country is, the richer and more abundant its fungus flora will be. At any rate, this does not appljr to the larger fungi. There must, therefore, be other factors besides the chlorophyllaceous
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The Botany of Iceland

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