The Botany of Iceland - 01.12.1930, Side 179

The Botany of Iceland - 01.12.1930, Side 179
STUDIES ON THE VEGETATION OF ICELAND 169 temperature of 5.3° and an annual amplitude of 19.4. Thus, wliile a natural surfaee is on the whole similar to a bare sandj' surface, the presence of a covering of vegetation or snow will cause a re- duction of the annual amplitude of c. 10° and an increase of the mean annual temperature of no less than 1.30. Tliis applies to the surface of the soil, but the deeper-lying strata too are affected by a covering of snow or vegetation, and in the same direction. There will be a decrease in the annual amplitude and an increase in the mean annual temperatui-e. A comparison between the two sides of table 33 will show the numerical values. A covering of vegetation will, in the summer, cause a lower average monthly temperature of the surface below it than the na- tural surface or a bare sandy surface would have done. This difference will, liowever, onlj^ amount to a couple of degrees. In the winter, however, a covering of snow will mean an immense increase of the surface temperature under the snow compared with that above the snow. According to Wild, a snow-covering of 30—45 cm.s’ depth will cause a temperature difference of 8—9° between the surface of the soii and that of the snow. Thus a sandy surface has a January- February temperature of c. -h100, while the surface below a snow- covering of 30—40 cm. has only a January-February temperature of 2°; at a depth of 40 cm tlie values are -r- 6° and +1° re- spectively. Veiy convincing and thorough investigations on temperature conditions in snow have been made by J. Keránen (1920). The investigations comprise two snow-periods 1915—16 and 1916—17, the teinperature in the surface of the snow at various depths and at the surface of tlie soil being measured 3 times daily, at 7 o’clock, at 13, and at 21 o’clock. By means of these figures tlie average monthly temperature for the respective depths has been calculated. The mean values l'or the two periods have been given in table 34, "where likewise the deptli of the snow-covering is given, besides the temperature of the air, and Ihe temperature at various distanc.es from the surface for the year and for each month. The snow-covering during the months November—April has an average depth of 47.8 cm and due to this an average surface tem- perature of -í- 14.2° can only cause the temperature at tlie bottom, i- e. at the surface of the soil to drop to -h2.7°. An investigation of temperature conditions in the snow in the various months will also show the varying isolation power of the
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The Botany of Iceland

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