The Botany of Iceland - 01.12.1945, Side 50

The Botany of Iceland - 01.12.1945, Side 50
392 STEINDÓR STEINDÓRSSON cur under very similar conditions and are very closely related. I am in- clined to believe that the alpine mýri is hardly ever any stable forma- tion, but a transitional form either from a damper to a drier stage, or the reverse. Nobody who has observed the vegetation of the highland can avoid noticing how changeable it is. Larger or smaller areas of vegetation are either forming or disappearing. It is difficult to separate pure associations within the mýri formation. Those I have attempted to distinguish, should perhaps more correctly be called association frag- ments or variants of the actual associations which occur in related formations; but precisely this condition I regard as quite characteristic of unstable plant formations in which typical associations have either not developed or are changing into others. If we compare the mýri formation with the types of vegetation of the neighbouring countries, we shall no doubt find formations which are closely related to the alpine mýri, whereas it is difficult to find formations which are closely related to the lowland mýri of Iceland, this mýri differing from both the Arctic and the European, especially the Scandinavian, types of mýri. In the “Græskjær” (grassy bogs) mentioned by both W arming (1888, p. 130) and R o s e n v i n g e (1896, p. 243) from Greenland, many of the same species are found which dominate in the alpine mýri in Iceland. In addition to the two species of Eriophorum, Salix glauca, Carex rariflora, and C. rigida are recorded; however, it is pre- cisely these species which especially distinguish the vegetation of the alpine mýri from that of the lowland mýri. Within Scandinavia I should think that the closest relationship is to be found with the Carex rariflora and C. rigida “Niedermoore” mentioned by Fries (1913, pp. 132 and 134). Large continuous areas of the mýri formation are not found in the highland, it nearly always occurs as belts around the areas of flói at the bottom of the valleys or in some few valleys along the foot of the mountains. Thus for instance in Fagridalur, where a large variety of the formations of the mýri series were found in the localities investigated by me. In addition the mýri vegetation is sometimes found along brooks and rivers where there is a fairly considerable gradient. In small depres- sions we often find a patch of flói at the bottom surrounded by a nar- row belt of mýri, and, at the top, a shrub heath.
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The Botany of Iceland

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