The Botany of Iceland - 01.12.1945, Side 60

The Botany of Iceland - 01.12.1945, Side 60
402 STEINDÓR STEINDÓRSSON Cerastium trigynum Saxifraga stellaris „ rivularis Poa alþina Oxyria digyna Polygonum viviþarum Veronica alþina Deschampsia alþina Comparing these lists with those given by J ó n s s o n, we shall see that the species of Epilobium, Montia rivularis, and Catabrosa aquatica listed byjónsson as the commonest species of the dý vegetation are absent here. These species are either very rare or absent altogether within my area of investigation, and they are no doubt all very rare at altitudes above 500 m. Thus we may speak of two types of dý vegetation: the lowland type dominated by Epilobium species, Montia, and Catabrosa aquatica, and the alpina type, in which all these species are lacking, while Cerastium trigynum, Deschampsia alpina, Erio- phorum Scheuchzeri, and various Saxifraga are the commonest species. d. The Jaðar Vegetation. This formation was first described from Iceland by M 0 1 h o 1 m H a n s e n. It is the transitional form between the mýri formation and the communities of the dry soil, and has some characters of both. M 0 1- h o 1 m H a n s e n (1. c. pp. 109-110) describes the jaðar vegetation on Arnarvatnsheiði as follows: “In depressions between the moraine walls, on the borders of the mýrar, in small damp hollows in the mó, and as a fringe along the rivers the jaðar vegetation is met with. When typical- ly developed it is easily distinguished from the other types of vegetation by the very large knolls of which the surface consists. These often attain a height of 1 m or more and 1 or several m in diameter. The distance between the individual knolls is up to /2 m. The jaðar vegeta- tion belongs to moderately damp soil having a normal snow-covering in the winter.” In the highland regions visited by me I failed to find this typical jaðar described by Molholm Hansen from Arnarvatnsheiði; this does not agree with M 0 1 h o 1 m H a n s e n’s contention that the jaðar “appears as a very characteristic feature of the landscape in the high- land tracts” (1. c. p. 53). However, different types of this formation may doubtless occur. The only feature which the jaðar described by me has in common with that of Arnarvatnsheiði as regards the conditions of the soil and the habitat factors, is that the soil is moderately damp and the snow-covering normal. The formation described by me here as
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The Botany of Iceland

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