The Botany of Iceland - 01.12.1945, Side 119

The Botany of Iceland - 01.12.1945, Side 119
THE VEGETATION OF CENTRAL ICELAND 461 species is common to this and thc blown sand associations, viz. Equise- tum œrvense, which often forms a kind of ground vegetation in the Elymus association. In this association the high E percentage is espe- cially noteworthy, and the same applies to the apparent equilibrium between the H and G percentages. Analyses 3, 5, and 6 were made in Kýlingar, analysis 4 in Jökuldalir; analysis 7 is from Síðumanna- afrjettur near Varmafell. It shows a higher number of species and a higher A percentage than the others. The locality is situated by a small brook near the margin of a lava flow; sand flats made up of fluvial sand and volcanic ashes are found along the brook. Some vegetation was found where the sand was dampest, and there analyses XX, 7 and 8 were carried out. The association is widely distributed in all parts of the highland where damp, sandy areas are found. 4. Eriophorum Scheuchzeri—Agrostis alba—Equisetum arvense-Ass. (Tab. XX. A-B, 8). This association is closely related to the preceding one, but is found where the sand is wettest and is occasionally flooded by water. The three character species are quite dominant physiognomically. The analysis was made very near analysis XX, 7. Otherwise the association was observed in several places under similar conditions. There is every indication that it is a pioneer association which, according as the condi- tions develop, may pass either into a Calamagrostis jaðar and subse- quently a shrub heath, if fresh sand is constantly added and the land grows higher and drier, or, if the water for some reason or other is not draincd off, be transformed into a flói vegetation. c. The M elur Vegetation (gravel flat vegetation). By far the greater part of thc interior highland of Iccland is covered with melur. The surface is covered with big or small stones, which, however, are of such size and situated so close to each other that thc wind has no longer any appreciablc influence on it, all thc finer material having been blown away. The stones vary greatly in size, from quite small to large blocks. Small quantities of fine material will often gather in the lee of the stones, and in these places the plants will take root and barely sustain life. The surface of the melur may be either level or sloping; in the latter case there is, as a rule, some motion at the bottom owing to solifluction. Where the inclination of the moun- tain sides is greatest, talus slopes or screes will form, which are mostly
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The Botany of Iceland

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