The Botany of Iceland - 01.12.1945, Side 130

The Botany of Iceland - 01.12.1945, Side 130
472 STEINDÓR STEINDÖRSSON H umlum (1936, pp. 38-39) mentions a sowewhat similar vegeta- tion. The only foreign descriptions which have been available to me for comparison are that of F æ g r i from Jostedalsbræ and that of P o r- s i 1 d from Disko. I have already pointed out the relationship with one of the sociations mentioned by F æ g r i, but otherwise it would seem that the development of vegetations is somewhat different here and in Norway. Almost the same result is arrived at, I think, by a com- parison with P o r s i 1 d’s description (1902, pp. 106-111), which shows a quite different type of vegetation than that found on the moraine dealt with here. Although my observations from Kringilsárrani are few in number, they show fairly distinctly how thc vegetation behaves in its initial state on this moraine. We may say that the whole vegetation of the ground moraine is still at an initial stage. The southernmost part of the moraine, nearest the glacier, whence analyses 1-3 are derived, has not yet pas- sed the “unstable years” (Fægri 1933, p. 110), i. e. the external alterations of the moraine are still so great that they prevent the in- vasion of the vegetation. Still this instability is less than might be expected in view of the age of the moraine, the moraine being com- paratively level. What might seem peculiar in the colonisation by the plants of this barren field is that the phanerogams apparently come before the cryp- togams. It is true that my investigations are not quite satisfactory in this respect, but this much may be established from them that in the first pioneer stage in which analysis 1 was made, neither mosses nor lichens were found, and apart from the aforementioned Philonotis cushions the cryptogamous vegetation is very poor throughout the moraine; it is far surpassed by the phanerogams both in regard to degree of covering and to frequency. L ii d i seems to have come to a similar result in the Alps, saying (1921, p. 225) : “Die Erstbesiedlung erfolgt durch die besiedlungtiichtigsten Gefásspflanzen der Umgebung”. The first pioneer species on the Kringilsárrani moraine are Catabrosa algida, Draba rupestris, and Arabis alpina. In areas nearby, in which these species were found, they were of a much lower growth and more poorly developed than on the moraine. Thus in no other place did I observe the phenomenon that Draba and Arabis had two flowering periods in the same summcr. When I visited this locality in the middle of August I found the two species with well developed stems with nearly fully mature fruits from the first flowering; but at the same time new stems whose first flowers had just come out were developing from the rosette.
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The Botany of Iceland

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