The Botany of Iceland - 01.12.1945, Side 131

The Botany of Iceland - 01.12.1945, Side 131
THE VEGETATION OF CENTRAL ICELAND 473 Deschampsia alpina, Poa alpina, and Cerastium trigynum are likewise members of the first pioneer association, but they only reach their full development where the moraine is older and drier and the first pioneers have disappeared. Thus it is these six species which have first established themselves on the moraine. The other species occurring in analyses 4-6 will only appear later, and some of them seem to replace the first-comers when these disappear. Thus the pioneer species, with the exception of Poa alpina and Deschampsia alpina, have disappeared in these analyses, but in addition to those two, which here attain their greatest development on the moraine, Festuca ovina, F. rubra, and Saxifraga groenlandica have become more conspicuous. We can say nothing at all as to which formations or which species will be victorious if the development of the vegetation proceeds so far that an actual competition between the species will commence. A continued investiga- tion of the area during a number of years might probably give a reply. 2. The Eyjabakkar Moraine. (Tab. XXIV. A-B). Eyjabakkajökull is a glacier issuing from the northeastern corner of Vatnajökull some distance farther eastward than Brúarjökull. From this glacier springs Jökulsá in Fljótsdal. The gradient of the glacier is much steeper than of Brúarjökull, but it is often in a similar motion. Often their advances coincide, thus in 1890, as stated above. Since then Eyjabakkajökull has receded in about the same way as Brúar- jökull, but more slowly; thus at present there is only well over one kilometer frorn the terminal moraine to the front of the glacier; but the latter has often been in motion since 1890, having alternately receded or advanced. Where the glacier advanced farthest, a similar terminal moraine to that in Kringilsárrani has been formed. In front of the actual morainic ridge the soil, which prior to the advance of the glacier was very deep, has been compressed so as to form wave-like folds (see Fig. 10). The whole of this terminal moraine is largely covered with vegetation in much the same way as the terminal moraine in Kringilsárrani, though the wind erosion phenomena are more pro- nounced here than there, especially on the side facing the glacier. The vegetation of the ridge consists mainly of Gramineae, which, however, are highly mixed with herbs, e. g. Taraxacum croceum; where the soil is most sandy; Equisetum arvense is very conspicuous. The ground moraine slopes rather considerably from the ridge to the glacier’s edge. The surface is very uneven, and larger or smaller accumulations of The Botany of Icland. Vol. III. Part IV. 32
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The Botany of Iceland

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