Fróðskaparrit - 01.01.1987, Side 47

Fróðskaparrit - 01.01.1987, Side 47
WHEN, HOW, AND WHENCE? 51 about 100 km distant from the mainland. The degree of isolation is mirrored in the depauperate insect fauna: only about 950 insect species are known from the islands, while the number in the British Isles is about 20000, in Norway at least 12000, and in Denmark more than 13000 (Bengtson 1982). The terrestrial invertebrates in the Faroes have immigrated after the last gla- ciation (see below). The immigration pro- cess can be divided into stages, implying that taxa with different dispersal abilities and/or different habitat requirements have colonized the islands during different time periods (or at least have started to do so). To take just one example: anthropocho- rous species have been able to invade the islands later than, e.g., anemochorous species. The Post-Glacial period The Faroes were completely ice-covered during the last Pleistocene glaciation (the Weichselian). The islands were covered by a local ice sheet (or at times isolated ice sheets covering the single islands) - the striae are directed from the centre of the is- land group (Rasmussen 1982). The ice cov- er reached far outside the present outline of the islands and (based on geological evi- dence) no floral or faunal refugium can have existed (Rasmussen 1982). Nor is there any evidence of a land-bridge con- nection between the Faroes and the British Isles. The geology of the Faroes is sum- marized in Rasmussen (1982). The polar front (or convergence) separa- ting arctic and subarctic waters from sub- tropical waters passed rapidly (on a geo- logical timescale) from its position west of Portugal northwards past the west coast of the British Isles at about 13500 BP (Ruddi- man et al. 1977) (Fig. 1). This caused (or was caused by) a rapid expansion of the currents bringing subtropical waters to the seas of western Europe. This current, in contrast to conditions today, was a restric- ted, anticlockwise gyre (Jansen et al. 1983, Buckland 1988). Coope (1979) has argued that during this period the North Atlantic islands and part of Scandinavia were invad- ed by certain taxa but this does not seem likely (Buckland 1988, see also below). During the Younger Dryas Stadial the polar front advanced southwards, reaching the SW coast of Ireland at about 10200 BP (Fig. 1), and the circulation of the ocean current in the North Atlantic returned to glacial conditions. The subsequent retreat northwards of the polar front seems to have been just as sudden (Ruddiman et al. 1977: Tab. 6), and the front reached a posi- tion just south of Greenland by 9300 BP (Fig. 1). The North Atlantic gyre then re- turned to its former anticlockwise pattern and was still at that time restricted to the seas off northwestern Europe (Fig. 2). Fossil finds from Iceland indicate that the pre-Landnám fauna was a cool tempe- rate rather than an arctic fauna (Buckland 1988). The few subfossil finds from the Faroes indicate that similar conditions ob- tained there; the single taxon of the 11 taxa reported by Jessen and Rasmussen (1922) that does not occur in the Faroes today, the carabid beetle Calathus micropterus Duft. is not an arctic species but a forest-dwelling one, wich occurs both in Scotland and wes- tern Norway today. The oldest known flora in the Faroes is of Preboreal age, although in composition
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