Fróðskaparrit - 01.01.1993, Page 93

Fróðskaparrit - 01.01.1993, Page 93
SALIX IN THE FAROE ISLANDS AND THEIR AFFINITY WITH THE POPULATIONS IN ICELAND 97 less ascending shrub, but can be almost prostrate in difficult conditions. Mature leaves on Salix arctica are glabrescent al- though there are often exceptions, and the short wavy trichomes on the leaves of “the eastem phase” of Salix glauca are never found in the Icelandic material. The catkins on Salix arctica are usually much longer, with looser inflorescences and longer cap- sules with reddish hue. After studies in field and examining cul- tivated samples it is clear how much the populations in Iceland and the Faroe Is- lands differs from Salix glauca, whether compared with the populations in Scandi- navia and Central Europe (The Central Eu- ropean population is often considered as a species, Salix glaucosericea B. Flod.) or “the eastem phase” in North America and Southeast Greenland. Nevertheless it is not to be overlooked that Salix arctica and S. glauca are related species. In North Amer- ica and Greenland populations of interme- diate character have since long mused those who have tried to separate these species (Simmons, 1913: 69-72; Flodems, 1923: 97-99 and pp. 121-157; Bocher, 1938: 63- 66; Polunin, 1940: 157-159 and pp. 162- 166; Scoggan, 1978: 263; Argus, 1965: 96). Whether the problems are due to hy- bridswarm, introgression or to the fact that the distinction between the species is not sufficiently analysed is uncertain, but more extensive studies are needed and most like- ly there are different conditions at the vari- ous places where the species meet or over- lap. In Iceland however the population has been geographically isolated for such a long time that possible hybridisation or in- trogression in primeval times or before the species colonized the country should since long have coalesced, and today it is impos- sible to regard the population otherwise than one species. The population in the Faroe Islands is of the same origin and sim- ilar, except the peculiar hybridization with Salix herbacea in historic time. References Argus, G.W. 1965. The taxonomy of the Salix glauca complex in North America. The Gray Herbarium of Harvard University, Cambridge, Mass. U.S.A: 64- 96. Bjarnason, A.H. 1983. lslensk flóra. Iðun. Reykjavík: 250-253. Bocher, T.W. 1938. Biological Distributional Types in the Flora of Greenland. Meddelelser om Gronland CVI 106: 63-66. Elven, R. In prep. Salix glauca L., in Flora Nordica. Floderus, B. 1923. Om Gronlands salices (in Swedish). Meddelelser om Gronland LXIII. Kobenhavn: 97- 157. Gronlund, C. 1881. Islands Flora. Kjobenhavn. Hansen, K. 1966. Vascular Plants in the Faeroes. Horizontal and vertical distribution. Dansk Bot. Ark. 24, N 3: 105. Hulten, E. and Fries, M. 1986. Atlas ofNorth European Vascular Plants I, III. Kónigstein. Hylander, N. 1966. Nordisk kdrlvaxtflora II (in Swe- dish). Stockholm. Hamet-Ahti, L., Palmen. A., Alanko, P., Tigerstedt, P.M.A., Koistinen, M. 1992. Woody Flora of Fin- land (in Finnish). Helsinki. Jalas, J. and Suominen, J. 1976. Atlas Florae Europaeae, 3. Helsinki. Jóhansen, J. 1985. Studies in the vegetational history of the Faroe and Shetland Islands. Ann. Soc. Scient. Færoensis, Sup.XI. 117. Tórshavn. Jóhansen, J. 1989. Survey of geology, climate, and vegetational history. In: Højgaard, A., Jóhansen, J., and Ødum, S.(eds.). A century of tree-planting in the Faroe Islands. Ann. Soc. Scient. Færoensis, Sup. XIV. Tórshavn: 11-15. Kristinsson, H. 1986. Plontuhandbókin (in Icelandic). Reykjavík.
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