Fróðskaparrit - 01.01.1995, Side 100

Fróðskaparrit - 01.01.1995, Side 100
104 PARASTENOCARIS GLACIALIS IN THE FAROEISLANDS fauna, but has entered from the free water outside the beaches. Parastenocaris gla- cialis seems to be the only truly interstitial species in these assemblages. In most of the small beaches only a few specimens of P. glacialis were found, while the beaches at Sørvágsvatn (Skjatlá and es- pecially Sørvágsvatn at Ivarsheyggjur) contained dense populations. Possible fur- ther studies on this unique fauna should preferably concentrate on these beaches and this lake. Discussion As mentioned above, P. glacialis may be found in very small water bodies lacking in- and outlets, and also high up in the mountains in Fennoscandia. Apparently the species is limited to the northem parts of Europe (and probably Asia) and is adapted to cool-temperate conditions. The ability to disperse is low among the Parastenocaris species (as evidenced by the distribution of P. phyllura in Fennoscandia, Enckell, 1969). Resting stages are not known from any species and the means of dispersal are unknown. A single species has been repor- ted from plankton, so dispersal in open wa- ter seems unlikely. Dispersal upstream in a water course may be possible in the hy- porheal habitat (Tilzer, 1968). Moreover, species restricted to ífesh water, like P. glacialis, must have greater difficulties to disperse than species able to occur in brackish water (e.g., in the Baltic). It appears that some moss- and plant-liv- ing harpacticoid species have resting stages facilitating dispersal. One Parastenocaris species (P. brevipes) is found both in Sphagnum bogs and in subterranean habi- tats.This might indicate that the ability to form resting stages is not completely ab- sent in the genus. Possibly the occurrence on isolated islands like Iceland, Spitzber- gen and the Faroes in the north, and Tene- rife and New Caledonia in the south (Noodt, 1968) indicates such a possibility. The period of ice recession after the last Ice Age was characterized by meltwater streams and rivers, and dammed lakes (Brinck, 1966). The periglacial fauna - to which P. glacialis probably belonged - con- tained eurythermal and cold-stenothermal species. Bare sandy and gravelly surfaces were common. These areas, which were ex- tensive in the protocratic era during the ice regression, exist i.e. as sandy beaches to- day. An opportunistic species might very well have followed the retreating ice to- wards the north in Fennoscandia (e.g., P. glacialis). Likewise the species might have rafted on ice floes on the surface fresh wa- ter following the break-up of the ice-en- crasted sand/gravel/soil to islands in the North Atlantic, like the Faroes (see En- ckell, 1988, for a discussion of this possi- bility) This type of dispersal presupposes a tole- rance to low temperatures. Many interstitial animals endure freezing, and Jansson (1968) reported living animals in samples of frozen sand from the Baltic (including Parastenocaris phyllura). Enckell (un- publ.) found both P. phyllura and P. gla- cialis in samples of frozen sand from Swedish lakes and the specimens survived the melting of the ice. These two species are also regularly found under the ice in the
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