The Study of Plant Life - M. C. Stopes (korean ebook reader TXT) 📗
- Author: M. C. Stopes
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You can see this in an extreme case if you imagine yourself up in a balloon looking down on England as on a map. In certain places you see lakes, that is to say, the rocks and soil are so arranged that they form a basin and hold the water permanently there. Now in a lake, as you know, only water-plants will be growing, so that the presence of a fairly deep and constant lake makes it quite certain what kind of plants must grow in that spot. Imagine an earthquake or some slower earth-movement which is strong enough to change the rocks so that the water all runs away, and the result is that there will be dry land in the same spot where before was the lake. This will cause the water-plants to die sooner or later, and land-plants will replace them.
There is continual change in the arrangement of lakes and rivers, hills and shores, which takes place all around us, but so slowly that we do not notice it. It is slow, and therefore there is not a sudden killing off of any one kind of plant, and a rapid incoming of a different set of plants, but it causes a gradual shifting and moving of the groups among themselves. Sometimes there may be some swift and sudden change, as the result of a landslip or volcano, or in a stream or lake which has been artificially drained, which shows us a very good object-lesson in plant geography.
The importance of the physical form of any place, however, does not only lie in the position of its lakes and streams and the size of its hills. The kind of rock, and nature of the soil covering the rocks, are very important, as well as the many other details of the land.
In England there are no very high mountains, so that you cannot study the effect of great heights on plants, but all the same England affords quite sufficient opportunity for the study of physical geography in its relation to plant-distribution.
Even in the cultivated fields, where man tries to help the plants to overcome their surroundings, you will find the influence of the soil is very largely felt. Ask any farmer about his land, and he may tell you that a certain one of his fields is specially good for potatoes, another for barley, or that in a village a few miles away they can grow splendid crops of strawberries, while his are not worth the planting. Then think of the different kinds of plants for which the different counties of England are noted. No one could get the produce of the cherry orchards and hop-gardens of Kent to grow on the Yorkshire moors. Nor do we find acres of heather moor on the downs in the south of England, but instead there is a short turf with many little flowers which love the chalk and limestone, such as the blue and white polygala, rock roses, and several small orchids.
Now what is the difference between the north and the south of England? It is chiefly one of rock and soil. On the Downs in the south you find a thin coating of brown earth over thick masses of white chalk through the surface of which the water supply quickly runs, so that we get few streams or bogs. In the north the hills are built of coarse sandstones, hard grey limestones, and fine black shales which hold much water, so that there are many swampy places and innumerable streams and little waterfalls. Then, again, the land in the north of Kent, which is so famous for its cherries and hops, is a rich, fine clay, with a muddy and sandy soil, which centuries ago was the bed of a great river, and now is the most important factor in making Kent one of the most fertile parts of England.
If we find that the influence of the physical nature of the land is so strong even in the case of cultivated plants, which are helped by man’s knowledge, we shall expect to find that it is still more felt by the wild plants.
Let us go, for example, to the moors east of Settle, in Yorkshire, where you find the three kinds of rock, the hard limestone, coarse sandstone, and soft, black shales. If you walk across the moors, you will see that the principal plants are heather, bilberry, and several coarse grasses, which grow in more or less irregular patches. If you notice the grasses carefully, you will find that they are of several different kinds, showing varieties in their size, form of leaf, colour, and so on, and that very frequently the different kinds grow on the different types of rock beneath them. After a little experience, you will almost be able to tell what is the nature of the rock on which you are standing by the appearance of the plants at your feet.
If you live anywhere in the south of England, walk over some part of the downs till you see below you in the valley a clay-pit or pottery factory, which shows you that the chalk is no longer under the surface soil, but that it has been replaced by clay. Walk straight towards this place, collecting the plants you meet on the way. On the actual downs you will find many which do not grow near the clay-pit, since they are special chalk lovers. In the clayey valley it is very likely that you may find a pond; if so, walk towards it, noting all you pass on the way. As you get to the edge, reeds and bulrushes, water forget-me-not, tall spikes of water loosestrife, and many others appear which you would have been astonished to meet with on the downs.
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