•)•) 



Nr. ;{. C 11. Ostenfeld: 



T:il)lc I. 



Pliylo-scofirapliical Dislricis ol" Circcnland. 



West. East. 



sr — so° VIII 8:r — 81°. 



81° — 76° VII. 



76° — 72° VI. 

 72° — 69°:}0. ) 



V. 



Scoresby S. [ 



69° 30 — 67° IV. 



67° - 6.-)° ) 

 Anj^maj^salik J 



65° -61° II. 



(il° — 60°. 



soiithernmost parts of Greenland, while between these, 

 thcre are 6 districts on tlie East Coast (E VII — E II) and 

 7 on Ihe West Coast (W VII— W II), the island ol" Disko 

 (VI)) being taken by itself as distinct from the correspond- 

 ing portion of the niainland (Va); this is dne to the faet 

 that the southern portion of the island shelters a nuniber 

 of soLitherly species which are lacking on the niainland. 



I have noted for each district: 



1. No. of species,^ and then divided theni 



2. according to their geographical occurrence oulside Green- 



land, and 



3. according to the phyto-geographical types lo which this 



distribution refers them; also noting 



4. hoNV niany of the species of a district are found only 



in West Greenland (for the West Coast districts) and 



in East Greenland (for the East Coast districts) 



'For some of the districts (E II and 1-: IV) in tiic southern part of 

 the east coast 1 iiave included a small number of species that are not 

 actually recorded from there, but occur both to the north and south of 

 them, and so, in all probability, are to be found in the districts also, tliese 

 havinj; not been very thoroughly investigated and also forming very poor 

 habitats for piants, inter alia, on account of the limited ice-free arca. 



