<h2>CHAPTER XII<br/> <span class="small">ON PLANTS WHICH ADD TO CONTINENTS</span></h2>
<p class="hanging">Lake Aral and Lake Tschad—Mangrove swamps of West Africa—New
mudbanks colonized—Fish, oysters, birds, and mosquitoes—Grasping
roots and seedlings—Extent of mangroves—Touradons of the
Rhone—Sea-meadows of Britain—Floating pollen—Reeds and sedges
of estuarine meadows—Storms—Plants on ships' hulls—Kelps and
tangles in storms—Are seaweeds useless?—Fish.</p>
<p><span class="dropcap">T</span>HE way in which the savage, rugged, inhospitable
Britain of the Ice Age changed into our familiar
peaceful country formed the subject of the last
chapter.</p>
<p>But plants do far more than cover the earth and render it
fertile, for some of them assist in winning new land from the
sea or from freshwater lakes. The Sea of Aral, for instance,
or Lake Tschad are rapidly becoming choked up by reeds
and other vegetation. Blown sand from the deserts around
is caught and intercepted by these reeds, so that fertile
pastures are gradually forming in what used to be the open
water of a deepish lake.</p>
<p>By far the most extraordinary of all these plants which
form new land are the Mangroves.</p>
<p>They are only found in the tropics or sub-tropical regions,
and are always along the sea-coast. It is where a river ends in
a delta, dividing into intricate and confused irregularly
winding creeks, that the mangroves are especially luxuriant.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_157" id="Page_157">157</SPAN></span>
Such a river will have probably flowed through hundreds
of miles of the most exuberant tropical forest, where growth
is never checked by the cold grasp of winter.</p>
<p>Its waters are yellowish brown or <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">café au lait</i> coloured,
because they are full of mud and of decaying vegetation, with
dead leaves and decaying branches floating on the surface.
So full are such rivers of decaying material that they have
a distinct and unmistakable smell, which has been compared
to "crushed marigolds."</p>
<p>So soon as the muddy water reaches the sea, most of its
mud is deposited and forms great banks and shoals of shifting
odoriferous slime, which confuses and interferes with the
discharging mouths of the river.</p>
<p>It is upon these changing, horrible-smelling banks of
bottomless slime that the Mangrove is especially intended
to develop.</p>
<p>If one takes a canoe in such a delta and paddles inwards
on the incoming tide, a dense forest of glossy-green mangroves
will be found to cover the whole coast-line, and also
to extend far inland by the winding creeks, lagoons, and
river channels.</p>
<p>The whole theory of the mangroves becomes clearly
revealed as soon as the water begins to sink at low tide.
First one notices that the stem of every mangrove ends
below, not in a single trunk, but in an enormous number of
arched, stilt-like supporting roots. Not only the stem but
the branches also give off descending roots, which branch into
four or five grasping arched fingers as soon as they get near
the water. When they reach the mud, these fingers grow
down into it and form a new supporting root to the tree.
It is very difficult to give any idea of the extraordinary
appearance of these mangrove roots.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_158" id="Page_158">158</SPAN></span>
Imagine an orchard of very old apple trees in winter, and
suppose that one were to cut off every tree and plant it
upside down in black mud, and also to crowd them so closely
together that the branches were all mixed and confused.
This may give an idea of the odd and strange appearance
of the root-system in a mangrove forest. Upon these arching
roots, even on those which are not yet attached, multitudes
of oysters may be seen. There is also a little fish (a sort of
perch) which climbs up on to the roots or out of the mud
below, and gasps or squatters about in it.</p>
<p>As to the mud itself, it is a horrible, greasy, oozy, black or
blue-black slime of bottomless depth. "It is full of organic,
putrefying, strongly-smelling material, clearly full of bacteria.
The water itself is sometimes covered by a dirty, oily scum,
and air-bubbles rising from the bottom, spread out on the
surface and let loose their microbes in the atmosphere."<SPAN name="FNanchor_74" id="FNanchor_74" href="#Footnote_74" class="fnanchor">[74]</SPAN>
There are many crocodiles, which may be seen reposing on
the mud above high tide. It is difficult to distinguish them
from a rough log of wood, but it is still more difficult to kill
them, for their scales turn any ordinary bullet. There is
scarcely any experience more exasperating than when, after
one has taken a long, careful, and accurate aim, one observes
the sleeping brute suddenly wake and scurry down into the
water with a hideous leer on its face. Sea-cows or manatees
are said to live in these creeks. Little ducks of many kinds
rise in hundreds and thousands, but the commonest bird is
the "curlew" (either a whimbrel or closely allied to it).
During the day they sift the mud with their long curved
beaks for insects, and at sunset fly down in vast numbers to
the mudbanks near the sea. A miserable little white crane
called "Poor Joe" is common, and has the same habit. It
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_159" id="Page_159">159</SPAN></span>
is not worth shooting, and it is quite aware of the fact.
Herons, cormorants, and other birds are often to be seen.
Monkeys sometimes visit the mangroves, probably to eat
oysters or crabs. There are several kinds of crablike
creatures which climb up the roots and may be seen running
about all over them. But during the three weeks spent
by the writer in the Mahéla creeks of Sierra Leone, it was
the insects that made the deepest impression upon him; as
soon as the evening falls the mosquitoes appear in myriads
and in millions. Such creeks and mangrove swamps are
always feverstricken and dangerous, and probably enjoy the
very worst climate in the whole world. Of course nowadays,
when Sir Patrick Manson and Dr. Ross have discovered that
the mosquito carries the malaria germ, it is possible with great
care to guard against malaria. One has also the satisfaction
of knowing that the mosquito itself cannot be perfectly at
ease with all these tiny parasites attacking its digestive
organs.</p>
<p>At first sight such swamps appear to be useless, impossible,
and dangerous. But that is not the case. No one, of course,
would ever willingly reside in mangrove swamps, and the
mangroves themselves are of scarcely any use to man, although
the bark does sometimes furnish a useful tanning
material; but, indirectly, the mangroves are one of the most
important of all Nature's geographical agents.</p>
<p>On those horrible, slimy, shifting mudbanks no other
plants could manage to exist. If one looks carefully at the
seaward side of the last of the mangrove swamps, then it is
easy to see that they are colonizing and reclaiming the mud.</p>
<p>Not only do the roots depending from the branches grasp
and colonize new mud, but the seedlings are also specially
adapted to fulfil the same office.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_160" id="Page_160">160</SPAN></span>
They remain a long time attached to the parent fruit;
they also grow to a considerable length before they fall off.
When ready to fall, they have a distinct seedling stem, which
swells out towards the base and ends in a pointed root. The
seedling is, in fact, like a club hanging upside down and with
a pointed end. When it does fall, it goes straight down
deep into the mud; then it promptly forms some anchoring
roots, and the young mangrove is fixed in new mud and
begins to develop. So that the forest continually grows
towards the sea.</p>
<p>Such mudbanks soon become pierced by roots in every
direction. Then the leaves of the mangroves themselves,
as well as silt, soil, and rubbish floating in the water,
gradually accumulate about and around these roots. This
must raise the level of the ground. Eventually the soil
becomes hardened and is above the level of the water. When
this happens, the mangrove, which likes salt water about
its roots, becomes unhealthy and the ordinary jungle trees
kill it and take its place. Thus in course of time, when the
jungle is cleared, fertile ricefields may be thriving on what
was once a pure, or rather impure, mudbank.</p>
<p>In this way, by the continual development of the mangroves,
enormous stretches of land are being added to the
continents, and the process continues so long as the
character of the coast-line favours it.</p>
<p>The shore-line covered by these mangrove swamps is
enormous. In fact, within the tropics one finds them almost
everywhere along the seashore, but coral, rock, or an exceedingly
dry climate such as that of Arabia or Northern
Peru, prevents their growth. Central and South America,
West and East Africa, India, Polynesia, Australia, and much
of the Asiatic coast-line, is covered by mangroves.</p>
<div><SPAN name="a_ricefield_in_china" id="a_ricefield_in_china"></SPAN></div>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG class="mw" src="images/i_160.jpg" alt="" /> <div class="caption"> <p class="small"><i>Stereo Copyright, Underwood & Underwood</i><span class="j2"><i>London and New York</i></span></p> <p class="smcap">A Ricefield in China</p>
<p>The proprietor and two of his coolies are in front of the paddy field. The young rice
plants can be seen growing in the water.</p>
</div>
</div>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_161" id="Page_161">161</SPAN></span>
Theophrastus speaks of those in the Persian gulf, and
that exceedingly shrewd botanist has some valuable notes
about them worth reading even to-day.<SPAN name="FNanchor_75" id="FNanchor_75" href="#Footnote_75" class="fnanchor">[75]</SPAN></p>
<p>In temperate countries, such as our own, the districts
where great rivers enter the sea are for the most part aguish
and rheumatic, but, of course, there is nothing so startling
and extraordinary as the mangrove swamps.</p>
<p>Yet, even in temperate countries, the work of winning or
gaining new land plods steadily onwards, and it is performed
by humble, inconspicuous little plants.</p>
<p>Where the Rhone enters the Mediterranean, there are
some 40,000 acres of sandy and clayey land called the
Camargue. The bare sand near the sea is often flooded and
swept by violent storms in winter; anything which tries to
grow there is usually carried<SPAN name="FNanchor_75-b" id="FNanchor_75-b" href="#Footnote_75-b" class="fnanchor">[75-b]</SPAN> off and destroyed.</p>
<p>[note 75-b: Drude, <i lang="la" xml:lang="la">l.c.</i>; Schimper, <i lang="la" xml:lang="la">l.c.</i>; Warming, <i lang="la" xml:lang="la">l.c.</i>; <cite>Colonial Reports</cite>, No.
3, Miscellaneous. Schimper, <cite>Indo-Malayische Strandflora</cite>.]</p>
<p>But, after a time, one finds here and there a solitary plant
of a kind of Saltwort (<i lang="la" xml:lang="la">Salicornia macrostachya</i>) which has
withstood the strain: its branches gather a little sand and
hold it together, and its roots gradually explore and tie
down the soil around it. Next winter it can stand the sweep
and scour of the stormy water; next summer other plants
begin to grow on this tiny sand-heap, and the "touradon," as
it is called, is now fairly well established. It goes on growing
until it may be, after a few years, six feet in diameter.</p>
<p>Eventually the salt gets washed out of the soil and these
little heaps become united by a continuous covering of green
plants in which shrubs and then trees begin to grow.<SPAN name="FNanchor_76" id="FNanchor_76" href="#Footnote_76" class="fnanchor">[76]</SPAN> By this
time of course the sand has accumulated farther out to sea
and the same process is going on there.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_162" id="Page_162">162</SPAN></span>
In Britain we have the "sea meadows" of Sea-grass,
which covers the submerged sand and mudbanks near the
mouths of great rivers.</p>
<p>The waving green grasslike leaves form a rich submarine
meadow. They are used for stuffing pillows and cushions,
especially in Venice, but their real importance in the world
depends upon their being able to tie down and fix permanently
those unseen shifting banks which form a real
danger to all navigation.</p>
<p>These plants are very remarkable. They lived, no doubt,
at one time on the land, like most of the flowering plants.
But, like the whale and the seal, they have been driven
to take refuge below the ocean. They are not easily seen,
and, indeed, one may wander for years along the sea-coast
and never suspect that great meadows of Zostera (the
Eelwrack, Grasswrack, or Sea-grass) are flourishing under
water.</p>
<p>But, one might ask, how is the pollen of its flowers
carried? Obviously neither insects nor the wind can be
of any service. The pollen of Zostera is, however, of the
same weight exactly as the water, so that it neither rises
to the surface nor sinks to the bottom, but floats to and
fro until it reaches the outspread styles of another plant.
This is perhaps the most remarkable arrangement known for
the carrying of pollen.</p>
<p>Sometimes along the seashore, or especially on the muddy
foreshore of an estuary or tidal river, one can watch those
plants which are trying to form new land. One finds
generally that there is a broad stretch of marshy meadow
interrupted and intersected by small ditches and little
winding streams. As one gets towards the shore, Sea-pink,
Scurvy-grass, an Aster, and other plants, not to be found
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_163" id="Page_163">163</SPAN></span>
elsewhere, become common. Then stretching out into the
mud there are rows of curious reeds and sedges.</p>
<p>Try to pull up one of these reeds, and you will find
a strong, buried, stringy stem, with hundreds of anchoring
roots. These are the pioneers which first fix the sand.</p>
<p>Over the surface of the sand between these upright
stems, one often comes upon a most beautiful, glossy, dark-green,
velvety cushion. It is composed of a seaweed called
Vaucheria, whose twined and interlaced threads form a
thick, silky cushion. But it is only beautiful to look at
from above. If you pull up a piece of this cushion, you
will find that it is growing on black and loathly mud,
with many wriggling worms and horrible animalcula.
First these pioneer reeds, then this soft, silky carpet of
vaucheria, and then the sea-pinks and other estuarine
marsh flowers gradually creep forward and extend over
the bare muddy sand, so winning it from the sea for the use
of cattle.</p>
<p>In the worst winter storms, when the waves are thundering
heavily over these sands, it seems as if nothing
could resist them. Yet if you go down when the storm
is over, no harm has been done: there is the silky green
cushion of vaucheria, and there are the lines of pioneer
sedges and reeds quite undisturbed!</p>
<p>The reeds bend and sway, yielding to the water; the seaweed
is slimy and oily, and the water cannot injure it. But
yet the strength of these seaweeds is extraordinary, and,
indeed, almost incredible.</p>
<p>More remarkable still, perhaps, are those seaweeds
which grow upon rocks, often where the full strength
of the waves beats upon them. After a heavy storm,
when, perhaps, the great timbers of groins and the heavy
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_164" id="Page_164">164</SPAN></span>
concrete blocks of an esplanade have been shattered to
pieces and tossed all over the shore, one may go down to
the shore and there will be no visible difference in the kelps
and tangles of the rocks. Scarcely any seem to have
been broken away. Indeed, if one looks in the rubbish
left by the last high tide, one finds that when one of these
Alarias has been broken away, it is often because the stone
itself has been torn out of the rock! One finds broken off
stones with the seaweed still attached to them.</p>
<p>The reason is that the outside of the seaweed is oily,
slimy, or slippery, so that the water gets no hold of it. The
stem and substance is also elastic and surprisingly strong, so
that the daily tossing and wrenching when the tides come in
and go out has no effect in tearing it away.</p>
<p>But if you go down to a dry dock and look at the hull
of a ship which has come in to be cleaned and scraped,
you will see that it is entirely covered by seaweeds and
shells.</p>
<p>That ship has been driven through the water perhaps at ten
miles an hour or more, and yet those delicate-looking seaweeds
have held on! It is more surprising still if you can get
some of them and examine them with a microscope, for
amongst them are tiny, delicate, graceful little fronds and
sprays which one would think consisted of nothing but jelly.
Yet they have been able to thrive and grow on the ship's
hull while it has been hurrying day and night through the
sea, in calm or in tempest, and in currents of hot or cold
water.</p>
<p>Those seaweeds were called by Horace <i lang="la" xml:lang="la">Algæ inutiles</i>,
or useless seaweeds; but are they useless?</p>
<p>Go down to a little pool and watch them waving in the
water. Could anything be more beautiful than these little
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_165" id="Page_165">165</SPAN></span>
graceful red, yellow, or brown sprays? All sorts of seaslugs,
shrimps, and minute animals of weird and wonderful design
are clearly living on them. Fishes live upon these animals,
and fishes are an extremely useful and excellent food for
man.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_166" id="Page_166">166</SPAN></span></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />