What’s Blooming March 4 2020

 Hi Ramblers!

It’s been almost a year since out last Ramble and I wanted to encourage you to come out to the Garden. Today Emily and I walked the Orange Trail and the Dunson Garden just to see what what was flowering.

 

You can find the flowers that are likely to be blooming by using the blog archives and looking at previous Ramble Reports. All the photos in this post were taken by Don Hunter in early March on a previous Ramble. See if you can find when they were taken. (Hint: use the Blog Archive feature on the right hand side of this page.)

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FINE Things No 37

Some moths have aquatic caterpillars. And some of these caterpillars are parasitized by wasps that dive underwater to find them. (link)


European starlings in North America went from less than 100 birds released in Central Park to almost 200 million in 150 years. How was that possible? (link)


Is climate change a ticking time-bomb for great tits? Birds that depend upon an abundance of particular food sources at specific times of the year may not be able to adapt fast enough to climate change. (link)

 

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FINE Things No. 35

Rosemary suggested: A video about Ants! (link)

Linda suggests: 9 Rules for the Woke Birdwatcher, by J. Drew Lanham. (link)

The adaptations that enable Owls to rule the night. (link)

Petunia’s Waxy Cuticle Regulates the Plant’s Sweet Smell. The thicker the flower petals’ cuticle, the more fragrance compounds the plant releases, according to a recent study. (link)

Invertebrate Density Influences Plant Flowering Times, Abundance
An experimental study explores how plant communities may be affected by future declines in invertebrate populations. (link)

The Birds and the Bees and the Bearded Dragons-Evolution of a Sex-Determination System (link)

When fungi infect wood they often produce colorful substances. The result is called “spalting” and spalted wood is very attractive; it is used by many fine woodworkers to produce strikingly beautiful furniture and turned wood bowls. The Mushroom Club of Georgia recently recorded a Zoom lecture by an expert on spalting wood fungi. (link)

Research catches up with the world’s fastest growing plant. (link)

Watching genes turn on. (link)

 

Where do genes come from? (link)

The world’s most dangerous fart. (link)

Why do we pass gas? (link)

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Last Camp at Woodland Caribou

by Tim Homan

        Woodland Caribou Provincial Park, Ontario.  Mid-August, 2018, last two nights of our canoe trip along the Bloodvein River, which for most of its mileage through the park is totally unrecognizable as a stream with a flowing current.  Here the Bloodvein is largely a chain of lakes with numerous islands and long improbably shaped peninsulas dividing the lakes up into arms and bays and coves that stretch out in all directions.
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FINE Things No. 33

From Rosemary Woodel:To study a rare butterfly, this scientist had to get vertical. (link)

Need some magic in your life? Here’s the answer: Eric Chien, based in Beijing and raised in the US, has won an International Federation of Magic Societies’ world championship title. (link)

Back by poopular demand: How do wombats poop cubes? Scientists get to the bottom of the mystery (link)

Breathing Life Into the Corpse Flower. In botanic gardens, the lineage of a famously smelly plant is threatened. Can a new collaborative program save it? (link)
 

You should be excited that scientists are releasing 750 million genetically modified mosquitoes this year. Texas and the Florida Keys will see the release of GM insects in a plan to reduce disease transmission, (link)

Emily & Linda recommend Drew Lanham in “On Being”: “I worship every bird that I see.” (link)

Most of you have heard of Potassium, but what is it? And where does it come from? What is it used for? Derek Miller, of Veritasium, has the answers and more. (link)

From Rosemary Woodel: I made this movie about a wildflower walk in Inisheer, one of the Aran Islands.  I had given my i.d. book of Irish wildflowers to Linda so I did the naming using two websites.  Might be wrong on some of them. It’s 11 min long.   I posted it for Karen Hunter’s birthday. (link)

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FINE Things No. 32

From Linda: Stickiness is a weapon some plants use to fend off hungry
insects. (link)

How plants influence the honeybee caste system: workers and queens. (link)

It could be controversial, so I hesitated to post this link. “Plantwatch: weeds – appreciating the wild things on our streets. Lockdown may have given us more respect for the wild plants, and the work they do, in our urban areas.” (link)

“Absolutely Barking”; Nearly everything you need to know about bark. (link)

If you’ve ever been hiking in the higher elevations of the Rocky Mountains or the Sierra Nevadas you may have heard a high-pitched whistle. The sound was produced by a Pika, a fluffy ball of fur about the size of a hamster, but related to a rabbit. Pikas are adapting to climate change remarkably well, contrary to many predictions. (link)

Catherine Chastain submitted this one: Ice pancakes swirl on river. (link)

Both Linda and I recommend this: Milkweed Pollination: A
Series of Fortunate Events. (link)

 Jan Coyne recommended this one: Beetle parents manipulate
information broadcast from bacteria in a rotting corpse. (link)

These Mites Rain Down To Save Your
Strawberries | Deep Look (link)

These Face Mites Really Grow on You | Deep Look (link)

It’s not nature, except in the sense that it exploits the
laws of physics. I think you’ll enjoy it. 
(link)

The Contradictory Plant Known as Beefsteak Plant, Shiso,
and Perilla Mint, Perilla frutescens.
(link)

Emily recommended the next two:

We’ve waited for years on this news from down under and the
nerds of Georgia Tech shaped the solution. Warning! Pun alert! “Box seat:
scientists solve the mystery of why wombats have cube-shaped poo. Unique
physiology allows the Australian marsupial to produce square-shaped feces that
may aid communication.”
(link)

Moths to monkeys: 503 new species identified by UK scientists. (link)
Coastal job: sand artist. Must see sand sculptures. (link)
A new study finds global ice loss is now in line with the worst-case 
scenarios of the United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate 
Change, with ice sheets in Greenland and Antarctica melting the fastest. (link)
At least 14 new North Atlantic Right whale calves have been seen
 off south-eastern US this season. (link)
The Ocean's Mysterious Vitamin Deficiency. 
A puzzling lack of thiamine is disrupting some marine ecosystems. (link)


Stinkhorns: Fungi No One Can Love?

An appeal from Dr. John Wares, president of the Friends of the Georgia Museum of Natural History.
“If you are able to give, the Friends of GMNH is still one of the most important funding resources that our Georgia Museum of Natural History has these days. In the absence of our fundraising gatherings, your donations and memberships are important to us and we will be eager to get back to regular activities when it is safe to do so.”

To become a member of the Friends of GMNH, click here

This post first appeared in the weekly Newsletter of the Friends of GMNH and appears here courtesy of Dr. Robert Wyatt.

Stinkhorns: Fungi No One Can Love?

by Dr. Robert Wyatt

Those of us with broad interests in natural history enjoyed a stellar year for fungi in the late summer and fall of 2020.  Unusually high rainfall coupled with prolonged warm temperatures brought forth a diverse array of mycological wonders.  In my yard perhaps the most intriguing of these were the stinkhorns (Phallales), which first announced their presence to me via their putrid smell, reminiscent of decaying flesh.  And then I spied the horn, which, as the Latin name implies, looks very much like a phallus.  They certainly deserve their common name!

Phallus ravenellii with large and small flies feeding on the gleba

These interlopers arrived in mid-October but stayed around, appearing sporadically depending on weather conditions, until December.  The first wave was the largest, with perhaps as many as 100, spread across several clusters, suddenly springing up from coarse mulch applied earlier in the summer along our driveway.  Ann and I quickly identified this distinctive species as Phallus ravenellii, named “in honor” of Henry William Ravenel, a South Carolina planter and botanist who described many new species of fungi and flowering plants.  [I use quotation marks because one might wonder exactly how pleased Ravenel was to receive the dubious distinction of having a stinkhorn dubbed “Ravenel’s Phallus.”]
 

One of the largest clusters of Phallus ravenellii

 

In any case, this mushroom is hard to miss, reaching a height of 10 cm or more with a white, spongy stem that is hollow and a cap covered with a gray-green gelatinous gleba in which the spores are embedded.  These above ground structures last only a day or two, but more may emerge from “eggs” located just below the surface.

“Egg” of Phallus ravenellii and American carrion beetle

 

The elevation of the stalk occurs surprisingly rapidly (see time-lapse film at this link).  Every time I checked these ‘shrooms, they were covered with small to large flies including fruit flies (Drosophilidae), fungus gnats (Mycetophilidae), and house flies (Muscidae) apparently enjoying the banquet of bad-smelling, but presumably tasty and nourishing, slime . Harder to see because of their ability to disappear very quickly were green and black beetles that proved to be American Carrion Beetles (Necrophila americana), which normally feed on dead and decaying animal flesh.

Necrophila americana American carrion beetle

At first I thought the flies and beetles might be dupes of the stinkhorn — tricked into visiting by the distinctive odor and picking up and transporting spores inadvertently on their legs and bodies.  But they were regularly present and lingered as long as slime was available.  Apparently, the gleba is highly nutritious, and the spores and slime are purposely ingested by insects, which carry relatively few spores on the outside of their bodies (Tuno, 1998).  This intrepid Japanese researcher examined hundreds of fly rectums and found, on average, drosophilids harbored 35,000 to 240,000 spores, whereas muscids contained 1,680,000!  And germination of these spores was > 90%.  This would seem to answer a question posed by Roy (1994), who wondered if the attraction of flying insects was really advantageous to stinkhorns.  The latter are not pathogenic and therefore differ from the rust and smut fungi whose spores are delivered by confused flies to infect flowers of the plants she studied.  It seems likely that these insects defecate spores in areas conducive for growth of stinkhorns, spore germination is enhanced (or at least not diminished) after passage through fly digestive tracts, and spores may grow better in the nitrogen-enhanced environment that fly feces provide.
There is a further wrinkle to this story.  Recently, Teichert et al. (2012) discovered a bizarre understory tree in Brazilian rainforest that they argue is pollinated by certain nitulid and scarab beetles that ordinarily disperse spores of stinkhorns.  The odor chemistry of the foul-smelling flowers of Dugetia cadaverica (Annonaceae) involves molecules typically associated with the smells of carcasses and cheese and which are chemically similar to the characteristic earthy odors of fungi.  They conclude that this plant deceives the beetles using visual cues, such as flowers produced at ground level that resemble mushrooms, as well as olfactory ones.  [I am not making this up!]
Here are a couple more links:  (https://www.mushroomexpert.com/phallaceae.html) and (https://www.walterreeves.com/landscaping/stinkhorn-mushroom-identification-and-control/).
________________________________________
Dr. Robert Wyatt obtained his bachelor’s degree from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and his doctorate from Duke University, both in Botany. He taught for two years at Texas A&M University before joining the faculty at the University of Georgia, where he was a Professor of Botany and Ecology for more than 20 years. From 1999 to 2005 Dr. Wyatt was the Executive Director of the Highlands Biological Station, an interinstitutional center of the University of North Carolina. He has won numerous awards for teaching and research, including a Guggenheim Fellowship that enabled him to produce a book entitled Ecology and Evolution of Plant Reproduction. He has trained more than 40 graduate students, received millions of dollars in research grants, and published more than 160 scientific papers.

 

FINE Things No. 31

Natural history museums could/should play a role in
pandemic surveillance. Preserving specimens or tissues from species known to
harbor infectious diseases can be used to help determine a pathogen’s source. (link

Monarch butterflies in the western United States migrate
too, but to the southern California-Baja California coast, not to the mountains
of central Mexico. There were 1.2 million butterflies in this western
overwintering population when they were first counted in 1997. This year there
were 1914. (link)

Why cats are crazy about catnip. (link to video) (Link to Article)

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