Ramble Report: September 1, 2022
Leader for
today’s Ramble: Jim
Moneyhun, Flower Garden Curator
Authors of today’s
Ramble report: Linda and Don (please send comments and corrections to Linda: Lchafin@uga.edu)
Insect
identifications: Don
Hunter, Heather Larkin
Link
to Don’s Facebook album for this Ramble. All
the photos that appear in this report, unless otherwise credited, were taken by
Don Hunter.
Number of
Ramblers today: 29
Today’s
emphasis:
Jim, one of two curators of the Flower Garden, took us on a walk through his
domain, concentrating on flowers and plants that attract and support pollinators.
29 Ramblers today
Today’s Reading: Jim
read from Johann Wolfgang von Goethe’s 1790 book The Metamorphosis of Plants:
“Anyone who observes, even a little, the growth of plants, will easily discover
that certain of their external parts sometimes undergo a change and assume,
either entirely, or in greater or lesser degree, the form of the parts adjacent
to them. So, the simple flower, for example, often changes to a double flower
if the petals develop at the place of stamens and anthers.”
Jim Moneyhun, Flower Garden Curator |
Show-and-Tell:
Jim brought Dahlia and Zinnia flower heads, with examples of singles and
doubles of each flower head. Both Dahlias and Zinnias are in the Aster family
which is characterized by flower heads with two types of flowers. In the center of each head,
there is a disk (or sometimes a raised cone) of many tiny, tightly packed fertile flowers that produce
nectar. Being fertile, they have stamens and pistils and, if pollinated, will produce seeds. The disk is surrounded by one or more whorls
of large, colorful sterile flowers whose purpose is attracting pollinators–they
have no stamens or pistils and produce neither nectar or seeds. (There are, of course, some exceptions to this to be discussed on later rambles this fall.) Through breeding techniques, horticulturists have developed Aster family plants
that produce heads composed mostly of the showy ray flowers with few or no disk
flowers (marigolds are another good example). Since there is little or no nectar on
offer, pollinators quickly learn to bypass these flower heads as they search for nectar. And since these
sterile flowers produce no seeds, they provide nothing for seed-eating birds
or small mammals. A flower bed composed only of doubled flower heads will not
see many bees or butterflies in the summer or finches in the fall.
Dahlia flower head with a single whorl of ray flowers and many yellow disk flowers. |
Dahlia flower head with many whorls of ray flowers and no disk flowers. |
A similar thing
happens with flowers in other plant families. There is a Bloodroot cultivar
named ‘Multiplex’ where all the stamens and pistils have been converted to
petals, creating a showy flower that looks more like a Peony than a Bloodroot. With
no reproductive parts, these flowers are incapable of sexually reproducing and are
increased only by manual division or other forms of cloning. Doubling occurs
naturally in many plant families and was written about as long ago as 286 BC.
It is also used by modern horticulturalists to create showier flower clusters. However it occurs, doubling
happens at the expense of reducing the numbers of and availability of the
pollen-, seed-, and nectar-producing structures in the flower or flower head.
Bloodroot, Sanguinaria canadensis ‘Multiplex’ Photo by Brunk-Tan, Wikimedia Commons |
Monarch
|
The main thrust of Jim’s presentation was to say that the Garden has
examples of single flowers, as well as doubles of many species, scattered
throughout the Garden. The doubles are primarily for show but he and other
curators recognize the need for a balance between the single and double
varieties, and make sure the more pollinator-friendly single flowers are well
represented.
Jim also mentioned that the Japanese recognize 24 seasons in a solar
year, further broken down into 72 micro-seasons that are based on subtle but observable
changes in nature, such as ‘Spring Winds Thaw the Ice’ and ‘The Maple and the
Ivy Turn Yellow.’ The Japanese
micro-season for where we are now is described as “the heat starts to die down.” Perfect!
Today’s Route:
We left the Children’s Garden, heading towards the Visitor Center,
passing between the Ceramics Museum and the Visitor Center, and through
the corner of the Heritage Garden, before dropping down into the Flower
Garden. We eventually reached the lower
sections of the Flower Garden and made our way along all of the paths before
heading back up into the Heritage Garden, past the Pawpaw patch and on into the Physic
Garden and Herb Garden.
OBSERVATIONS
IT’S SPIDER SEASON!
Spiny-backed Orb Weaver in its web |
Joro Spider in its seemingly chaotic and multi-layered web. Hopes that Joros had diminished in number this year have been dashed. |
Yellow Garden Spider in its dewdrop-bejeweled web. |
Heather’s keen eyes spotted this very well camouflaged Citrid Flatid Planthopper on a branch overhanging the sidewalk from the parking lot to the Visitor Center. |
The Pecan tree in the Heritage Garden is swarming with caterpillars whose frass litters the sidewalk beneath |
As Jim led us through the Flower Garden, he pointed out a
number of cultivars that have been selected for color or extra petals
or ray flowers but that have retained their attraction for insect pollinators.
Zahara® Starlight Rose Zinnias are a horticultural selection focused on the color of the ray flowers that has left the fertile disk flowers intact. |
Eastern Tiger Swallowtail nectaring on a flower head of Zahara® Starlight Rose Zinnias |
Holy Basil is in the same genus as the familiar culinary Basil but is widely used for religious and medicinal purposes in India. |
Holy Basil flowers with their prominent, pollen-laden anthers and open throats are welcoming to bees. (Photo by Pranav, Flickr) |
Honey-bee visiting a Bee-blossom flower |
Cosmos, a native of Mexico, is a genus in the Aster family with about 26 species. Numerous hybrids and cultivars have been bred for a wide range of flower colors and plant sizes. Most have retained their pollinator appeal and ability to reproduce by seed. The genus name is also used as the common name and trade name.
Abelia is an old-fashioned Southern landscape plant that provides nectar for bees and butterflies throughout summer and fall. The genus Abelia is native to east Asia and Mexico. There are numerous cultivars offering different leaf and flower colors, stem heights, and fall leaf colors. None are known to have spread from cultivation and become invasive. Here’s a link to in-depth information on this genus and its landscape uses. |
Pink Agastache is pollinated by long-tongued insects and hummingbirds. In case you were wondering, that name is pronounced: “Ah-GAS-tuh-key” |
Blue Mealy Sage |
Honeybee nectaring on Garlic Chives flower |
Ligated Furrow Bee gathering pollen from the disk flowers of a Zinna flower head. Photo by Heather Larkin |
Cloudless Sulphur butterfly nectaring on the disk flowers of a Mexican Sunflower |
Horace’s Duskywing nectaring on Lantana flowers
Photo by Heather Larkin |
Eastern Carpenter Bee, nectar robbing on Anise-scented Sage |
Warmer winters and hardy cultivars have made it possible to grow bananas in Athens. This cultivar will come back year after year. |
Banana flowers consist of modified leaves (reddish-purple) that enclose elongated yellow ovaries (future bananas) topped with small sepals, petals, stamens, and styles. |
A “hand” of developing bananas (bottom) and some newly opened flowers (top). For a very in-depth look at banana flowers and fruits, here’s a great webpage. |
|
|
Saddleback Caterpillar Moth Photo by Gary Maness, Moths of North Carolina |
Forktail damselfly
Photo by Heather Larkin |
Redbud Leaf-folder caterpillar surrounded by pellets of frass Photo by Heather Larkin |
Last summer, Flower Garden curators and volunteers enjoyed a watermelon break that included a seed-spitting contest. This year they were rewarded with a small crop of watermelons. |
Citrus
Flatid Planthopper Metcalfa pruinose
Mexican Sunflower
Tithonia rotundifolia
Monarch
butterfly Danaus plexippus
Eastern
Tiger Swallowtail Papilio glaucus
Rattlesnake
Master Eryngium yuccifolium
Pecan
Carya illinoensis
Zahara®
Starlight Rose Zinnia Zinnia sp.
Russian
Sage Perovskia atriplicifolia
Eastern
Carpenter Bee Xylocopa virginica
Purple
Basil Ocimum basilicum
Pink
‘Wheat’ Celosia, Celosia spicata
Holy
Basil Ocimum tenuiflorum
Cleome/Cat’s
Whiskers Cleome gynandra
Zinnias,
not specified Zinnia sp.
Cosmos
Cosmos sp.
Gaura
Gaura sp.
Western
Honey Bee Apis mellifera
Abelia
Abelia x grandiflora ‘Kaleidoscope’
Butterfly
Weed milkweed Asclepias tuberosa
Oleander
aphids Aphis nerii
Midges
Family Chironomidae
Yellow
Garden Spider Agriope aurantia
Banana
plant Musa sp.
Golden
Alexander Zizia aurea
Smooth
Sumac Rhus glabra
Saddleback
caterpillar Acharia stimulea
Ginger
Lily Hedychium sp.
Tiger
Lily Lilium lancifolium syn. Lilium tigrinum
Watermelon
Citrullus lanatus
Angelonia
Angelonia augustifolia
Agastache
Agastache rupestris
Blue
Mealy Sage Salvia farinacea
Common
Buckeye caterpillar Junonia coenia
Job’s
Tears Coix lacryma-jobi
Buckwheat
‘Takane Ruby’ Fagopyrum esculentum
Blackberry
Lily Iris domestica
American
Sycamore Platanus occidentalis
Garlic
Chives Allium tuberosum
Peacock
Gladiolus Gladiolus murielae
Anise-scented
Sage Salvia guaranitica