Ramble Report May 18 2023

 Leader
for today’s Ramble:

Linda and Roger

Authors
of today’s Ramble report:
Linda, Don, Dale, and Roger. Comments, edits, and suggestions for the
report can be sent to Linda at Lchafin@uga.edu.

Invertebrate,
gall, and fungi identification:
Heather Larkin, Don
Hunter, Bill Sheehan

Link to Don’s Facebook album for this Ramble.

Most
of the photos
that appear in this report were taken by Don Hunter, Heather
Licklighter Larkin, Roger Collins, Bill Sheehan, and Aubrey Cox. Photos borrowed from the
internet are credited by name with a link to their source. Photos may be
enlarged by clicking them with a mouse or tapping on your screen.

Southern Magnolia
photo by Don Hunter

Today’s
emphasis
:
Seeking what we find on the Orange and Purple trails with a special focus on early
19th century land use history of the area now occupied by the Botanical
Garden.
Number
of Ramblers today:
17

Ramblers gathered between rain showers on this cool,
cloudy
morning.
photo by Don Hunter

photo by Don Hunter

Reading:
In her
second novel, Gilead, Marilynne Robinson wrote: “Sometimes I have
loved the peacefulness of an ordinary [rainy] day. It is like standing in a newly
planted garden after a warm rain. You can feel the silent and invisible life.
All it needs from you is that you take care not to trample on it …. such a
quiet day, rain on the roof, rain against the windows, and everyone grateful,
since it seems we never do have quite enough rain…. I have spent my life
watching, not to see beyond the world, but merely to see – great mystery – what
is plainly before my eyes. I think the concept of transcendence is based on a
misreading of creation. With all respect to heaven, the scene of the miracle is
here, among us.”

Heather with her macro-photography kit
photo by Aubrey Cox

Show and Tell: “What’s all that stuff
that Heather’s carrying around?” Heather explained the gear that
makes up her macro-photography kit. In addition to the macro lens that she
pairs with her full frame, mirrorless camera body, she has a diffusing hood (Cygnustech)
that surrounds the barrel of her lens.It diffuses the light from the flash, pointing it down in front of the
lens at her subject instead of behind. In response to many questions, Heather also showed off the snazzy hip clip (Spider Holster) where
she carries the camera when not in use, saving the discomfort caused by having
all of the weight on a strap around her neck and shoulders.

Announcements:
Georgia
Forest Watch is sponsoring a “Wild Herbs Walk” with Patricia Kyritsi Howell, RH
(AHG), founder of BotanoLogos
School of Herbal Studies
on Friday, May
26, 10:00am – 1:30pm. The leisurely walk in the Chattahoochee National Forest will cover about one mile, with lots
of pauses to look at medicinal plants. For more information, email info@gafw.org or call (706) 867-0051.

Humphrey’s Spring Branch
photo by Don Hunter

Today’s
Route: 
We left the arbor next
to the Children’s Garden and walked to the Orange Trail trailhead on the Garden’s entrance
road. We took the Orange Trail along Humphrey’s Spring Branch down to the
beaver pond, where we crossed the boardwalk and then returned uphill to the
Visitor Center on the Purple Trail. Our route today was described in a 2001 Garden
publication, “Plant Communities Along the
Purple/Orange Trail at the State Botanical Garden of Georgia,” researched and
written by Anne Shenk, Elaine Nash, and Ann Mathews.
You can access this
guide here.

OBSERVATIONS:

On our way to the Orange Trail, we stopped to
look at the Witch Hazel shrubs growing along the Children’s Garden fence. Many of the
leaves sported small conical “witches’ hats,” which are actually a temporary home to gall-forming aphids.
Photo by Don Hunter

Dale wrote about Witch Hazel galls in the Nature Ramble blog
of April 27, 2017 (lightly edited for today’s report):

The conical galls on Witch Hazel are produced by an aphid with a
complex life history that alternates between two plants, River Birch and Witch Hazel,
and two life forms, asexual and sexual. In the spring, female aphids (Hormaphis
hamamelidis
) emerge from all-female eggs laid near leaf buds on the Witch Hazel
the previous autumn. As the tender leaves emerge, the young female aphids begin
feeding on them (sucking the sap) and the leaf responds by producing a green,
cone-shaped structure around the aphid (which later turns dark red). The gall
is rich in nutrients and provides food for the female as well as shelter for her young. Once
protected inside the gall, the young female aphid produces eggs asexually (a
process called parthenogenesis that produces offspring that are genetically
identical to the mother). The female then dies. Later in the spring, the underside
of the gall, visible on the lower leaf surface, splits open and winged female aphids
leave the gall and fly away to the alternative host plant, a River Birch
tree. Here they will lay eggs on the lower leaf surfaces of birch leaves. Several
generations of wingless, all-female aphids are produced on the birch leaves (they
resemble white flies). Eventually, in the fall, the final, all-female generation
of wingless aphids lays eggs that produce sexual, winged aphids – both female
and male – that mate when they mature, thus introducing some genetic diversity
into the life cycle. The inseminated females then fly to Witch Hazel shrubs where
they lay all-female eggs on twigs near the leaf buds. These eggs overwinter
and, in the spring, they hatch,
starting the Witch Hazel generation again.” (Thanks, Dale!)

Lower surface of the Witch Hazel gall showing
exit hole
photo by Don Hunter

Heather dissected one of the galls. Some were
empty (left), some still contained adults and larvae (center and right).
photo (left) by Don Hunter, photos (center and right) by Heather Larkin

Giant Onion, planted near the
Visitor Center Plaza, is a species of onion native to the Himalayas that
produces beautiful, perfectly round spheres of many small purple-pink flowers. The plant can reach 4.5 feet in height.
photo by Frank Liebig

As
we began the downhill walk on the Orange Trail, the misty, gray day seemed to bring with it a peaceful, quiet mood.
Ramblers? Quiet? Yes, it happens.

Humphrey’s Spring Branch, formerly known only
as “the stream beside the Orange Trail,” now has a name, thanks to Roger’s
research.
photo by Don Hunter
Roger
pointed out the terraced slope on the left side of the Orange Trail as we
walked from the trailhead down along Humphrey’s Spring Branch.
photo by Don Hunter

Roger
is researching the land use history of several areas in and around Athens, focusing
now on the Botanical Garden. He stopped the group where several old Shortleaf
Pines line the trail. He pointed out that the larger trees are more than 100
years old – earlier this year, he’d aged a similarly sized, fallen Shortleaf Pine nearby by counting its
annual growth rings. Upslope, he pointed out evidence of terracing
, a practice employed
globally by farmers for thousands of years, and introduced
to farm fields in Georgia around 1935, as part of the FDR administration’s
efforts to prevent erosion and restore degraded agricultural land.

The orange bumps that dot the Brown-toothed
Crust Fungus coating this branch are galls created by tiny gall midges.
photo by Don Hunter

Bill told us the midge is an
undescribed species in the midge family (Cecidomyiidae, a family of flies known as gall midges or gall gnats) that feeds on fungus inside the
gall. Bill raised a batch of these midges and took the photos below. He assumes that the white stuff underfoot
is a fungus, but is not sure if it is
Brown-toothed
Crust fungal material or if it
is a different
fungus imported by the midge.

photos by Bill Sheehan

Dale provided this information: “Midges are true flies and therefore have two wings. The two tiny, brown, club-shaped structures just behind and below the wings are called ‘halteres’ and are homologous to a second pair of wings, but they are not wings. The halteres vibrate during flight and, as the body of the fly changes orientation, receptors at the base of each haltere sense the movement and communicate with the central nervous system, enabling it to sense where the fly body is oriented in space and time.”
 

Bonnet mushrooms completely encircled the
base
of a mossy tree trunk.
photo by Don Hunter

 

Phylloxera
are aphid-like
insects
that feed on the leaves of many plant species. The plants respond by enclosing the
insect in a gall where a female then lays eggs and young insects develop.
This gall was probably formed by the Hickory Pouch gall-forming aphid. Photos: t
op of leaf, left, and bottom of
leaf, right, showing a large slit from which the adult Phylloxera exited.
photos by Don Hunter

Bill dissected the Phylloxera gall and discovered that its contents are dead insects, the living ones having departed through the slit.
photo by Bill Sheehan

Fungi have proliferated along the Orange Trail in the cool, damp weather we’ve been
having.

Common Split Gill mushroom
photo by Heather Larkin

Crown-tipped Coral Fungus
photo by Heather Larkin

Two forms of the same species of Xylaria
photo by Heather Larkin

Xylaria flabelliformis has no common name – maybe it’s just too confusing when there are two such drastically different forms: a bushy asexual form (right and left) and a finger- or club-like sexual form (center). They are so different that some experts want to give them different names but that breaks the naming rules.

Another species of Xylaria, this one known as
Dead Moll’s Fingers
photo by Don Hunter

Hairy Rubber Cup fungus might be better named
“peanut butter cups.”
photo by Don Hunter
Close-up of Hairy Rubber Cup fungus
photo by Heather Larkin
Roger stopped near the head of Humphrey’s Spring Branch.
photo by Don Hunter

Ramblers have stopped at this small ravine many times to look at an example of headward
erosion. Headward erosion occurs when spring flow washes soil and rock backwards
upslopefrom the point of origin. The result is that the stream lengthens opposite from the
downslope direction of stream flow.

It turns out that this is Humphrey’s Spring, which Roger located by researching land records from the early 1800s. In the
photo above, he is holding the trunk of a downed Tulip Tree that fell across the trail
several years ago. By counting the annual rings, he determined that the tree
was at least 170 years old when it fell. This tree would have shaded the
spring, helping to keep the water and any foodstuffs stored there cool and fresh.

The steep hillside across from Humphrey’s
Spring Branch was too steep to plow, though it was undoubtedly logged at least
once over the years.

photo by Don Hunter

At this
point along the Orange Trail, a small tributary, Robison’s Spring Branch, flows into Humphrey’s Spring
Branch.
photo by Don Hunter

Earlier
in the week, Roger followed this tributary upslope and discovered a small stone
spring box at its origin downslope from the UGarden greenhouses. Based on the property owner’s
name at the time of its construction, Roger has named the tributary
Robison’s Spring Branch. The name of Robison, probably a variation of Robeson as in the North Carolina county, is the spelling in the deed records and is the family name in the cemetery just over the hill in Hidden Hills Lane.  The Robison family owned 400 acres which would have included the spring.  “The spring” is mentioned in the metes and bounds of their deeds.

The
spring box was constructed in the early 1800s. The metal pipe emerging from
the left side of the box was a later addition,
1890s to early 1900s,
probably to serve a ram pump to get water up to the house
. The pipe-like thing in the middle is a stick.
photo by Roger Collins

 

As the floodplain along Humphrey’s Spring
Branch
widens, Broad
Beech Fern (aka “Fox-head Fern” to Ramblers) becomes abundant.
photo by Don Hunter

 

We saw many small, dark snails in Humphrey’s Spring Branch.

In Charlie Wharton’s 1998 report, “The Natural
Environments of
the
State Botanical Garden of Georgia” (link to the report),
he mentions finding “little black aquatic
snails” in the genus Elimia in this creek (which he called “South Creek”).

photo by Heather Larkin

We left
the forest behind when we arrived at the boardwalk crossing the beaver pond. The
pond
has
changed
in appearance since we were here
on May 4. Then the pond was dominated by Duck Potato; now, Rice Cut-grass has
entered the picture and filled all the gaps between the Duck Potato.

Rice
Cut-grass stems and leaf margins are lined with sharp teeth that can actually
draw blood from bare arms and legs.
photo by Don Hunter
Roger
spotted a juvenile Yellow-bellied Sliderdownstream of the boardwalk where the vegetation is sparser; it
was coated with silt and nearly invisible.
photo by Heather Larkin

A mysteriously beautiful insect floated
above the plants at the beaver pond.
photo by Christina Butler

The Phantom Crane Fly flies with its legs spread widely apart and seems to tumble through the air like a snowflake
or dandelion seed, movement made possible by hollow legs and air-filled foot
segments. More fascinating info about this very cool insect is here.

SUMMARY OF OBSERVED SPECIES:

American Witch Hazel     Hamamelis virginiana
Giant Allium     Allium giganteum
Shortleaf Pine     Pinus echinata
Brown-toothed Crust fungus     Hydnoporia olivacea
Undescribed gall-forming midge
Bonnet fungus     Mycena sp.
Mockernut Hickory     Carya tomentosa
Phylloxeran galls     Phylloxera caryaecaulis
Hairy Rubber Cup     Galiella rufa
Common Split Gill mushroom     Schizophyllum commune

Crown-tipped Coral fungus     Artomyces pyxidatus
Xylaria flabelliformis (No common name)
Dead Moll’s Fingers     Xylaria longipes

Pale Indian Plantain     Arnoglossum atriplicifolium
Rattlesnake Fern    Botrypus (Botrychium) virginianum
Broad Beech Fern     Phegopteris hexagonoptera
Aquatic snail        possibly
Elimia sp.
Duck Potato, Wapato    Sagittaria latifolia
Yellow-bellied Slider    Trachemys scripta scripta
Rice Cut-grass        Leersia oryzoides
Phantom Crane Fly     Bittacomorpha clavipes

Lagniappe

Bill took this gorgeous photo last week of a rust fungus (Puccinia
recondita
) on the lower surface of Jewelweed leaves.

Searching
for terms and topics in old Nature Ramble blogs:
There are two easy ways to
search old Nature Ramble reports on the blog.

(1) Go
to the home page of the blog –
naturerambling.blogspot – where the reports are found. Look
in the extreme upper left corner of that page, to the right of the orange “B” icon,
and you will see a small window. Type in your search topic (say, frog) and click
on the magnifying glass or hit your keyboard’s “return” key. The app will
instantly load all of the reports in which your search term is found. Look for the words “read more,” click on them, and the complete report
will open; you can then search the report for your topic using your browser’s search function. If the first report you open doesn’t contain
the exact reference you are looking for, click the back arrow in your browser to return
to the previous page and scroll down to the next listed report. To make it easy
to tell if you have looked at a particular report during your search, the words
“read more” will be highlighted in red text for the ones you have already opened.

(2)
Another method for searching old reports is to enter this text into your
browser’s search window: site:naturerambling.blogspot.com XXX

Replace
the XXX with your search term. For example:
site:naturerambling.blogspot.com frog 

Make sure there is no space after the colon, one space before the search term, and no space after the search term. Your
browser will return a list of “hits” – ramble reports that contain the search
term.

Lagniappe #2: Joros are back in the news! And back in our yards, I hear.