Ramble Report August 31, 2023

 Leader
for today’s Ramble:
Catherine Chastain

Author of today’s Ramble report: Linda. Comments, edits, and suggestions
for the report can be sent to Linda at Lchafin (at) uga.edu.

Photos today were taken by several people, including Emily Carr, Cathy Payne, and Linda. Photos may be enlarged by clicking them
with a mouse or tapping on your screen.

Number of Ramblers
today:
about 25

Today’s emphasis: Hand-printing from nature!

Sandy makes even Dog Fennel look beautiful!

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Ramble Report August 24, 2023

 Leader
for today’s Ramble:
Linda

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

Photos in this report were
taken by Jan Coyne, Bill Sheehan, and Don Hunter. Don was out sick but photos
taken by him on earlier rambles are included and credited. Photos may be
enlarged by clicking them with a mouse or tapping on your screen.

Number
of Ramblers today:
35 

Today’s emphasis: Flowers,
fruits, butterflies, moths

Ramblers entering the Flower Garden
photo by Bill Sheehan

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Ramble Report August 17, 2023

Leaders
for today’s Ramble:

Bill Sheehan and Heather Larkin

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

Insect, fungi, and slime mold identifications: Bill, Heather, and Don

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. Photos may be enlarged by clicking them
with a mouse or tapping on your screen.

Today’s
emphasis:

 Fungi, Slime
Mold, and insects in the Upper Shade Garden and along the Orange and Purple Trails

Number
of Ramblers today:
33

Ramblers on the Orange Trail

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Ramble Report August 10, 2023

 Leader
for today’s Ramble:
Linda

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

Insect
identifications:
Don
Hunter, Heather Larkin, Bill Sheehan

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. Photos may be enlarged by clicking them
with a mouse or tapping on your screen.

Number
of Ramblers today:
22

Today’s
emphasis:
Seeking what we found in the Dunson Native Flora Garden and nearby powerline right-of-way

Show and Tell: Bill
brought some amazing galls that he collected from Virginia Creeper vines on his
property in western Clarke County. These galls are created by a gall midge, Lasioptera psedrae, that exclusively uses Virginia Creeper as a host plant. They are abundant near Bill’s house, yet are otherwise unknown on iNaturalist, with very little info elsewhere on the internet.

Virginia Creeper galls
Photos by Bill Sheehan

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Ramble Report August 3, 2023

Authors of today’s Ramble report: Linda and Don. Comments, edits, and suggestions for the report
can be sent to Linda at Lchafin@uga.edu
All photos are by Don Hunter except where otherwise indicated. His complete set of photos from today’s Ramble are on Facebook
here.

Rainy morning at the Botanical Garden
Photo of Impatiens by Aubrey Cox

Today was a “rainy-day
ramble,” practicing the new Nature Ramble weather policy: we meet
regardless of the weather and see what happens. We’re pretty sure that, rain or
shine, we will have a good time.
About 15 ramblers met in the Visitor Center and swapped
stories for a while.

Don shared an exciting piece of news with us. As many of us know, Don has
collaborated with Becky Hunt Griffin, Coordinator of the Great Southeast
Pollinator Census and UGA Extension entomologist, for several years, providing
detailed photographs of Georgia pollinators and insect identifications during
the census and throughout the year. Becky just posted this announcement on the
Pollinator Census Facebook page: “I am excited to announce that the 2023 Great
Southeast Pollinator Census Grand Marshal is 
Don Hunter. Don has been an
incredible advocate for the Census and pollinators. He enjoys helping
educate others about insects.  He was the obvious choice for this year’s
Grand Marshal and I was honored to present him the a plaque recognizing his
role. Thank you, Don Hunter, for all you do for pollinators! Look for
Don’s video opening this year’s Census early on August 18th.”

Don proudly displaying his award

Don joined the Nature Ramblers in the spring of 2013 and quickly took on the role of photographing and recording each ramble. Before then, he’d had no interest in insects but has since taught himself through studying field guides, iNaturalist, BugGuide.net, and other online sources. What is the secret to his success with photographing insects? “Just practice, practice, practice and picking up hints and techniques from friends and fellow photographers.”

The Great Southeast Pollinator Census is a community science project created by UGA Extension, now in its sixth year
with thousands of participants all over the SE. The census will take place this
year August 18-19.

Sandy shared highlights from her
recent butterflying trip in Costa Rica. Below are  seven photos of some of the butterflies,
plants, snakes, and birds she encountered. The complete set of her photos are here.

 

Linda shared this article about living in the natural world in a time of change.

Around 9:30, Ramblers ventured outside
into a barely detectable mizzle.
Most of us wandered around the Herb and Physic
Garden as the sun came out, admiring the pollinators that were visiting
the medicinal and culinary herbs curated by Garden Curator Carol Dyer Rudow.

Bumblebee on Oregano flowers
photo credit

Meanwhile Don was photographing
in the nearby beds and in the Heritage Garden, employing his new macro flash
diffuser to spectacular effect. All of Don’s photos are here on Facebook and a selection are below.

As
members of the Aster family, Zinnia flower heads are a combination of
small fertile flowers (in this photo, five-lobed yellow flowers) held on a central
disk and outer whorls of pink ray flowers. Many of the Zinnias at the Garden show a tendency to
have oddly shaped and colored ray flowers popping up among the disk flowers.
Versute
Sharpshooter resting on a Zinnia’s ray flower.
Ocola
Skipper visiting the disk flowers on a Coreopsis flower head.
Large Milkweed Bug on Butterfly weed flowers.

Large
Milkweed Bugs exhibit aposematic coloration – bright orange or red colors that
warn potential predators that an insect is poisonous.
Adults (above) are patterned with black and reddish-orange markings, juveniles are mostly red with a few black spots (below), and even their eggs are bright
orange.

Ailanthus Webworm
Moth visiting the small fertile flowers of a Hydrangea inflorescence. The large
showy flowers in the foreground are sterile, existing only to attract insects
who quickly discover that pollen and nectar are available only in the small
flowers.

Job’s Tears is an
odd-looking grass with wide, clasping leaves and bulbous swellings at the base
of the seed head. It is native to Southeast Asia and cultivated there at high
elevations where other grain crops do not grow well. The stem at the base of
the flower cluster is swollen into a hard, round ball called a pseuodocarp
(“fake fruit”). Some varieties of Job’s Tears have hard pseudocarps
that are used to make beads; other varieties have soft pseudocarps that are
harvested and sold as Chinese pearl barley.

Carpenter
Bee “robbing” a Salvia flower by chewing a hole in the base of the flower and sipping nectar.

Don saw quite a few
Western Honeybees and one Eastern Carpenter Bee visiting Salvia flowers in
search of nectar. Dale wrote the following mini-essay (lightly edited)
about nectar robbing by bees in the Ramble Report of July 19, 2018. At that
time, we’d been watching large Carpenter Bees and small Honeybees visiting Salvia
flowers.

Dale: “The larger Carpenter Bees were
‘nectar-robbing,’ piercing the narrow bottom of the tubular flower, while only
the [smaller] Honeybees were attempting to access the nectar through the flower
opening. While visiting the flower in the ‘legitimate’ way, the smaller bee thrusts
its head into the opening at the front of the blossom to reach the nectar at
the base, thereby coming in contact with the anthers and picking up a load of
pollen on their head and thorax. They also contact the stigma, the flower
structure that receives pollen, and the pollen they carry from other
flowers gets deposited on that stigma, effecting pollination.

As the Carpenter Bee
visited each blossom, it avoided the opening of the corolla, instead heading straight
to the base of the flower. The nectar gland is inside the flower,
at the base of the corolla. If the blossom has been previously visited by a
nectar thief, there will be a hole there and the bee will insert its mouthparts
and sip up the available nectar. If there is no hole, the bee makes one by
biting the flower with its mandibles.

You might think
that nectar robbery would harm the ability of the robbed plant to produce
fruits or seeds. But several studies have shown that there is no difference
between the productivity of robbed and unrobbed plants. In some cases, there
may even be benefits from being robbed. How can robbery be beneficial? It has
been suggested that by depleting
the nectar supply of a flower it stimulates subsequent visitors to travel a
greater distance before they visit another flower. This would increase the
frequency of outbreeding by reducing the likelihood of self-fertilization. Self-fertilization
can occur when a bee carries pollen to another flower on the same plant – self-fertilization can
result in offspring with lower genetic fitness.

Mutualistic
relationships, like that of plants and their pollinators, can be sensitive to
cheating. The only way plants have of responding to a cheater is through
evolution or behavioral change. If nectar robbing were really damaging to a
plant, then plants that could reduce or prevent this behavior would be at an advantage.
They would produce more offspring than plants that experienced more robbery and
these offspring would be more resistant to robbing. Remember that a plant-pollinator
relationship is not isolated, it exists in a complex web of relationships.
There are many kinds of bees and flowers in an ecological community and each of
them interacts, directly or indirectly, with all the others. As long as there
are smaller bees around to pollinate a flower, it may not matter that Carpenter
Bees steal nectar. But if the only pollinator present was a Carpenter Bee, the long-term
presence of the plant would be in doubt. This discussion of nectar robbery in Wikipedia shows
how complex such an apparently simple behavior can be.” Thanks, Dale!

SUMMARY OF OBSERVED SPECIES

Oregano                                   Origanum vulgare
Bumblebee                               Bombus sp.
Chamber Bitters                       Phyllanthus urinaria

Creeping Charlie, Ground Ivy  Glechoma hederacea
Plumeria, Frangipani                Plumeria sp.
Asparagus                                Asparagus officinalis
Lawn Pennywort                      Hydrocotyle bowlesioides
Zinnia                                      Zinnia elegans
Versute Sharpshooter Leafhopper    Graphocephala versuta
Ocola Skipper
                            Panoquina ocola
Coreopsis, Tickseed                Coreopsis sp.
Black-eyed Susan                   Rudbeckia hirta
Long-tailed Skipper                Urbanus proteus
Fiery Skipper                           Hylephila phyleus
Lantana                                   Lantana camara cultivar
Transverse-banded Flower Fly
       Eristalis transversa
Carpenter-mimic Leafcutter Bee    Megachile xylocopoides
Fennel                                  Foeniculum vulgare
Large Milkweed Bug            
Oncopeltus fasciatus
Ailanthus Webworm Moth    Atteva aurea
Job’s Tears                            Coix lacryma-jobi
Hydrangea                            Hydrangea sp.
Blue-green Bottle Fly            
Lucilia coeruleiviridis
Salvia 
cultivar ‘Heatwave Blaze’    Salvia microphylla   
Common Eastern Bumble Bee       Bombus impatiens
Eastern Carpenter Bee                  Xylocopa virginica
Carpenter-mimic Leaf Cutter Bee    Megachile xylocopoides