Ramble Report September 21, 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 (at) uga.edu.

Insect identifications and natural history: Don Hunter, Heather Larkin
Fungi and lichen identification: Don Hunter

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:
26

Today’s emphasis: Fruits, flowers, and insects in the Middle Oconee River floodplain.

The Middle Oconee River on a beautiful Fall day

Announcements/Interesting
Things to Note:

On October 6, Roger Collins will present “Before
there Was the Garden,” the fascinating landscape history of the last 12,000
years of what we know as the State Botanical Garden to the Friends First Friday
breakfast. The registration deadline is Noon on Friday, September
29. $10 for Friends members, $12 for non-members – registration fee includes
breakfast.
Link
to registration.

The Oconee River Land
Trust will be celebrating their 30th Anniversary on Sunday,
October 8th, 3:00-6 p.m., at Smith Wilson’s house on eastern Clarke County. The
event will be catered by Lee Epting, with music, adult beverages, hikes, and mule-drawn
wagon rides.
More
information is at the land trust’s web site.

Here is a nice essay In praise of late summer wildflowers. The author of this essay, Margaret Renkl, will give a reading at the Athens Clarke County Library on Monday, October 16, from her new book The Comfort of Crows.

Today’s
Route:
We headed downslope along the White Trail extension to the floodplain, walked toward the river on the ADA trail, and turned right (upriver) on the White Trail. We followed the White Trail along the river to its junction with the Blue Trail. We followed the Blue Trail to the Mimsie Lanier Center and returned along the service road to the paved entrance road.

OBSERVATIONS:

The Hinoki False Cypress next to the arbor has been draped with the vines of Purple Passionflower all summer.
Now, the vines are nearly defoliated, the leaves having been consumed by the
caterpillars of Gulf Fritillary. Even some of the fruits have been nibbled. The
overall effect is of a rather bedraggled Christmas tree.


Last of the Gulf Fritillary caterpillars on the Purple Passionflower vine (left) and an empty Gulf Fritillary chrysalis (right).

The
floodplain continues its annual explosion of late summer color and diversity. Many species in the Composite/Aster family 
Wingstems, Rough
Sunflower, Tall Ironweed, Camphorweed, Tall Goldenrod, bonesets
– are in flower and fruit as well as various
smartweeds, and morning-glories. This year, Wingstems and Crownbeards
– both plants are in the genus Verbesina – dominate the view; both support a variety
of insects. 

Variegated Fritillary caterpillar near the top of a Southern Crownbeard
plant. Photo by Heather Larkin.

Common Wingstem with Fall Webworm Moth caterpillar.


Daddy Longlegs perched in one of the Southern Crownbeard inflorescences

Southern Crownbeard leaves nearly covered with Silvery Checkerspot
caterpillars.
Tucked away in the sea of wingstems, Maryland Wild Senna has flowered and fruited in several places in the floodplain. Senna species are the host plants for the caterpillars
of several species of sulphur butterflies.
Late instar of a Marmorated Stink Bug on a Maryland Wild Senna leaflet

Late-flowering Boneset, aka Late-flowering Thouroughwort, is one of the many
fall-flowering Composite/Aster family species that lacks ray flowers; the disk flowers are so
numerous and their style branches so conspicuous that these species attract a
wide range of insect pollinators even without showy ray flowers.

Avis
provided some insight into the origin of the name “boneset,” originally applied
to Common Boneset, Eupatorium perfoliatum, another white-flowered species in
this genus. Its leaves were brewed as a tea used to treat the mosquito-borne
viral infection “breakbone fever” (now call dengue fever) that causes severe
bone and joint pain. The leaves of Common Boneset appear to be “run through” by
the stem – hence the other common name for this group of species:  thoroughwort, meaning “through leaf.” (As in “thoroughfare.”)

Leaf of Common Boneset – the bases of two opposing leaves are fused so
they appear to be one leaf perforated by a stem.
Photo by Arthur Haines, GoBotany
Camphorweed is another Composite/Aster family species with showy disk flowers and no rays. It is beautiful in flower, almost as beautiful as it is
malodorous. Its stems, leaves, and flower heads are covered with microscopic
glands oozing chemicals that smell a whole lot like a catbox.
Small White Morning-glory flowers come in two colors: white and
lavender-pink. A key identification feature is the purple color of the stamens.
The leaves of Small White Morning-glory are even more variable than the flowers, appearing in several
variations ranging from three-lobed to heart-shaped to arrowhead-
shaped.
Photo by Dan Tenaglia

Members of the
Smartweed or Buckwheat family, Polygonaceae, are a
lmost
as numerous as Composite family species in the floodplain. Most of the species in this family in our region have “ocrea” at the point where a leaf attaches to a
stem. An ocrea looks like a tiny sleeve that wraps around the stem and the base
of the leaf stalk. It may be white, green, brown, or colorless; tiny and nearly indiscernible or
much longer; hairy, bristly, or smooth. Whatever the details, its presence is a
reliable indicator of the family.

Arrow-leaved
Tearthumb, a common wetland plant, has arrowhead-shaped leaves and small white
or pink flowers held in clusters. Most notable are the stiff, down-pointing
barbs that line the stems and leaves (below).

Arrow-leaved Tearthumb ocrea, outlined in blue
Photo by Paul Rothrock, Consortium of
Midwest Herbaria

Climbing Buckwheat vines sprawl across other plants near the riverbank. Their eye-catching
fruits (above), each with three frilly white wings, outshine the inconspicuous green
and white flowers.
Climbing Buckwheat flowers
Photo by Dan Tenaglia
Climbing Buckwheat ocrea outlined in blue
Photo by Dan Tenaglia
Cinnamon Vine, an invasive species in the Yam family, is invading the
River Cane patch by the river. It flowers and produces seeds but spreads mainly
by dropping these aerial bulbils, each of which can sprout several stems.
Cinnamon Vine leaves
Photo by James Miller
Also twining among the River Cane, Sand Bean is a native member of
the Bean family, with typical pea-shaped flowers and legume fruits.

After
rounding the corner at the river and crossing the footbridge, we began to walk
upstream and encountered large patches of Stinging Wood Nettle along the trail.

Stinging Wood Nettle in flower
Close-up of stinging hairs on a Wood Nettle stem

Stinging Wood Nettle, native to eastern and central North America, grows
throughout the floodplain at the Garden. It has separate female and male
flowers, with the male flowers in small clusters in the leaf axils and female flowers
in large clusters at the top of the stem. The individual flowers are small and green, not
at all showy. Stinging Wood Nettle gets its name from the stinging hairs found all
along the stems and leaves and even in the flower clusters (I have seen
hairless plants at the Garden, but they are uncommon). The hairs are brittle
and hollow, and break off when touched, releasing a witch’s brew of irritating compounds – formic acid, histamines, and serotonin
– that wise mammals learn to avoid. We don’t love the stinging
hairs and their painful effects, but we do love the beautiful Red Admiral butterfly that uses this and other
nettle family species as a larval host. We didn’t see Red Admirals today, but here are some good photos from the internet.

Red Admiral butterfly and caterpillar
(left photo by Iain Leach, right photo by Ken Dolbear)

Red Admiral caterpillars are unharmed by the stinging hairs that provide the plant with protection from other herbivores. Stinging Wood Nettle usually grows in high pH soils – the
abundance of this species along the trail here supports Dan Williams’ finding
of amphibolite bedrock in this area of the Garden. Also common in the Middle
Oconee River floodplain is False Nettle, a nettle without stinging hairs that
also supports Red Admirals. (Note: true nettles are not related to Purple
Deadnettle, the spring-flowering weed in the mint family.)

The native Virgin’s Bower has beautiful spiraling heads made up of many individual
fruits with long curving tips covered with hairs. The hairs dry, spread, and catch the wind, carrying the seed some distance from the parent plant. The flowers and seed heads resemble those of the non-native invasive
Sweet Autumn Clematis, but the leaflets are different. Virgin’s Bower leaflets
are toothed; Sweet Autumn Clematis leaflets are not.
Surprise! A Green Heron posed for several minutes on a log near the river bank.
This is typical hunting behavior for this species – they don’t wade as much as other herons nor
do they scare as easily. Its neck is tucked in while scouting for fish, but extends
many inches when it strikes. Green Herons have actually been observed fishing with bait.
The patience and persistence of this tool-using bird is pretty amazing.
Slender Orange-Bush Lichen is rare in Georgia, and found mostly in the Coastal Plain.


Pretty Ruffle lichen shared the twig with Orange Bush lichen
Ceramic Crust Fungus on a downed tree next to the trail
Appalachian Mock-orange

Sometimes
called English Dogwood, this shrub does not resemble orange trees or dogwoods,
and it definitely isn’t English. Native to eastern and midwestern North America, it has brittle, red, peeling stems rising in a clump and opposite, toothed leaves. Beautiful flowers with five white petals and
golden yellow stamens appear in late spring. The flowers have no fragrance, hence the species name: inodorus.
The similar European Mock-orange often shows up near old homesites; it has
fragrant flowers.

Hearts-a-Burstin’ (aka Strawberry Bush) in fruit

 

Chinese
Privet removal in the Middle Oconee River floodplain is a long-term work-in-progress, first begun
about 20 years ago with Jim Hanula’s experimental removal plots. Staff
at the Mimsie Lanier Center have followed that effort with gyrotrack mulching and herbicide applications over the years. The transformation of the
floodplain has been astonishing, with insect and plant species diversity greatly increasing. The most recent effort took place in January along this stretch of the White Trail when Gary Crider led a privet removal project by employees from the new-to-Athens
REI store.
Forty-two REI folks showed up on a Sunday morning, along with a
half-dozen Garden staff. Using the cut-and-paint method, they cleared two
acres of large privet (2-6 inches in diameter). By summer, the privet monoculture was transformed into a diverse,
pollinator-friendly landscape
.

Dried bracts of a Musclewood flower and fruit cluster

At last we reached the Green Dragon fruits that Linda had promised. The leaf and stem of the plant have withered,
leaving the fruit cluster on the ground for animals to eat and, hopefully, disperse
the seeds.

Green
Dragon is a sister species of Jack-in-the-Pulpit – both are in the genus Arisaema.
While JIP typically has one leaf with 3 leaflets (sometimes 5) held more or
less upright, Green Dragon has one leaf with 7-13 leaflets held horizontally in
a semi-circle.

Green Dragon leaf with many leaflets held in
a semi-circle
Photo by Janie K. Marlow

Both Green Dragon and JIP arise from an underground storage
organ called a corm (sort of like a solid bulb). Like JIP, Green Dragon plants change sex
from year to year based
on the amount of energy (carbohydrate) stored in the corm. Female plants
produce fruit, an energy-expensive undertaking; male plants produce pollen, a
less demanding process. Good soil nutrient levels lead to larger plants – with
more leaflets to conduct photosynthesis – and with more carbohydrates stored in
the corm to support fruit production. A plant that has exhausted its resources
one year in fruit production may return the next year as a small male plant or
one with a mix of female and male flowers. Only the largest plants are
exclusively female. In plants with both female and male flowers, the two flower
types are spatially separated, with male flowers at the top of the flowering
stalk, female below. The male portion withers after pollen is released so it’s
impossible to tell from a mature fruit cluster if it came from a female-only
plant or a mixed-gender plant. The size of this fruit cluster suggests it may have been a female plant.

Woodland edge at the Mimsie Lanier Center for Native Plants

Just
past the Green Dragon, we turned east on the Blue Trail, heading for the
Mimsie Lanier Center for Native Plants. As always in the fall, the Center’s grounds were
bursting with Composite/Aster family plants in full flower.

Appalachian Sunflowers are six-feet tall with large flower heads and densely hairy stems (below).

Stone Mountain Daisies
Red-spotted Purple puddling in the drive to the Center
The spots are actually orange and the purple is really blue but who’s quibbling?
Heather noticed a red-shouldered Eastern Leaf-footed Bug
nymph on the white fruits of American Beautyberry cultivar growing along the drive.

SUMMARY OF
OBSERVED SPECIES:

Purple Passionflower     Passiflora incarnata

Hinoki Falsecyress     Chamaecyparis
obtusa

Gulf Fritillary (caterpillar and vacated chrysalis)    Agraulis vanillae

Immigrant Fruit Fly    Drosophila
immigrans

Maryland Senna     Senna marilandica

Yellow Crownbeard     Verbesina
occidentalis

Common Wingstem     Verbesina
alternifolia

White Crownbeard     Verbesina virginica

Wild Grape     Muscadinia rotundifolia

Variegated Fritillary (chrysalis)     Euptoieta
claudia

Brown Marmorated Stink Bug (nymph)     Halyomorpha
h
alys

Camphorweed     Pluchea camphorata

Tall Ironweed     Vernonia gigantea

Late-flowering Boneset     Eupatorium
serotinum

White Morning Glory     Ipomoea
lacunosa

Littlebell Morning Glory     Ipomoea
triloba

Arrow-leaved Tearthumb     Persicaria
sagittata

Dotted Smartweed     Persicaria
punctata

Climbing False Buckwheat     Fallopia
scandens

River Cane     Arundinaria gigantea

Trailing Fuzzy-bean/Sand Bean     Strophostyles
helvola

 (Stinging) Wood Nettle     Laportea canadensis

Fall Webworm Moth (caterpillar)     Hyphantria
cunea

Virgin’s Bower Clematis     Clematis
virginiana

Green Heron     Butorides virescens

Slender Orange-bush Lichen    Teloschistes
exilis

Pretty Ruffle Lichen    Parmotrema
austrosinense

Southern Tussock Moth, tent. (caterpillar)    
Dasychira meridionalis

Ceramic Parchment Crust Fungus     Xylobolus
frustulatus

Common Moonseed     Menispermum
canadense

Mock Orange     Philadelphus coronarius

River Birch     Betula nigra

Perilla Mint/Beefsteak Plant     Perilla
frutescens

Daddy Longlegs     Order Opiliones

Hearts-a-Burstin’/Strawberry Bush     Euonymus
americanus

Green Ash     Fraxinus pennsylvanica

American Burnweed     Erechtites
hieraciifolius

Silvery Checkerspot (caterpillar)     Chlosyne
nycteis

Yellow Passionflower     Passiflora lutea

Green Dragon     Arisaema dracontium

False Boneset     Brickellia
eupatoriodes

Appalachian Sunflower     Helianthus atrorubens

Stone Mountain Daisy     Helianthus
porteri

Dwarf Sumac     Rhus michauxii

Georgia Aster     Symphyotrichum
georgianum

Geometer moth (caterpillar)     Family
Geometridae

Eastern Leaf-footed Bug (nymph, late instar)    
Leptoglossus phyllopus

American Beautyberry, white-fruited cultivar    
Callicarpa americana

Red-spotted Purple butterfly     Limenitis
arthemis