Ramble Report September 6 2018

Today’s Ramble was led by
Dale Hoyt.

Here’s thelink to Don’s Facebook
album for today’s Ramble. (All the photos in this post are compliments of Don.)

Today’s post was written
by Linda Chafin (plants) and Dale Hoyt (animals).

Today’s Focus:
Plants and insects in the lower power line right-of-way.

28 Ramblers met today.

Today’s reading:
Dale read the August 21 entry from Donald Culross Peatties’ Almanac For
Moderns:

NOT
blood nor flesh nor hair nor feathers, not the chlorophyll or cellulose of the
plants, is stranger than the stuff called chitin. Chitin is not only the hard
shell of the dapper little beetles in their tail-coats; it is the glistening
wing of the dragon fly, and his thousand faceted eye, the exquisite feathered
antenna of the moth by which it perceives the odor of its mate across miles of
summer darkness, the feet of the laboring ant, the heavy armor of the lobster,
the gossamer of the spider, the thread of the silkworm. There is very little
about an insect, or for that matter, any of its allies in the sea or upon the
land, which is not chitinous. One moment the stuff is finer than the tresses of
woman, and the next ponderous and stiff as the armor of a knight, and all
without change in its chemical composition. As a bloom upon the wing of a luna
moth fluttering across the moon, it is evanescent as snowflakes; encased in
drops of amber where a Mesozoic beetle died, it has seen the ages pass without
a change.

Show
and Tell:

  1. Sue brought two things to show, a wren’s nest on top of a
    bluebird nest, retrieved from a nest box, and a sprig of Fireweed (Pilewort, Erichtites
    hieraciifolius
    ) with several insect galls on the stem.
  2. Carla brought a loofah gourd she grew and shared some of
    the seeds.
  3. Don brought a bit of Hyssopleaf Thoroughwort (Boneset), Eupatorium
    hyssopifolium
    , to show. It’s in the same genus as the Late Flowering
    Thoroughwort or Late Boneset, Eupatorium serotinum, that we saw in the
    ROW last week (and again this week).

Today’s Route:  
We left the Visitor Center, and headed down the road to the Dunson
Native Flora Garden roadside deer fence. 
We then worked our way into the lower ROW and explored it to near the
river before we called time and headed back the way we came.  We then enjoyed air conditioning, refreshments
and conversation at the Cafe Botanica.

LIST OF OBSERVATIONS:

In the round planter next
to the bench at the base of the steps leaving the Visitor Center Plaza we found
a small caterpillar, probably that of a Painted Lady butterfly.

Caterpillar of Painted Lady butterfly

The pot
contained Angelonia angustifolia, sometimes called Summer
Snapdragon, a South American plant that is not the commonest host plant for
this species. Painted Lady caterpillars usually eat thistles. The caterpillar,
when feeding on thistle, builds a messy silken nest that surrounds a few leaves
and protects the caterpillar from predatory wasps.

We checked on the Spiranthes odorata in the planter next
to the sidewalk to the side entrance of the building.  It’s almost fully filled out with its triple
spiral of white flowers.

The Passion Flower vines on the Dunson Native Flora Garden fencing are
loaded with fruits and leaves, but not many caterpillars of the Gulf Fritillary
butterfly. Compare the blog post from last year at this date (September 7,
2017) with what we saw today: “. . . we found nearly all the Passion Vine leaves
consumed, dozens of Gulf Fritillary caterpillars of various sizes and three or
four Gulf Fritillary chrysalids.
” Why
there should be such a difference in abundance of the butterflies between last
year and this one is an interesting question. Any suggestions?

Carla made today’s most
exciting discovery: a Gulf Fritillary caterpillar that was thrashing about. A
closer look revealed that a Stink bug was just above it on the vine and an even
closer look showed that the Stink bug had pierced just one of the caterpillar’s
last abdominal legs. Just one!

Stinkbug nymph has captured a Gulf Fritillary butterfly caterpillar and is starting to feed. Notice that the proboscis is attached to just one abdominal leg. That was all that was needed to inject venom and digestive enzymes.

Stink bugs are members of
the insect order Hemiptera (pronounced: he-MIP-ter-ah) which consists of
insects with piercing, sucking mouthparts: true bugs, cicadas, leaf hoppers,
aphids, scale insects etc. With mouth parts like that there are only two things
a bug can do: pierce and suck. What they pierce and suck makes them either
predators, parasites or herbivores. The herbivores pierce and suck plants, the
predators pierce and suck animals, especially other kinds of insects, and the
parasites, like kissing bugs or bed bugs, pierce and suck people and/or other
vertebrates.

The distinction between a
predator and a parasite is sometimes fuzzy. Many Ramblers may have read Annie
Dillard’s Pilgrim at Tinker’s Creek
and shuddered at her description on pp. 5-6 of a frog:

“And
just as I looked at him, he slowly crumpled and began to sag. The spirit began
to vanish from his eyes as if snuffed. His skin emptied and drooped; his very
skull seemed to collapse and settle like a kicked tent. He was shrinking before
my very eyes like a deflating football. I watched the taut, glistening skin on
his shoulders ruck, and rumple, and fall. Soon, part of his skin, formless as a
pricked balloon, lay in floating folds like bright scum on top of the water: it
was a monstrous and terrifying thing.”

A Giant Water Bug sucking
the life out of a frog was the inspiration for that passage and it was just
like what was happening to Carla’s caterpillar. After several minutes searching
and finding only a few more caterpillars, we turned our attention back on that
unfortunate caterpillar and saw it hanging, limp and motionless, still impaled
on the Stink bug’s proboscis.

Predator or parasite? A predator is an organism that attacks and kills another organism and
then eats it, or part of it. A parasite is usually thought of as an organism
that feeds on a host organism, but does not kill the host. Bedbugs are
parasites; the Giant Water Bug that Annie Dillard saw was clearly a predator.
But the world often ignores the clear categories that humans create. There are
insects, tiny wasps, that lay eggs on or in caterpillars. The eggs hatch into
tiny grubs that begin to eat the internal organs of their host, eventually
killing the host caterpillar. These creatures have some of the characteristics
of parasites – they feed internally, like a tapeworm or a liver fluke, but they
kill their host. Biologists call them parasitoids.
If you have grown tomatoes you may have found large caterpillars (Tomato Hornworms)
eating the leaves and fruits of your plants. Often, if you let the hornworms
continue to devour your plants you will see them become sluggish and covered
with hundreds of tiny white egg-shaped structures. These are the cocoons of a
parasitoid wasp that injected eggs into the hornworm. The wasp larvae eat the internal
organs of the caterpillar and then eat through the skin to pupate on the
surface of the caterpillar. From each tiny cocoon a parasitoid wasp will emerge
and seek out another hornworm.

Spiders:

This is the time of year
when spiders are large enough to be conspicuous.

Spinybacked Orbweaver spider

We found a Spinybacked Orbweaver on its web. This
strange looking spider resembles a small crab, but spins a sticky capture web
just as other orbweavers do. One feature unique to its web is found in the
non-sticky support strands to which the sticky capture threads are attached:
the texture of the silk changes intermittently so that the silk looks like it
was periodically “fluffed up.” No one knows why this is done, but it is
characteristic of this kind of spider.

Clearwing Hummingbird Moth feeding on Tall Thistle.

Several Tall
Thistles are currently blooming and we watched as one was visited by a Clearwing Hummingbird Moth, a
day-flying Hawk moth that resembles a small hummingbird as it hovers and flies
backwards and forward with all the agility seen in real hummingbirds. The food
plant of the caterpillar is Viburnum.

Caterpillars: From now until
late fall you will see caterpillars wandering over roads and sidewalks. These
are typically the caterpillars of moths looking for a suitable place to pupate.
(The caterpillars of many moth species dig into the earth and make a chamber
within which they pupate.) You seldom see butterfly caterpillars doing this
kind of exploration. They almost always seek out a sheltered bush or quiet
place to form a chrysalis, frequently on the same food plant they have been
feeding on. In the Handicapped Parking spaces in front of the Visitor Center we found a yellow striped caterpillar
crossing the road.

Yellow-necked caterpillar

It was a Yellow-necked caterpillar (Datana ministra), a species that feeds on a variety of trees and shrubs.

Horse Nettle flowers

The flowers of the Horse Nettle should remind you of
Tomato blossoms. The similarity is due to their relationship to Tomatoes, Potatoes,
Eggplant and other plants in the Nightshade family (Solanacea). These all have
a similar flower with an unusual anther. The typical plant anther splits down
its length to release the pollen within. The anthers of solanaceous plants has
a tiny opening at the very end: it is called a poricidal anther. The pollen within is dry and not sticky as pollen
of insect pollinated plants often is. Only a few bees, bumblebees, can
successfully pollinate such plants. They do so by grasping the anthers and rapidly
contracting their wing muscles. This makes a buzzing sound and vibrates the
anthers, shaking the pollen out. The dusty pollen is attracted to the hairy
body of the bumblebee by a difference in electrical charge. As bees fly through
the air they create a static charge much like running a comb through your hair
does. Honeybees cannot “do the buzz” and are very inefficient pollinators of
such plants.

DYC is short for “Darn
Yellow Composite” and Late summer–early fall is their flowering season. Sunflowers
and their many look-alikes are in the Composite Family (Asteraceae). Today we
saw Rough-leaved Sunflower in the lower powerline right-of-way; in the upper
right-of-way, Starry Rosin-weed and Woodland Tickseed are still in flower. How
to tell these yellow-flowered composites apart? One place to start is learning
to recognize the different genera in this family by their involucral bracts—the
whorls of small green bracts that encircle the base of the flower heads of all
species in this family. Here are some photos that illustrate the different
types of involucres of some common composite family genera:

Sunflower involucral bractsCredit:  Dan Tenaglia, Missouriplants.com

Rough-leaved Sunflower:  The genus Helianthus
usually has several whorls of bracts that all look alike; each bract is
lance-shaped with tapered, spreading tips.
 

Silphium incolucral bractsCredit:  Janie Marlow, NameThatPlant.net

Starry Rosin-weed:  The genus Silphium has fewer, broader
bracts, each one broadly triangle-shaped and often curved outwards at the tip.

Coreopsis involucral bractsCredit:  Janie Marlow, NameThatPlant.net

Woodland Tickseed: The genus Coreopsis has the most distinctive involucre of any
composites in this area. The bracts are in two very different series: the outer
series’ bracts are narrow, green, and spreading; the inner series’ bracts are broader,
yellowish, and tightly pressed against the base of the flower head.

The edges of the leaves of
C. terniflora (Sweet Autumn Clematis) are smooth (L) while those of the native C. virginiana (Virgin’s Bower) are
serrated (R).
Credit: University of
Wisconsin-Extension Master Gardener Program

Virgin’s Bower
flowers are peaking now. Our native species of Virgin’s Bower have leaves
consisting of three toothed leaflets. We noticed that some of the leaves close
to the tips of the vines had leaflets with smooth margins, potentially confused
with the exotic invasive species, Sweet Autumn Clematis, whose leaflets have
smooth, toothless margins.  

Arrow-leaf Tearthumb; the spiny stems give it its name.

Arrow-leaf Tearthumb is one of the smartweeds, in the same genus Persicaria as Dotted
Smartweed and Pennsylvania Smartweed.
They all have the characteristic “ocrea” that is unique to this plant family,
the Polygonaceae. An ocrea is a sheath or sleeve that arises from the base of
the leaf stalk and wraps around the plant’s stem.

Common Dodder, a parasitic plant; note the flower buds and the haustoria swelling where the orange stem is in contact with the host plant.

Common Dodder
is one of eight species in the genus Cuscuta
that occurs in Georgia. All dodders are parasitic plants, deriving moisture and
all their nutrients from their host. The stems are orange (no chlorophyll) and
there are no leaves (who needs ‘em when you are stealing all your food?). Dodder
seedlings have roots but as soon as the growing plants make contact with a host
plant, the roots wither away. Dodder sinks tiny peg-like structures, called
haustoria, into the vascular system of the host and begins to shunt resources
into its own vascular system. The host plant tries to defend itself against
this thievery by producing a protein that blocks the flow of nutrients to dodder.
But dodder is one step ahead: when it connects to the host, it inserts genetic
material that blocks the formation of the clotting protein. The nutrients and
water are then able to flow freely into the dodder plant. Various species of dodder
are a major agricultural pest on other continents, so plant scientists are exploring
how to prevent dodder from hijacking the clotting protein. Fortunately, none of
the Georgia species are a problem for farmers and none are known to be a threat
to other native plants.

Virginia Dayflower

Virginia
Dayflower
, a native dayflower species, has three blue petals; the exotic Common
Dayflower has two blue petals and a tiny, white, third petal.

 

SUMMARY OF OBSERVED SPECIES:

Painted Lady (caterpillar)

Vanessa cardui

Angelonia

Angelonia angustifolia

Fragrant Lady’s Tresses orchid

Spiranthes odorata

Purple Passionflower

Passiflora incarnata

Gulf Fritillary (caterpillar)

Agraulis vanillae

Spined Soldier Bug

Podisus maculiventris

Green Crab Spider

Misumessus oblongus

Yellow Crownbeard

Verbesina occidentalis

Wingstem

Verbesina alternifolia

Frostweed

Verbesina virginica

Spinybacked Orbweaver

Gasteracantha cancriformis

Rough-leaf Sunflower

Helianthus strumosus

Virgin’s Bower clematis

Clematis virginiana

Tall Goldenrod

Solidago altissima

White Crownbeard

Verbesina virginica

Maryland Senna

Senna marilandica

Tick Trefoil

Desmodium sp.

Camphorweed

Heterotheca subaxillaris

Tall Thistle

Cirsium altissimum

Clearwing Hummingbird Moth

Hemaris thysbe

Eastern Tiger Swallowtail
(dark form female)

Papilio glaucus

Tall Ironweed

Vernonia altissima

White Morning Glory

Ipomoea lacunosa

Arrowleaf Tearthumb

Polygonum punctatum syn.
Polygonum sagittatum 

Dotted Smartweed

Persicaria punctatum syn.
Polygonum punctatum

Pennsylvania Smartweed

Polygonum pensylvanicum
syn. Persicaria pensylvanicum

Red-root Flatsedge

Cyperus erthrothizos

Carolina Horsenettle

Solanum carolinense

Dodder

Cuscuta sp.

Stout Wood Reed

Cinna arundinacea

Mikania/Climbing Hempweed

Mikania scandens

Virginia Dayflower

Commelina virginica

Yellow-necked Caterpillar

Datana ministra