Ramble Report July 7 2016

Today’s Ramble was lead by Dale Hoyt.

All the photos in this post are compliments of Rosemary Woodel, except
where noted.

Today’s post was written by Dale Hoyt.

Twenty-two Ramblers met on a cool summer morning.

Today’s reading:  

Dale read an
excerpt from Edwin Way Teale’s
Circle of the Seasons entitled The
Measure of an Enthusiasm
. (Teale was probably the most popular nature
writer in the mid-twentieth century (before Rachel Carson). He won a Pulitzer Prize for his travel
book, North With the Spring, as well as the John Burroughs medal for
distinguished nature writing.)

The measure of an enthusiasm must be taken between interesting events. It
is between bites that the lukewarm angler loses heart. It is between birds that
the mildly interested watcher gives up. The true devotee possesses an
enthusiasm that burns so fiercely it carries him over the uneventful between
times when nothing is happening.

Rambler leaving:
Today was Molly Longstreth’s last Ramble with us. She is moving to Arkansas. If
you would like to stay in touch with her she can be contacted at this
address.

Today’s
route
: We took the mulched path down to the Dunson Native Flora Garden; slowly
walked through the DNFG and returned to the parking lot via the road and the
cement walkway.

Dunson
Native Flora Garden
: Our focus today was on the ferns in the DNFG, but we also took note of
other plants and animals.

Fern structures

Linda gave us a quick overview of
the terminology used to describe fern structures. Here’s a brief summary:

stipe

the part of the stem from the
ground to the first “leaves”

blade

the part of the frond that is
“leafy”

frond

the entire stipe and blade

rachis

the part of the stem within the
blade

pinna (pl.: pinnae)

a “leaflet” attached
to the rachis

pinnule

a subdivision of a pinna

pinnate

the blade is divided into a
number of pinnae, each attached to the rachis at a single point

pinnatifid

the pinnae are broadly attached
to the rachis

sporangium

(pl.: sporangia)

a microscopic structure that
produces spores

sorus (pl.: sori)

a collection of sporangia,
often brown, but may be black, green or yellow, depending on spore color

Beech buds

Developing buds of American Beech

In the fall the American Beech tree has uniquely shaped
buds found at twig tips and leaf bases. They are long, cigar shaped and have
sharply pointed ends. These buds are now beginning to form. At present they are
only about 1/16 inch long, but already have the pointed tip. When mature they
will be approximately 1/4 to 1/2 inch in length.

Spores and Seeds

Ferns and mosses can reproduce two ways: asexually and
sexually. Sexual reproduction produces spores, which are the dispersal phase of
the fern or moss life cycle. In this way spores are like the seeds of flowering
plants – they enable the plant’s offspring to find suitable habitats a long
distance from the parent plant. But there the similarity ends; spores are on
their own whereas seeds have been provided with a head start in life. Each seed
contains an embryonic plant in a state of suspended animation. The seed also
contains a food supply to help the young plant get established before it can
start an independent life. Spores have none of these. They are single cells and
when they germinate they must immediately begin to make their own food supply
through photosynthesis. The seed has the luxury of that pre-packaged food
supply. It’s embryo can sink a root into the soil using that food source as its
energy supply. The shoot part of the embryo can wait until the root is
established before it starts to grow and make more food for itself and its
root. Spores and seeds represent two different reproductive strategies: either
1) produce a small number of offspring, each endowed with a packet of food, or,
2) produce an enormous number of propagules, none of which have anything to
tide them over or help them get established. A flowering plant may produce
hundreds or thousands of seeds, but a fern produces millions or billions of
spores.

“Fern balls”

Some Ramblers spotted a ball-shaped structure at the end
of a Christmas fern frond. It appeared as though the terminal third of the
frond was rolled up, forming a roughly spherical ball. This is not the first
time a Rambler group has seen this. Two years ago Ramblers saw several of them,
both here in the SBGG and elsewhere. The story of what makes these curious
structures is told here.

Fern herbivory

Whenever you look at a fern you should be impressed with
what you don’t see. You almost never see signs of it being fed upon. This immunity
from attack by herbivorous insects is due to the presence of toxic chemicals in
fern tissues. In ferns as well as many other plants these substances are a
major defense against being eaten. But they are expensive to make so plants often
don’t produce them until they are needed. This makes the fresh leaf susceptible
to attack. In the case of the Fern ball caterpillar they feed on their first
ball for a while and then leave, seeking out another frond where they construct
a second ball and commence feeding again. It is not known for certain, but it
could be that the fern tissue becoming more distasteful as a result of the
caterpillar feeding, requiring it to move to a new host plant.

Seed dispersal by ants

Seeds inside this trillium seed capsule are dispersed by ants

Many of the plants that flower early in the spring
produce seeds that are adapted to dispersal by ants. Each seed has an
energy-rich “handle,” called an elaiosome, that ants avidly seek out
(see Linda’s book, p. 44, for a photo of Trillium elaiosomes). The foraging ant
carries the seed back to its nest where the elaiosome is stripped off and fed
to other members of the nest, the queen and the developing larvae. The seed is
then discarded, either carried out of the nest and dropped with the bodies of
dead ants and waste material or placed inside the nest in special latrine
areas. In either case the seed has a rich environment in which to germinate and
grow. Additionally, many seeds must have the elaiosome removed in order to
germinate. In this way such plants can slowly spread over the landscape, one
ant hill at a time.

We saw two plants today that depend on ants for their
seed dispersal: the Large Flowered Heartleaf, a type of wild ginger, and a
Trillium with a developing fruit that has not opened yet. The Heartleaf was
surrounded by a large number of young plants. Perhaps it was located very close
to an ant nest and its seeds didn’t get carried very far.

Fruits

Jack-in-the-pulpit with developing fruits, each with a single seed
Painted buckeye fruits
Mayapple fruit
Goldenseal ripe fruits

Fruits are the packages that contain the seeds of flowering
plants. There is great variation in the packaging as well as in the number of
seeds in the package. In some plants the fruit consists only of the pistil and
its contained seed or seeds. In others there are additional parts derived from
other tissues of the flower. Today we saw the developing or mature fruits of
several plants that flowered earlier this spring: Jack-in-the-pulpit, Painted
buckeye, Mayapple, Trillium and Goldenseal.

Jack in the Pulpit

We saw several Jack-in-the-Pulpit plants with developing
fruits today. The story of how these plants can change sex, switching from male
to female and back, can be found here.
Each small green sphere is the fruit of a single flower and contains one seed.
The fruit will develop an intense red color when ripe. which attracts birds.

Goldenseal

The fruits were abundant on June 9 this year, but today
we only saw one plant with its bright red berries. Like the Jack-in-the-pulpit,
the red berries appeal to birds that digest the pulp and later pass the seed.

Painted Buckeye

You may remember earlier this spring that many of the
shrubby buckeyes in the DNFG bore racemes of yellowish-green flowers. Now some
of those flowers have produced fruit, but many of the plants have none. George
wanted to know why. Not all the buckeyes produced flowers this year. Trees and
shrubs often don’t flower when they are young and even the shrubs that arise as
root suckers won’t flower until they have aged a few years. Other factors affect
the amount of fruit set. When pollinators are not abundant or are ineffective in
pollen transfer fruit set is limited. There could be only a few flowers with
functional pistils, as in the case of Bottlebrush buckeye. I haven’t been able
to find any information about the Painted buckeye to indicate if they are
similar to the Bottlebrush in being limited by the number of complete or
perfect flowers (Complete or perfect flowers have both stamens and pistils.) To
answer this question we’ll need to carefully examine the flowers when they
bloom next spring.

The fruit contains a single seed within a relatively thin
shell. Squirrels (and, perhaps, Chipmunks) eat buckeyes, but for other mammals (humans,
livestock) they are poisonous.

Trillium

The Trillium seed pod or capsule will split open when
ripe, liberating its contained seeds with their elaiosomes. (See the discussion
of Ants and seeds, above, and also see Linda’s book, p. 44, for a photo of
Trillium elaiosomes). Trilliums are just one of many plants with ant-dispersed
seeds.

Mayapple

The Mayapple fruit is the only part of the plant that is
edible and then only when ripe. The ripe fruit is pale greenish-white. It is
consumed by Box turtles without harm and they are probably the major dispersal
agent for the seeds. One of the compounds derived from the plant, podophylline,
has been used in cancer chemotherapy.

Hibiscus flowers

Hibiscus flower; stamens with dark anthers surround the style;
5 branched stigmas project forward on end of style.

There are two Hibiscus currently flowering in the DNFG, H. moscheutos and H. coccinea. These plants
exhibit the characteristic flower structure of the Mallow family – the long,
projecting pistil and the stamens that completely surround the pistil style nearly
up to the end where the stigmas are. The nectar glands of the flower are at the
base of the petals. This seems like an unlikely arrangement to assist in
pollination because small insects that come to feed on the nectar would not
come in contact with the stigmas very often. But these flowers can easily be
pollinated by humming birds whose heads would contact the anthers and stigma
while they imbibe nectar. Also, surprisingly, a recent study showed that small
bees transmitted pollen to the stigmas, but mostly when they tumbled around
while fighting each other. Bees that entered the flower alone were ineffective
as pollinators. Video of
bee visiting a Hibiscus flower
. (Watch the first 15-20 seconds; you will see
a bee fly into the blossom, bumping into the stigma. It spends the rest of the video
nectaring and then gathering pollen from the anthers.)

Other blooming flowers at the bottom of the DNFG that
were attractive to pollinators are Scarlet bee balm and Smooth Coneflower. The
Rattlesnake master is not yet blooming, but we saw it blooming two weeks ago in
another part of the garden and it was covered with bees and wasps.

Ferns

I confess I had difficulty identifying the ferns from their photographs, so I’m going to include only those that I am confident of. All the ferns
we looked at today are in the List of Observed Species at the bottom of this
post.

Christmas fern fertile frond (undersurface); sterile fronds in background
Broad Beech fern; 2 basal pinnae point in a different direction
Sensitive fern

Scouring Rush

Scouring rushes are planted near the deer fence at the
bottom of the Dunson Garden. We saw them as we walked up the road on our way
back to the Arbor. The common name refers to its use by early travelers to
scrub out pans after cooking. The plant has a high silica content that makes it
good for scrubbing out dirty objects. Another common name for the genus Equisetum is “Horsetail” and refers
to the appearance of the other species. They have a ring of thread-like leaves
arising from each joint of the stem, making the entire plant resemble a horse’s
tail. But the Scouring rush lacks these leaves and doesn’t resemble a horsetail
in any way, shape or form. In the recent past horsetails were thought to be an
evolutionary lineage independent of ferns, but more recent DNA sequence
analysis suggests that they really should be included with the ferns.

Passion Vine

Climbing up the fence near the Scouring Rush was a Purple
Passion-flower, unfortunately not in bloom. (The flowers only open for a single
day.) It had two fruits the size of large eggs and many people think these are
the origin of another common name for this plant: Maypop, because if a child
stomps on the fruit it may pop. It turns out that this is an example of
“folk etymology.” The real origin of the name, was revealed in Who Named the Daisy? Who Named the Rose?,
by Mary Durant, 1976, Dodd, Mead & Co., NY.

. . . often known by the charming nickname of maypop, but not because it blooms in
May
. Maypop is the
anglicization of the
Indian maracock, as the Virginian tribes called it, the name having made its way from the
Tupi Indians of South America, up
through the Arawak and Carib tribes, and into North America. In the
original Tupi, the name was maraca-cui-iba — the “rattle
fruit” – because of the gourd-like
fruits whose seeds rattle when
the fruit is dried.

The “passion” part of the name does not refer
to any aphrodisiac property. It is a reference to the passion of Christ. Early
Jesuit missionaries to Brazil in their efforts to convert the native people to
Christianity made up symbolic biblical references for the flower parts; e.g., the
ten sepals and petals represented the 10 faithful disciples, the three styles
the three nails, etc.

The juice of a commercial species of passion flower, Passiflora edulis, is widely used as a
flavoring in beverages and ice cream in Latin America. Avis also reports that
passion flower tea is an anxiety-reducer.

Syrphid fly – Yellowjacket queen mimic

Hover fly wasp mimic

Not everyone was around when we encountered a fly that
mimics a Yellowjacket wasp. Unfortunately, it flew away and Rosemary was only
able to get a quick snapshot when it rested briefly on a wind-blown leaf.

Sulphur shelf fungus

Sulphur shelf fungus

This fungus is also known as “Chicken of the woods.”
 The common name refers to its edibility.
It also is a wood-decaying fungus, rotting the wood of its host tree and
ultimately weakening it. I’m uncertain about which species of Sulphur shelf
this is. The
Mushroom Expert website lists
two similar species that infect oaks: Laetiporus sulphureus and L. cincinnatus. The fruiting body of the
first is typically seen high up in the tree, the second rots the roots and is
seen at the base of the tree, so this one could be L. cincinnatus.

List of Observed Species

Common Name

Scientific Name

Flowering
plants

American Beech

Fagus grandifolia

Large-Flowered Heart leaf

Hexastylis shuttleworthii

Jack in the Pulpit with fruit

Arisaema triphyllum

Painted Buckeye with fruits

Aesculus sylvatica

Goldenseal

Hydrastis canadensis

Trillium

Trillium sp.

May apple

Podophyllum peltatum

Rose Mallow

Hibiscus moscheutos

Scarlet Rose Mallow

Hibiscus coccineus

Scarlet Bee Balm

Monarda didyma

Rattlesnake master

Eryngium yuccafolia

Smooth Purple Coneflower

Echinacea laevigata

Purple Passion-flower

Passiflora incarnata

Ferns

Wood fern

Thelypteris sp.

Christmas fern

Polystichum acrostichoides

Southern Maidenhair fern

Adiantum capillus-veneris

Ebony Spleenwort

Asplenium platyneuron

New York fern

Parathelypteris noveboracensis

Northern Maidenhair fern

Adiantum pedatum

Goldie’s wood fern

Dryopteris goldiana

Cinnamon fern

Osmundastrum cinnamomea

Netted Chain fern

Lorinseria areolata

Broad Beech fern

Phegopteris hexagonoptera

Royal fern

Osmunda spectabilis

(= O. regalis)

Scouring Rush

Equisetum hyemale

Animals

Syrphid fly

Diptera: Syrphidae

Fungi

Sulfur shelf fungus

Laetiporus sulphureus

or L. cincinnatus