Ramble Report May 2, 2024

 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 (at) uga.edu.

Insect identifications: Heather
Larkin
,
Bill Sheehan

Fungi and gall identifications: Bill
Sheehan

All the photos that appear in this report,
unless otherwise credited, were taken by Heather Larkin. Photos may be enlarged
by clicking them with a mouse or tapping on your screen. Number of Ramblers today: 29

Today’s emphasis: Seeking what we found in the Children’s,
International, and Threatened & Endangered Species gardens.

Reading: Linda read a poem about the passing of spring by Byron
Herbert Reece from his 1950 book, Bow Down in Jericho. Byron Herbert
Reece was born, and lived his life, in Union County, Georgia. This piece in the New Georgia
Encyclopedia tells you more about Reece’s life and poetry.


We Could Wish Them a Longer Stay

Plum, peach, apple, and pear

And the service tree on the hill


Unfold blossom and leaf.


From them comes scented air


As the brotherly petals spill.


Their tenure is bright and brief.


We could wish them a longer stay,


We could wish them a charmed bough


On a hill untouched by the flow


Of consuming time; but they


Are lovelier, dearer now


Because they are soon to go,


Plum, peach, apple and pear


And the service blooms whiter than snow.

Show and Tell:

Roger C. brought some deceased cicadas of the 13-year brood – note the
distinctive red eyes on the adult at the top of the photo; the shed
exoskeleton of a nymph is below. Roger’s and Betsy’s home in Oglethorpe
County is in the middle of a local cicada colony. Roger said, “For the past
week the woods around us have been filled all day with their incessant buzzing
– like the sound track to a horror movie. I am surprised to go somewhere like
the Botanical Garden and not hear them.”


Linda pointed out the American Wisteria blooming overhead on the Children’s Garden Arbor.

Many ramblers remember the Children’s
Garden Arbor when it was known as The Wisteria Arbor, and was laden with old, heavy
Chinese Wisteria vines that flowered like crazy every April. In fact, it was
the cover photo for a 2001 book
about the Botanical Garden by Hugh and Carol Nourse, two of the leaders of the original group of Nature Ramblers in 2009. With increased awareness of the invasiveness of
this species, and with the vines threatening to overrun the nearby woods, they
were removed when the Children’s Garden was installed and the arbor re-built.
A single vine of our native American Wisteria was planted on the northwest
corner and is slowly spreading. Mostly found in the riverine swamps of south Georgia,
American Wisteria is occasionally found in gardens in north Georgia. If you see
a Wisteria growing north of the Fall Line you can bet it’s the Chinese
species

feel free to kill it!

American Wisteria flowers are not fragrant like the Asian species, but are more intensely colored.

Announcements and other interesting things to note:

Gary Grossman, Professor Emeritus of Animal Ecology at UGA, has written a
beautiful essay
about fishes and rivers in the Southern Appalachians. Gary will be leading a river
ecology ramble this fall along the Middle Oconee River.

“The Cicadas Are Here, Singing a Song for the Future,” an essay in the New York Times by Margaret Renkl.

“Sunken Treasure: The
Art & Science of Coral Reefs” exhibit of rare books and coral
specimens collected by Jim Porter is still on display at the Hargrett Rare Book
and Manuscript Library on North Campus. Jim leads tours of the exhibit every
first Friday at 2:00 pm through July 5. Jim is also leading a special tour for
Ramblers on Thursday morning, June 27, when we will meet him at the library at
9:00am.


Today’s Route:  We exited the Children’s Garden along the
south side near the Callaway Building, entered the International Garden where
we visited the bog garden, the Threatened and Endangered Species garden, and
the Pawpaw patch.

OBSERVATIONS:

Yellow- and blue-flowered Wild Indigo species are in bloom at the
Garden and elsewhere in Athens in native plant gardens. Their spectacular
flower spikes make both of these species easy-to-love natives. The
yellow-flowered species above is the result of a hybrid between Yellow Wild Indigo and White Indigo called ‘Carolina Moonlight.’ The blue-flowered plants below are Tall
Blue Wild Indigo. The Wild Indigo genus Baptisia has received a lot of horticultural attention in
the last 20 years and there are now several hybrids and cultivars on the
market.


There are about 25 species of Wild Indigo in the eastern half of North America,
the only place on the planet where this species occurs. The Wild Indigo genus,
Baptisia, was called “False Indigo” in the past since these plants are not in the
same genus as the dye-producing indigo of the tropics. But they are not
“false” anything, so we ackowledge their North American nativity with the common
name of Wild Indigo. (One Baptisia species, B. tinctoria, has been
used as a dye plant.)
For information on growing Wild Indigo, click here and here.

Like many other species in the Bean Family (Fabaceae,
pronounced fab – ā – see – ee), most Wild Indigo leaves are trifoliate, i.e.
there are three leaflets per leaf. (There are a couple of notable exceptions
that we’ll see in flower in the summer.)

Pea type of bean family flower

Wild Indigo plants have classic Bean Family flowers, with an upright banner
petal and two wing petals enclosing a keel petal. Only large pollinators such as bumblebees can pollinate these flowers
their weight presses down on the keel petal, exposing the stamens and pistil hidden within. There are two other types of
Bean Family flowers, the Mimosa type and the Senna type, but the classic Pea
flower type is by far the most common in this family.

Mimosa type of bean flowers – a cluster of many tiny flowers with long showy stamens

Senna type of bean flowers with five nearly identical petals. Maryland Senna grows in the right-of-way and we’ll see it in flower this summer.
Photo credit.

A large bed of ‘Extracta’ Garden
Sage is in full flower and attracting Western Honeybees in the Children’s
Garden. Both are European species and the flowers are a nice fit for the bees –
no nectar robbing is required to reach the nectar at the base of the flower
tube. ‘Extrakta’ Garden Sage is a cultivar of Common Sage, a European native
long used for medicine and cooking. The species name, Salvia officinalis,
refers to the storeroom, the officina, in monasteries where dried herbs were
stored and medicines were crafted. Below, a Western Honeybeee is visiting a Garden Sage flower.

Calico Beardtongue, a native species of Penstemon, also attracts honeybees.

Green-and-Gold is still flowering in the Children’s Garden

When we entered the International Garden, we were awed by three large flowering
shrubs/small trees, a pink-flowering Deutzia, a white-flowering Deutzia, and an
American Smoketree.

Deutzia is a Eurasian genus in the Witch Hazel Family.
Deutzia

× ‘Monzia’ Pink-A-Boo®


White-flowered Fuzzy Deutzia

American Smoketree

This striking shrub occurs on rocky limestone slopes on the Cumberland Plateau of northwest
Georgia, Alabama, Tennessee, and Kentucky, and west to Missouri and Arkansas.
It is rare throughout its range. The name Smoketree comes from
clusters of long, pink
hairs on the spent flower stalks that persist for months. Its fall leaf color is considered to be the best of any native shrub.

 
Heather spotted this nearly invisible cluster of newly hatched Tuft-legged Orbweaver spiders in a delicate net of silk.


We headed to the bog in search of pitcherplant flowers and their inflated, insect-capturing leaves. Sadly, most of the leaves we
found were phyllodes
the flat, sword-shaped leaves that pitcherplants produce
when there is insufficient sunlight. 
 

One Yellow Trumpet Pitcherplant had fully expanded leaves with a victim, a Click Beetle, on its
way to becoming a nitrogen source (below).

How Pitcherplants Work

Decaying insect bodies inside a pitcherplant leaf
Photo by Don Hunter

Insects
are attracted by sweet smelling nectar produced around the top rim of the
pitcher and, if they fall in, are prevented from escaping by downward pointing
hairs or slippery surfaces. Once trapped in the bottom of the pitcher, their
bodies are digested by enzymes produced by bacteria that live in the pitcher,
as well as those produced by the plant. In fact, pitcherplant pitchers support
a suite of creatures that depend on them for shelter and food, including some
that are found nowhere else but those pitchers, a wonderful example of
symbiosis. Both plant and bacteria depend on this insect soup for nutrients
such as nitrogen and phosphorus. Wetland soils, where pitcherplants live, are
always low in available nitrogen, and pitcherplants, sundews, butterworts, and
bladderworts make up for this lack with their carnivorous lifestyle.

Parrot Pitcherplant flower
photo by Don Hunter

Pitcherplant flowers are strange looking – the petals droop down, the sepals
arch widely over them, and the pistil and stamens are hidden away under… an
upside-down umbrella? In typical flowers, the pistil is a small structure, held
at the center of the flower, consisting of an ovary, a style (a small column on
top of the ovary), and a sticky, pollen-receptive stigma at the top of the
style. In pitcherplants, the style is expanded into the upside down umbrella
and the stigmas are notches on the tips of the umbrella’s “ribs.” The combination
of drooping petals and the upside-down umbrella ensure that insects who have
entered into the flower looking for nectar or pollen are trapped long enough to bumble around among the stamens,
accidentally picking up pollen which they may carry to the next pitcherplant’s flowers. (For more detail on pitcherplant pollination, see this article from the Harvard Forest website.)

Early last fall, the gnarly twigs and
branches of this Northern Prickly-ash (aka Northern
Toothache Tree)
in the Physic Garden were bare, stripped of their leaves by
the hungry caterpillars of Giant Swallowtails. The tree seems to have fully recovered, and is fully leafed out with a new crop of leaves waiting for this year’s cats. Giant
Swallowtails use only plants in the Citrus family (Rutaceae)
as larval hosts, including shrubs such as this species as well as the coastal Southern Toothache Tree (Southern
Prickly Ash or Hercules’ Club, Zanthoxylum clava-herculis) and Wafer-ash
(Ptelea trifoliata), a shrub of calcareous soils.

Pawpaws are in flower.
White-marked Tussock Moth caterpillar making its
way along the railing in the Pawpaw patch. The four pale bumps on its back are dense
“tussocks” of stinging hairs on the first four abdominal segments. They feed on the leaves of oaks, Black Cherry, Hackberry, and willows. More info on this species is here.

The Threatened and Endangered Species beds are overwhelmed with Indian Pink, in glorious flower, this year! I would like to nominate “Firecracker Flower” as a new common name for this species that is neither Indian nor pink, but explodes with color.

Heather noticed this spider  yes, it’s a spider!  on an
Indian Pink leaf. It’s an Ant-mimicking Jumping Spider.
Ant mimicry is fairly common, having evolved more than 70 times. Some insects
mimic ants to discourage predation (ants are usually unpalatable), others to
lure their predators in so they can then turn and attack them.
Cooley’s Meadowrue is one of the rarest plant species in Georgia, and is
both state and federally listed as endangered. Eight populations have been
documented in Georgia, but only one is protected on conservation land.
Georgia’s populations differ from North Carolina and Florida plants in several
ways and may represent a new species, endemic to Georgia.

Leaving the native plants of the T&E garden behind, ramblers emerged into the
China Section just in time to catch the Voodoo Lily
in full flower, its spadix besieged by flies. Flies and
beetles are attracted by the rotten meat appearance of the spathe and the
disgusting odor of the spadix. The Voodoo Lily is definitely not a member of the Lily Family but belongs in
the Arum Family (Araceae), familiar to us as other spathe-and-spadix flowers
such as Jack-in-the-Pulpit (in the woods) and Peace Lily (possibly seen in a planter at a shopping mall near you).

Voodoo Lily flower with its speckled spathe and brown, columnar spadix. The yellow patch at the base of the spadix is a cluster of tiny flowers. Zoom in to this photo you can see the flies swarming both the spadix and spathe. Heather, who took this closeup photo and got out as fast as she could, testified to the overwhelming awfulness of the smell.
During cool, damp springs such as we’ve had this year, Camellia Leaf Galls may develop on the leaves of Camellias, turning them thick, fleshy, and
bright green.
Over time, the galls become dry and powdery, as above, releasing spores
that will infect the plants again next spring.
The galls are created by a fungus, Exobasidium camelliae, found mainly on Sasanqua Camellias.
Bill spotted two Flannel Moth
chrysalids on twigs of a Swamp Chestnut Oak.

Flannel Moth
chrysalis

The adult Flannel Moth is aptly named.
Photo by Judy Gallagher
Heather found a Carolina Wren’s nest (below) with four chicks in a drain pipe.
Photo by Bill Sheehan

SUMMARY OF OBSERVED SPECIES:

Thirteen-year Cicada             Magicicada
sp.

American Wisteria                 Wisteria
frutescens

Tall Blue Wild Indigo              Baptisia
australis

Yellow Wild Indigo
×
White Indigo ‘Carolina Moonlight’ Baptisia
sphaerocarpa
X B. alba

Calico Beardtongue, Long-sepal Beardtongue          Penstemon
calycosus

‘Extracta’ Garden Sage        Salvia officinalis

Green-and-Gold                    Chrysogonum
virginianum

Fuzzy Deutzia                        Deutzia
scabra

Pink Deutzia                          Deutzia
× ‘Monzia’ Pink-A-Boo®

American Smoketree           Cotinus
obovatus

Tuft-legged Orbweaver Spider      Mangora placida

Yellow
Trumpet Pitcherplant         Sarracenia
flava

Click Beetle                            Family
Elateridae

Parrot Pitcherplant               Sarracenia psittacina

Northern Prickly-ash (aka Northern Toothache Tree)  
                                                Zanthoxylum americanum

Tall Pawpaw                            Asimina
triloba

White-marked Tussock Moth caterpillar  Orgyia
leucostigma

Indian Pink                                         Spigelia
marilandica

Slender Ant-mimic Jumping Spider          Synemosyna
formica


Cooley’s Meadowrue                     Thalictrum
cooleyi

Voodoo Lily                                    Sauromatum
venosum

Camellia Leaf Gall                         Exobasidium
camelliae

Southern Flannel Moth               Megalopyge
opercularis

Carolina Wren                              Thryothorus ludovicianus