Ramble Report June 15, 2023

Leader
for today’s Ramble:
Heather Larkin

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

Insect
identifications:
Heather Larkin, 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 by tapping on your
screen.

Number
of Ramblers today:

27

Today’s
emphasis:
Seeing the Garden through the eyes of a child, taking pleasure
in the smallest of animals and flowers especially with the aid of magnification.

Heather introducing ramblers to magnifying (5x) containers that allow you to see your captive insect (or flower, rock, toad, etc.) from all sides. These nifty devices are available online by searching “beautyflier 1 small insect magnifier.”

Announcements/Interesting
Things to Note:

A free workshop on the ecological and cultural value of River Cane will be held at the  Botanical Garden on Thursday, June 22, at 10:30am in the Visitor Center’s Gardenside Room (downstairs). For more information, contact Laurel Clark, State Botanical Garden of Georgia Communications Coordinator, 706-542-6014, laurel.clark@uga.edu



Carla mentioned the upcoming 2024 Total Solar Eclipse,
April 8, 2024, passing through points on a line from the Rio Grande River up
through Waco/Dallas to St. Louis to Detroit to Buffalo, NY to Burlington,
VT.  Lodging in places along the path of
totality is already at a premium. NASA has a webpage devoted to the eclipse, including this map that shows the path of the eclipse.

Karen
Porter mentioned the recent, highly successful Greenway Day celebration, that included many of the folks that were part of the original movement to
get the Greenway established. Detailed information about the Greenway along
with maps is available at this website.

Halley
put in a plug for the local chapter of the Georgia Native Plant Society, the Athens-East
Piedmont chapter. Meeting times and
places are best found on the chapter’s website.

Richard
mentioned that on the season finale of “Ted Lasso” one of the characters could be
seen with his feet on his desk reading the book “Finding the Mother Tree” by
Suzanne Simard.

Reading: Heather read from Henry Van Dyke (1852-1933), A
Child in the Garden
from “The Poems of Henry Van Dyke,” 1914.

When to the garden of untroubled thought
I came of late, and saw the open door,
And wished again to enter and explore
The sweet, wild ways with stainless bloom inwrought,
And bowers of innocence with beauty fraught,
It seemed some purer voice must speak before
I dared to tread that garden loved of yore,
That Eden lost unknown and found unsought.
Then just within the gate I saw a child–
A stranger-child, yet to my heart most dear;
He held his hands to me, and softly smiled
With eyes that knew no shade of sin or fear:
“Come in,” he said, “and play awhile with me;
I am the little child you used to be.”

Today’s
Route:
  We left the Children’s Garden arbor and
headed to the fountain at the Visitor Center plaza. We then explored the flower
beds around the Porcelain Museum and the Herb and Physic Gardens.

OBSERVATIONS:

Don arrived early and discovered a number of insects on
the Rattlesnake Master plants in the Children’s Garden.

Small Channeled Valgus Beetle exploring the head-like inflorescence of  a Rattlesnake Master

This is the tiny fly just barely visible beneath the Rattlesnake Master flowerhead, on the right side of the stalk.


A plant bug, Rhinocapsus rubricans,
seen on the Rattlesnake Master flower head, has no common name.

American Toads rely on numbers for reproduction, with the female
laying up to 12,000 eggs at a time. Tadpoles are cannibalistic, but they still
survive in such huge numbers that we get what we’ve been seeing for the past
few weeks: hundreds of baby toads hopping everywhere. Snakes are the biggest
predator of these toads at any age.
 

Heather passed around the
magnifying container with a captive American Toad.

There are
many beautiful plantings at the Botanical Garden, but none are more eye-catching
than the Visitor Center plaza fountain. Visible in this panorama shot are several
hybrid pitcher plants, floating water lilies, alligator-flag, spider-lily with
white flowers, and a Bald Cypress tree. Sheldon Jones is the curator of this
aquatic garden.

The Pollinator Garden
that surrounds the Porcelain Museum features a variety of mints, milkweeds, and aster family plants and is always a great place to look for insects.

‘Little Joe,’ a dwarf cultivar of Three-nerved Joe Pye Weed, is just coming into bud.

A Large Milkweed Bug explores a ‘Little Joe’ leaf
These bugs feed on the stems and leaves by piercing and sucking
but are considered more of a nuisance than a threat since their nymphs develop
into adults within about a month.

 

Versute Sharpshooter, a
member of the leafhopper family, on a ray flower of Black-eyed Susan

Leafhoppers as a family all feed on plants. Research
has shown that they feed on nutritionally poor sap and have to consume vast
amounts of it, the equivalent of a human drinking nearly 400 gallons of water
per day.
The “Sharpshooter” name has been attributed to several behavioral traits: the damage they inflict
on leaves resembles bullet holes, the “rapid and forcible ejection” of excess water from their bodies, and their rapid hiding skill
which reminded someone of an army sharpshooter. (“Versute” means crafty, cunning, or artful.)

Roger found a Barred Owl feather on the path

Like other
owls, Barred Owl’s wings and feathers have a number of features that enable
them to fly almost silently. Their wings are large relative to their body size,
allowing them to glide long distances without a lot of noisy flapping. The leading
edges of their wing feathers have comb-like teeth that break up the air passing
over them and dampens its sound; the trailing edges have a soft fringe that
further breaks up air flow. Smaller down feathers also absorb sound.

With their distinctive “who cooks for you, who cooks
for you all” call, Barred Owls are the most commonly heard owl in this area.
They prefer forested areas, but seem to have adapted to life in Athens’s wooded
neighborhoods, where their calls are heard year-round
but especially during breeding season. They are formidable night hunters, taking
prey as small as insects and as big as crows.

The toothed or fringed edges of a Barred
Owl’s wing feather helps to reduce the sound of air passing over their wings.

The complex flower head of
a Zinnia, a member of the Aster (composite) family, contains both ray and disk
flowers.

There are
several whorls of purplish-pink ray flowers and a single whorl of green, folded,
undeveloped ray flowers surrounding the central disk in this Zinnia flower head. In the very center, red scales
(called “palea”) obscure the developing disk flowers above (see the bright yellow, fully
developed disk flowers in the photo below). The yellow pods are the
pollen-bearing anthers of the ray flowers.

Typically,
composite flower heads have fertile (seed-producing) disk flowers and sterile
ray flowers; in Zinnias, both types of flowers are fertile.

Linnaeus named this
genus after the German botanist Johann Gottfried Zinn who first described these plants.

A bumblebee is exploring the ray
flowers of a Zinnia flower head. Five-lobed, bright yellow disk flowers are
open in the center of the head.

Cicada Killer Wasps are up to 2 inches long and look scary, but they are generally harmless to
humans. Few stings have been recorded, and they sting only when truly harassed.
They are so generally unbothered by humans that there are videos of them being
handled and petted. The wasp in Don’s photo is a smaller one: females have to
be big enough to do what they are named for…stinging, paralyzing, and burying adult
cicadas. They lay eggs on the buried cicada, which will be eaten by the
emerging young.

Clustered
Mountain-mint flower heads are always covered with insects:
Common Eastern Bumble Bee (left) and Western Honey Bees (right)

With its large
heads consisting entirely of fringed, elongated, ray-like disk flowers,
Stokes
Aster may well be the most beautiful member of the Aster family. In the
wild, Stokes Aster occurs in bogs and wet pinelands, where it is almost always
purplish-blue as here. Cultivars with white, pink, or violet heads are now
available in the nursery trade. The flowers
must be cross-pollinated in order to produce seed and are visited by a wide
variety of insects, especially  butterflies and bees. This species is ranked as critically imperiled by Georgia DNR.

A large
number of Swamp Milkweeds were planted in the Porcelain Museum garden to
attract Monarch butterflies, but have also attracted several other insects that
dine on milkweed leaves.
photo credit: R.A. Nonenmacher

Large Milkweed Bug adult (left) and nymph (right) on
Swamp Milkweed foliage
Swamp Milkweed Leaf Beetles
specialize in eating the leaves of Swamp Milkweed and their close relatives.

These beetles are not deterred by the
milky latex that drips out from the wounds they inflict. The latex contains toxic
glycosides but, just like monarch caterpillars, the beetles have adapted to
this poisonous diet and are rendered unpalatable or even deadly to their predators.
The beetles’ bright colors are a warning: keep away or die! Although they are
not harmed by the latex, the beetles minimize the amount they consume by
slicing into a vein and draining off some of the latex before beginning to chow
down.

Spotted Pink Lady Beetle
on Swamp Milkweed foliage
The Swamp Milkweed plants in
these beds are always heavily infested with Oleander Aphids, aka Milkweed
Aphids.

Wingless adults and nymphs are both seen in Don’s photo; if the plant becomes too crowded, winged adults
are produced that fly to other plants and establish new populations. Small female
wasps attack Oleander Aphids and lay eggs inside of the victims. The black,
swollen aphids at the top of this image are parasitized “zombie aphids,”
filled with wasp eggs. When the eggs hatch, the developing larvae eat the aphid
from the inside. Ah, nature red in tooth and claw. For more info on Oleander
Aphids, click here.

Ramblers admire this watery bed of
Horsetails, Spider-lilies, White-topped Sedge, and Indian Shot Canna

Indian Shot Canna nearly overwhelmed by Scouring Rush Horsetails

Spider-lily

White-topped Sedge
Nathan found a pair of mating
Two-lined Spittle Bugs in the grass. The photo was taken of the bugs in the magnifying viewer.

Native to Europe, Common
Bugloss is an important nectar-producing plant for beekeepers in its native
range and was rated in the top ten species for nectar production in the
United Kingdom. In this country, it is listed in Washington, Oregon, and Colorada as a noxious weed
because of its invasiveness in forests, rangeland, alfalfa fields, and hay pastures.
All parts of the plant, except for the petals, are covered with white, bristly
hairs.

Last and definitely least, Crowdippers were seen on our way
out of the Herb Garden into the Physic Garden. They are Asian plants in the same family as
our native Jack-in-the-Pulpit and Green Dragon, all of which have the spathe
and spadix type of inflorescence. The spathe is the slender, tube-like
structure; the spadix is the long, slender, curving structure rising from inside
the spathe. Flowers are produced at the base of the spadix.

 

In spite of its endearing name, Crowdippers is an invasive weed in parts of Europe and North America. Here’s how the website of Scott Arboretum (Swarthmore College, Pennsylvania) describes the plant: “The volunteer who first introduced me to Pinellia described this invasive plant with a tone of loathing and detestation. If memory serves me correctly, I believe she described Pinellia as
the “bane of [her] gardening existence.” At the time, I thought that
was a pretty strong statement for such a small weed. But, after three
months of first-hand experience with this seemingly ineradicable plant
that always reappears with gusto, I now understand what the volunteer
meant.”

Nathan and Dale

SUMMARY OF OBSERVED
SPECIES:

American Toad     Anaxyrus americanus
Three-nerved Joe Pye Weed     Eutrochium dubium cultivar ‘Little Joe’
Large Milkweed Bug, adult and nymphs     Oncopeltus fasciatus
Black-eyed Susan     Rudbeckia hirta
Versute Sharpshooter leafhopper     Graphocephala versuta
Barred Owl     Strix varia
Elegant Zinnias     Zinnia elegans
Cicada Killer wasp     Sphecius speciosus
Clustered Mountain Mint     Pycnanthemum muticum
Western Honey Bee     Apis mellifera
Common Eastern Bumble Bee     Bombus impatiens
Swamp Milkweed     Asclepias incarnata
Stokes Aster     Stokesia laevis
Swamp Milkweed Leaf Beetle     Labidomera clivicollis
Oleander Aphids     Apis nerii
Two-lined Spittle Bug     Prosapia bicincta
Scouring Rush Horsetail     Equisetum hyemale
White-topped Sedge     Rhynchospora (Dichromena) colorata
Spider-lily     Hymenocallis sp.
Indian Shot Canna     Canna indica
Common Bugloss     Anchusa officinalis
Crow-dipper     Pinellia ternata