Ramble Report June 1, 2023

 Leader
for today’s Ramble:

Connie Gray

 Author
of today’s Ramble report:
Linda

 Fungi identifications: Don

Linkto 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: 30

Today’s emphasis:  Native ferns in the Dunson Native Flora Garden

Ramblers checking out Southern Shield Fern in the Shade Garden

Reading: Connie read a poem, possibly written
by Roy Campbell, from “Our Ferns: Their Haunts, Habits and Folklore,” by Willard
Nelson Clute, first published in 1901.

If you would see the lady fern
   In all her graceful power,
Go look for her where woodlarks learn
   Love-songs in a summer bower.
   *******************************
Go look for the pimpernel by day,
   For Silene’s flowers by night,
For the first loves to bask in the sunny ray,
   And the last wooes the moon’s soft light;
But day or night the lady fern
   May catch and charm your eye,
When the sun to gold her emeralds turn
   Or the moon lends her silvery dye.
But seek her not in early May
   For a Siblyl, then, she looks,
With wrinkled fronds that seem to say,
   ‘Shut up are my wizard books.’
Then search for her in the summer woods
   Where rills keep moist the ground,
Where foxgloves from their spotted hoods
   Shake pilfering insects round;
Fair are the tufts of meadowsweet
   That haply blossom nigh,
Fair are the whorls of violet
   Prunella shows hard by;
But not by burn, in wood or dale,
   Grows anything so fair
As the plumy crests of emerald pale
   Of the lady fern, when the sunbeams turn
To gold her delicate hair.

Show-and-Tell:
  
Catherine brought a photo of a fawn taken
shortly after its birth in her backyard Wednesday morning. She reported that it
took 10-15 minutes for the labor and within the hour the fawn was standing and nursing.
By late Thursday morning, the fawn and its mother had moved on.

Linda
brought a flower from a Silky Camellia shrub growing near the Visitor Center; Barbara put it to lovely use, below.


Announcements/Interesting
Things:

Jan
Coyne sent this link to an article
about “awe walks,” “outdoor rambles designed to cultivate a sense of amazement.” She commented: “What we see on rambles may fall more into the category of
“awwww” than awe, but I think we end up often enough in the latter. Nature
Rambling: it’s good for you!”

Another
link
provided by
Jan is a real eye-opener about the value of mosses.

Today’s
Route:
   We left the arbor next to the Children’s
Garden and walked down the sidewalk path through the Shade Garden, heading to
the Dunson Native Flora Garden for the fern walk.

Four ferns planted in the Shade Garden are not native
to the Georgia Piedmont: a close but unnamed look-alike of Mariana Maiden Fern,
Autumn Fern, and Southern Shield Fern.

Similar
to its look-alike (Mariana Maiden Fern, native to tropical and subtropical
areas of Asia and Africa), this unnamed fern is an aggressive spreader in the
Garden and has escaped into surrounding woodlands and floodplains.

A native of east Asia, Autumn
Fern, frond (left) and sori (right), is spreading rapidly throughout the southeast. Two
short pieces, here
and here
, tell the
story of this species’ journey from ornamental darling to invasive pest plant
in just a few years.

Japanese
Painted Fern is native to eastern Asia and, so far, is well behaved, i.e. it has
not yet been reported to invade natural areas.
Southern
Shield Fern is native to the southeastern Coastal Plain but has begun to spread
aggressively throughout north Georgia as it has become a favorite in the nursery
trade.

Ferns have two
different growth patterns
– clumps and patches – which are determined by the
position of their rhizomes (underground stems). If the rhizome is erect, the
fronds emerge from its tip in a clump, usually forming a vase- or fountain-like
tuft of fronds. If the rhizome creeps along horizontally underground, the
fronds will emerge from buds scattered along its length, forming a more or less
scattered patch of fronds. Examples of clump-formers include Christmas Fern,
Southern Lady Fern, and Cinnamon Fern. Patch-formers include New York Fern,
Netted Chain Fern, and Sensitive Fern.

Clump of
Christmas Fern (left) and patch of Netted Chain Fern (right)


One thing that
makes ferns seem difficult to learn is the vocabulary that is unique to this
group of plants. As most people do know, fern leaves are usually called fronds.
Less well known is the term for the leaflets that make up the frond: a pinna
is one leaflet, pinnae is the plural. The margins of a pinna may be
shallowly scalloped or deeply lobed, but if the pinna is fully divided to the stalk, separated from
adjacent pinnae, it is a subleaflet called a pinnule. These may even be
subdivided further into pinnulules or -lets, but let’s stop there! It is the
repeated division of the fern frond that people mean when they describe a plant
as looking “ferny.”

Christmas
Fern fronds are divided into pinnae that are shaped like Christmas stockings.

Royal Fern
fronds are divided into pinnae (red outline) that are divided into pinnules (yellow outline).

Ferns
reproduce by spores, not seeds. Spores are dust-like reproductive structures produced in sori (single: sorus). The sori are usually round or
crescent-shaped and found on the lower surface of the fronds. But in many
species sori may be found elsewhere such as the tips of fronds or in special,
separate, fertile fronds.

Ebony
Spleenwort’s crescent-shaped sori are held on the lower surface of pinnae
(left). Sensitive Fern’s bead-like sori are produced on separate fronds
(right).

Southern
Lady Fern is a clump-forming fern
found in moist forests throughout the
southeast. Lower elevation plants have reddish stalks; mountain plants (above
3,500 feet or so) have green stalks. Both have been planted in the Dunson
Garden.
.

Our first stop in the Dunson Garden
was the Southern Lady Fern. On many fronds, the bottom pair of pinnae point downward
from the stem “like little lady’s slippers.” Unlike many other ferns, Southern
Lady Fern has hairless stalks because, you know, southern ladies shave
their legs. (Some ramblers disagreed with this generalization.) This species
is distinguished by the shape of its pinnae – they are about the same width
for most of their length then abruptly taper to a point, a shape known to
botanists as “acuminate.” The lobes of Southern Lady pinnae have finely
toothed edges.

Southern
Lady Fern pinnae
abruptly taper to a point.

Southern
Lady spores are produced in crescent-shaped sori on the undersides of
the pinnae.

Christmas Fern is
one of the most common ferns in Georgia,
growing in a wide range
of habitats from dry upland woods to streamside bottomlands. It can be
identified by its evergreen fronds and pinnae shaped somewhat like Christmas
stockings.
Its
leaf stalk is green with tan scales.
Last year’s fronds will remain around the base of the plant till
they disintegrate in late spring.
Christmas
Fern’s sori are clustered on pinnae at the tip of the frond.

Ebony
Spleenwort, another common fern, looks like a small version of Christmas Fern
except its leaf stalk is dark in color – glossy brown or black – and wiry. Ebony Spleenwortwill
grow in poor, dry-ish acidic soils that most other ferns won’t touch.

Ebony
Spleenwort sori are crescent-shaped and located on the lower surface of pinnae.

          

Royal Fern
occurs in sunny marshes and shady, wet areas along streams. Both its pinnae and pinnules are widely and regularly spaced. Spores
are produced in tan, tassel-like clusters at the tips of the fronds (below).

Rattlesnake Fern
has only one large, triangular sterile leaf per plant; it is held more or less
horizontally at the top of the fern’s stalk and is divided into several pairs
of lacy, much divided pinnae. In mid-spring, a second and very different leaf
rises from the same point at the top of the stalk – it is slender, tan, erect,
and bears many round sori.

Sterile leaf
of Rattlesnake Fern
Rattlesnake
Fern with erect fertile leaf (left); close-up of sori on fertile leaf (right)

Georgia has two
species of maidenhair ferns:  Northern Maidenhair Fern and Southern
Maidenhair Fern, occurring respectively in north and south Georgia (mostly). In
both species, the pinnae are delicate and fan-shaped, with the sporangia tucked
under small flaps of tissue along the edges of some pinnae. Both species grow
only where soil moisture and pH are high.

Northern Maidenhair
Fern has a broadly fan-shaped or semi-circular frond, with the soft,
blue-green pinnae radiating out from the top of the black, wiry,
erect stalk.


Southern
Maidenhair Fern grows among the rocks lining the wash. In the wild, it is
most often found growing on damp limestone. Its stems are black and glossy and
the blade is typically drooping
and oval in outline
with many pale green pinnae.

Sensitive
Fern frond

We stopped next at the
Sensitive Fern patch beneath the double-trunked Tulip Tree.
Individual fronds arise from an extensive network of underground rhizomes that form large patches.
The fronds of
Sensitive Fern are not fully divided into pinnae – they are, instead, deeply
lobed with wings of tissue along the midvein connecting the lobes. The edges of
the lobes are wavy or scalloped.
Sensitive
Fern grows in moist to very wet sites. Its name reflects its sensitivity to cold.

Sensitive
Fern frond eaten by insects

A number of the
fronds have been eaten by insects, unusual for a fern. The larvae of the sawfly
Hemitaxonus dubitatus is known to eat Sensitive Fern leaves but this
insect has not been documented in Georgia. Dale pointed out that sawflies
aren’t really flies — they’re Hymenopterans, related to wasps, bees, and ants.

Sensitive
Fern spores are produced in separate fertile fronds that look nothing like the
sterile fronds. Brown, bead-like sori are held on branches clustered at the top of an erect
stalk and will open to release thousands of tiny spores. Fertile fronds are
produced in the summer; today, we saw several fertile fronds from 2022 that had
dried and persisted through the winter.

 

Netted
Chain Fern is a near look-alike to Sensitive Fern and occupies the same wet
habitats.

 

Netted
Chain Fern is named for the chain-like pattern of small veins that line the
midvein of every lobe. These are best seen on the lower leaf surface. Sensitive
Fern lacks these chain-like veinlets. 

Netted
Chain Fern has a separate fertile frond as does Sensitive Fern. But Netted
Chain Fern holds its sori in narrow chain-like links.
New
York Fern is easily identified because the fronds are widest in the middle,
narrowing at both ends, because…“New Yorkers burn their candles at both
ends.” In the wild, this species forms large patches, often blanketing
entire hillsides. Only one insect is known to feed on its fronds, the
caterpillar of Pink-Shaded Fern Moth (Callopistria mollissima), a
widespread species in the eastern U.S.
Broad Beech Ferns
are a patch-forming fern with fronds scattered along widely creeping rhizomes. Its two lowest pinnae angle downward, creating the characteristic “fox-face.”
Goldie’s Wood
Fern occurs in high-elevation boulderfields and nutrient-rich cove forests over mafic bedrock
in north Georgia.
Marginal
Wood Fern

is a clump-forming fern found mostly in the mountains. It’s considered
evergreen because its fronds overwinter, spreading flat against the
ground to
maximize the amount of sunlight they can capture on short winter days.
The overwintered fronds are pretty beat
up by spring and disintegrate as new fronds begin to emerge.

—–

Marginal
Wood Fern is named for the location of the sori which typically line the margins of
the lobes of the pinnae.

The
Cinnamon Fern population in Dunson is much diminished from past years, with
only a few fronds so far this year.

Cinnamon
Fern fronds are easily identified by the small patches of white or tan hairs at
the base of the pinnae, aka “hairy armpits.”

Flowering plants and fungi are
making the transition to summer in the Dunson Garden.

Fairy Finger
fungi growing among the ferns.

Smooth Phlox
draped with a Hog Peanut Vine, with a Daddy Longlegs in the center of the flower.

Black
Cohosh is still going strong in Dunson.

Richard Eaton
sent this message last week:

“While I was standing by the flowering Black Cohosh
last Thursday, there wasn’t much discussion of the smell of the flowers, only
that they didn’t smell very good. Someone near me said that she thought that
they smelled like mothballs. That was interesting to me since I had spent a few
years studying the bacterial metabolism of the usual component of mothballs,
naphthalene.* So I took a sniff. The flowers did indeed have a mothball odor. However,
it is more likely that the chemical causing the smell is indole which,
when concentrated, smells similar to naphthalene and thus mothballs. Indole is
best known as a product made by the bacterium, E. coli, which gives it the
characteristic fecal odor. E. coli make indole from the amino acid,
tryptophan, using the enzyme, tryptophanase. Possibly black cohosh has a
similar ability.” 

 

Further research on this topic brought Richard to this article, “Roses are Red,
Violets are Blue, White Florals Smell Like Feces.” 

*Eaton, R. W. and P. J. Chapman.1992. Bacterial metabolism
of naphthalene: construction and use of recombinant bacteria to study ring
cleavage of 1,2-dihydroxynaphthalene and subsequent reactions. Journal of
Bacteriology 174:7542-7554. Link to this article.

SUMMARY OF OBSERVED SPECIES

Unnamed look-alike of Mariana Maiden Fern, Macrothelypteris
torresiana

Rice Paper Plant     Tetrapanax
papyrifer

Southern Shield Fern     Thelypteris kunthii

Autumn Fern    
Dryopteris erythrosora

Arborvitae “Fern” (a spikemoss)     Selaginella braunii

Japanese Painted Fern    Athyrium niponicum

Southern Lady Fern    Athyrium asplenioides

Christmas Fern     Polystichum acrostichoides

Royal Fern   
Osmunda regalis

Rattlesnake Fern     Botrypus (Botrychium)
virginianum

Southern Maidenhair Fern     Adiantum capillus-veneris

Sensitive Fern     Onoclea sensibilis

Netted Chain Fern     Woodwardia areolata

New York Fern  
 Thelypteris noveboracensis

Northern Maidenhair Fern     Adiantum pedatum

Broad Beech Fern     Phegopteris hexagonoptera

Fairy Fingers fungi    Clavaria fragilis

Goldie’s Wood Fern     Dryopteris goldieana

Cinnamon Fern     Osmundastrum (Osmunda)
cinnamomea

Marginal Wood Fern     Dryopteris marginalis

Smooth Phlox    
Phlox glaberrima

Ground Nut    
Apios americana

Daddy Longlegs     Family Opiliones

Black Cohosh     Actaea
racemosa