Monday, June 1, 2020

Prothonotary Wablers

Prothonotary Warblers (Protonotaria citrea) are small songbirds with a strange name and a spectacular presence in their swamp homes. They are neotropical migrants that return from their wintering grounds in Central America and northern South America to breed in the lowland forests of eastern North America.

A male Prothonotary Warbler (Protonotaria citrea) on its nesting territory.
Davie County, NC.
Church hierarchy has provided names for a number of bird species like Cardinals and Bishops. The unusual name for this delightful bird also has an ecclesiastical origin. The Prothonotary, the First Notary of the Catholic Church, wore yellow vestments while carrying out his duties.

You usually hear a Prothonotary Warbler on its breeding ground before you see one. The Prothonotary song is a loud and emphatic, SWEET-SWEET-SWEET, that the male uses to mark its territory. Then there is a light in the forest. A singing male flies into view. He is a rich yellow color and he does, as the Grateful Dead lyricist Robert Hunter wrote, “glow with the gold of sunshine”. The warbler’s black eye and ebony beak stand out against the golden feathers of the head and neck.  Its wings and tail are blue-gray.

A Prothonotary Warbler bringing nest material to a tree cavity
made by a Downy Woodpecker.  Rowan County, NC. 
Unlike most warblers that make traditional nests, Prothonotaries nest in tree cavities. They use an old woodpecker hole in a dead tree or branch and line the interior of the cavity with twigs, leaves and moss. Prothonotary Warblers will also raise families in nest boxes. They lay 4-6 eggs and in many areas, Prothonotaries can produce two broods per year. Their nest are vulnerable to raccoons, snakes and to Brown-headed Cowbirds (Molothrus ater), a nest parasite.

A Prothonotary Warbler peeking out of its cavity nest.
Rowan County, NC.
A Prothonotary Warbler entering a nest box. Mecklenburg County, NC.
Photo courtesy of Christine McCluskey.
Prothonotary Warblers feed on insects and other invertebrates. One day I saw a Prothonotary catch several dragonflies as they emerged from the old nymph exoskeleton and crawl up on a stick to complete the transformation to the adult stage. After the bird flew off, I found a pile of wings the warbler removed before eating the body of the dragonflies.

As fall comes on, Prothonotary Warblers start to move south. These little birds make long distance flights over water. Some fly right across the Gulf of Mexico to the Yucatan while others hop the islands of the West Indies to South America. Prothonotaries are often found in mangrove forests on their wintering grounds and join in mixed flocks of other small birds for mutual protection.

Prothonotary Warbler.  Rowan County, NC.
The population of Prothonotary Warblers has decreased significantly with more than a 40% decline since the 1960s. This mirrors a similar decrease in numbers experienced by other warblers. One of the factors in this decline is the loss of mangrove swamps in their tropical winter homes. There is some good news. Individuals and conservation groups are putting out Prothonotary Warbler nest boxes.  This  effort has resulted in local population increases in suitable habitat.

Each spring I look forward to the return of Prothonotary Warblers to the swamps in my area.  These golden creatures with their bold songs brighten even the dimmest of days.

Monday, May 18, 2020

April Showers Bring...

A Mayapple (Podophyllum peltatum) plant in April.  This two-leafed plant has
produced a single white flower.  Rowan County, NC.
Mayapples.  These marvelous plants (Podophyllum peltatum) emerge from the ground in early spring like a closed umbrella.  The lobed leaves expand and the umbrella theme continues with the petiole of the leaf in the center.  In fact, another common name of this plant is Umbrella Leaf and the specific name, peltatum, refers to an umbrella-like structure with a stem in the middle.  


Mayapples with newly emerged leaves.  The leaves are umbrella-like, with the
petiole in the center.  Rowan County, NC.
Mayapples grow in large clonal colonies in the understory of eastern forests.  Some Mayapple plants produce a single leaf and others produce paired leaves.  Only the paired leaf plants produce flowers.  The flowers are white with a variable number of petals and produce a yellow fruit, the May Apple. 


A stand of Mayapple plants in the understory of a
deciduous forest.  This stand is probably a clone.  The
genetically identical plants all growing
from a common rhizome.  Rowan County, NC. 

A flower bud of a Mayapple. The single flower emerges from
between the two leaves.  Rowan County, NC.

A young Mayapple flower just opening. Rowan County, NC.


A closeup of a Mayapple flower.  Rowan County, NC. 

A Mayapple plant with its single fruit.  Rowan County, NC.

Mayapples leaves, roots, stems and young fruits contain podophyllotoxin.  If ingested, this naturally occurring poison causes diarrhea, vomiting, excessive salivation and other dire symptoms.  Podophyllotoxin works by interfering with cell division.  This plant-derived toxin is used medically in cancer chemotherapy and it has antiviral properties.  The mature fruit contains lower levels of the toxin and can be eaten in small amounts.  

As the fruits mature, the leaves begin to show yellow blotches.  A fungus, Mayapple Rust (Allodus podophylli), causes these spots.  Fungal spores emerge from the bottom of the infected Mayapple leaves to infect other plants.  The rust is a sign the life cycle of the Mayapple is ending. By late May the fruit is ripe and the plants begin to fade.  Many animals, including Box Turtles, eat the Mayapple fruits.  A turtle that has eaten a Mayapple fruit can carry away the seeds in their digestive tract and deposit them to establish new colonies of this spring favorite. 


The upper side of a Mayapple leaf with Mayapple Rust (Allodus podophylli). 
Infected sections of the leaf turn yellow.  Rowan County, NC.
The underside of a Mayapple leaf infected by Mayapple Rust. 
The dark spots are structures producing the spores that
allow the fungus to infect other plants. Rowan County, NC.



Tuesday, May 5, 2020

Violets are ...


Purple flowers and bright green leaves are the colors of spring.  Bluets, irises and particularly violets against a green background shout springtime.  Bees are the main pollinators of violets and because the bee visual system is tuned to the ultraviolet and blue part of the spectrum, violets are bee magnets.  A group of large colorful butterflies, the fritillaries, has a different relationship with violets. Fritillaries lay their eggs on violets and their caterpillars develop there, but the adults sip nectar from other flowers. 

A patch of Purple Violet (Viola sororia)
in our lawn, Salisbury, NC

Great Spangled Fritillary (Speyeria cybele) in Rowan County, NC.  This
dramatic butterfly develops on violets.  Here it is feeding on Lantana camara.
Violets are in the genus Viola and have a worldwide distribution with most species found in the temperate regions of the northern hemisphere.  North America boasts about 80 species of violets and while many have flowers with the typical purple color, some species produce blue, white or even yellow flowers.

A unique feature of violets is they make two types of flowers.  One is the large, colorful flower, pollinated by insects we associate with violets.  Botanists term these flower chasmogamous.  The second type of flower violets make are small, they never open, lack petals and self-pollinate.  These small flowers are called cleistogamous.   Chasmogamous and cleistogamous are impressive words derived from Greek.  Chasmogamous means open reproduction.  They are bee pollinated and increase genetic diversity by outcrossing.  Cleistogamous is closed reproduction where the small, closed flowers do not host bees and only pollinate themselves.  This type of reproduction does not increase genetic diversity but is highly efficient.  The cleistogamous flowers produce many more seeds than the chasmogamous. 

Viola sororia showing rhizome with roots, leaves and
both chasmogamous and cleistogamous flowers. 
A common violet in the Southeast is Viola sororia, the Purple Violet.  This plant is a perennial and goes by a number of common names; Meadow Violet, Blue Violet, and most interestingly Lesbian Violet.  This last common name came from the ancient Greek poet Sappho of Lesbos who described her lover wearing violets in her hair.   The Purple Violet makes chasmogamous flowers that are about an inch and a half across and range in color from purple to white.   Purple Violets have an underground stem, the rhizome, that produces the heart shaped leaves, flowers and roots.  The colored, chasmogamous flowers are on long stalks and rise above the level of the leaves.  The closed cleistogamous flowers are pale green and are at ground level or sometimes underground.   Viola sororia readily hybridizes with other species of violets and a number of hybrid forms are recognized.  Purple Violet is a weedy plant and we have large stands in our yard that we do not mow and just enjoy the color.

Closeup view of a Viola sororia chasmogamous flower. 
The purple color attracts its bee pollinators.  


A cleistogamous flower of V. sororia.  These flowers are small, green, close
to ground level and self-pollinated.  

Another view of V. sororia cleistogamous flowers.   
Another common, weedy violet is Viola bicolor, the Field Pansy.  This annual is also a lawn denizen, at least in lawns that are not grass monocultures.  Field Pansy is a small plant with dissected leaves and flowers that range from white to blue.  The flowers have small blue lines and often a yellow center. 

A chasmogamous flower of Viola bicolor.  The purple stripes
on the flower directs insect pollinators to the nectar and pollen.  

Violets have a long history in traditional medicine.  They have been used to treat insomnia, respiratory problems and as an emetic.  I have not used violets to treat medical conditions but enjoy them as the color of spring.

Monday, April 20, 2020

Spring Ephemerals Part 2

Perfoliate Bellwort (Uvularia perfoliata).  A spring ephemeral flowering in
Rowan County, NC in April

The trees are leafing out, the canopy is nearly closed and the understory is greening.  This means the spring ephemeral flowering season is drawing to a close.  Spring ephemerals are small plants that grow on the forest floor and flower early to complete their life cycle in the spring of the year.

A deciduous forest in Rowan County, NC during March.
The canopy is open and the spring ephemerals
are starting to flower,

The same forest in mid-April.  The tree canopy nearly
blocks the sky, the shrub layer is greening up and the light intensity is much lower
than in March.  April means the spring ephemerals are finishing up.  

One of the most visible spring ephemeral in the Southeast is Trillium cuneatum or Little Sweet Betsy.  Trillium cuneatum is a perennial and emerges early in spring bearing three mottled, green leaves and a dark purple, three parted flower.  This flower is pollinated by bees and produces a single purple berry.  Trillium cuneatum is found in the Mountains and Piedmont of the Southeast and extends into Illinois and Pennsylvania.

Trillium cuneatum with is mottled leaves and an unopened flower bud.
Rowan County, NC.

Another view of the plant above showing the
large size of the flower bud.
Trillium cuneatum with open flower.
Windflower (Thalictrum thalictrodes) is a member of the Ranunculus family along with buttercups, hepaticas and columbines.  Windflower flowers are delicate, white and odd.  The flowers lack petals but instead have 5-10 white sepals that play the role of attracting early spring pollinators.   The leaves of Windflower are compound with three leaflets.  Thalictrum thalictrodes grows on the Piedmont and Mountains of North Carolina and throughout the eastern United States.

A Windflower plant (Thalictrum thalictoides) showing its compound leaves
and white flowers with variable numbers of white sepals. Davidson County, NC.

A closeup of a Windflower flower.  Note the multiple sepals and stamens.  Each
stamen has a yellow, pollen-bearing anther.  Davidson County, NC.   
Perfoliate Bellwort (Uvularia perfoliata), found in the Eastern United states and Canada, has pale yellow, bell-shaped flowers.  The genus Uvularia is named for the nodding flowers that resemble the uvula, that pendulous structure at back of the human throat.   The species name perfoliata, refers to the perfoliate leaves of this herb, whose base surrounds the stem. 

Perfoliate Bellwort in flower.  Rowan County, NC.

Perfoliate Bellwort showing its perfoliate leaf, the base of which
surrounds the stem.  Rowan County, NC. 

Spring Beauty (Claytonia virginica) is a beauty.  It has long, grass-like leaves and five-petaled, pink-lined, white flowers.  Like the other plants in this blog, Spring Beauty is found in Eastern North America, flowering early in rich woods.  Spring Beauty has a specialized, underground stem called a corm.  These corms were collected and eaten by Native Americans and taste like chestnuts.  Given their small size, it must have been a lot of work to collect enough Spring Beauty corms for dinner. 

Spring Beauty (Claytonia virginica) in flower.  

Flowers of Spring Beauty.  Each petal has fine pink lines that direct
pollinating insects to the nectar and pollen.  Mecklenburg County, NC.  
Spring is moving on and the spring ephemerals in North Carolina are finishing up.  But, for the last few weeks they have been putting on quite the show. 

A stand of Little Sweet Besty, Trillium cuneatum.




Thursday, April 9, 2020

The Ancient Dread


Reptiles evoke a strong reaction in people.  Fear, disgust, horror are all quite common responses to these cold-blooded creatures.  I am not in that group but when I come upon a snake by surprise, it can make me jump.  Think of the stories.  The serpent in the garden.  Dragons and maidens.  Man-eating crocs.  There are good reasons for these stories.  Snakes are a perfect embodiment of the other.  Cold blood, no legs, forked tongue, and some can kill with a bite.  The largest reptiles, the crocodilians, can eat us.  As David Quammen wrote in his book on top predators, The Monster of God, “It is one thing to be dead; it is another thing to be meat”.   The otherness, the fear of death or even the fear of consumption tint much of humankind’s view of reptiles. 

People have an innate, genetically based, fear of snakes.  Young children do not initially fear snakes but are very good at detecting them.  With a little training, that high degree of perception can turn to fear.  This leeriness had survival value for our ancestors and it is still with us today. 

A large Western Diamondback Rattlesnake (Crotalus atrox)
in Bentsen-Rio Grande Valley State Park, Texas

The largest venomous snakes in North America are the Diamondback Rattlesnakes. There are Eastern and Western species and these big snakes (Crotalus adamantus and Crotalus atrox) and they are the most dangerous venomous snakes in the United States.  Their great threat is because they can deliver a large dose of venom through their hollow fangs.  Diamondbacks are pit vipers, so named because of two pits that lay between their eyes and nostrils.   These pits are the snakes’ infrared detectors used to find their warm-blooded prey.  Pit vipers have broad heads and menacing eyes with vertical pupils. Diamondbacks usually consume small to moderate sized mammals, ranging from mice to rabbits. When a Diamondback Rattlesnake bites, the prey animal staggers off to die.  The snake tracks the stricken animal by its heat signature and smell, using its tongue.  When the unfortunate mammal is incapacitated, the snake eats it.  Diamondback venom works by interfering with blood clotting proteins, destroying red blood cells and damaging tissue.  Mortality for people bitten by the Eastern Diamondback is 10-30%.  Eastern Diamondbacks are listed as a species of least concern but the last Eastern Diamondback in Louisiana was seen in 1995.  The species may also be extinct in North Carolina.  Western Diamondbacks are more common but are also under pressure including rattlesnake roundups.  

A small Copperhead (Agkistrodon contortrix), showing its vertical
pupil split, Rowan County, North Carolina
In our part of the world, the most common pit viper is the Copperhead (Agkistrodon contortrix).  
Copperheads are handsome snakes with a brown background with a pattern of darker brown, irregularly-shaped stripes.  The head of this species is reddish-brown and gives the snake the name Copperhead.  Copperheads hunt small animals including mammals, other snakes and frogs.  Interestingly they have a real taste for cicadas, large insects that emerge each summer and fill the air with their songs.  Copperhead bites are painful but rarely fatal to people.  This is good because Copperheads have taken to living among people in rural and suburban settings.


A Common Snapping Turtle (Chelydra serpintina)
lumbering on land. Loxahatchee National Wildlife Refuge, Florida
Turtles generally do not elicit the repulsion or fear inspired by some other reptiles but Snapping Turtles are a special case.  The Common Snapping Turtle (Chelydra serpentina) is found in the eastern two thirds of the United States and southern Canada inhabiting freshwater lakes, ponds and streams.  Adult Common Snapping Turtles can reach a length of 18 inches and weigh over 35 pounds. Common Snapping Turtles have a large head with a beak, a long neck, a long saw-toothed tail and keels on the shell. It looks dangerous.  These turtles spend most of their time in water, but will come on land to move between bodies of water or to lay eggs.  Common Snapping Turtles are the top predator in their environment and consume fish, amphibians, small mammals and even plants.  Common Snapping Turtles usually do not bite people but have a fearsome reputation and will respond aggressively if picked up.    

The head of a Common Snapping Turtle.  Note the strongly hooked beak
and spines on the top of the head.

The tail of a Common Snapping Turtle with spines.
Alligators and crocodiles are the largest of the living reptiles and they are the most feared.  The American Alligator (Alligator mississippiensis) is native to the Southeastern United States.  American Alligators are black with wide heads and laterally compressed tails.  The males can reach 15 feet in length and weigh up to 1000 pounds.  American Alligators cruise the water with just their nostrils and eyes showing and that is a chilling sight.  These large reptiles were hunted to near extinction in the 20th Century but their numbers and range have increased with protection. They eat anything they can catch including fish, crustaceans, snakes, turtles and mammals.  While human fatalities due to American Alligators are rare, they do have a taste for dogs.  

An American Alligator (Alligator mississippiensis) swimming
in a South Florida waterway.  Loxahatchee National Wildlife Refuge.

The silhouette of an American Alligator with its nostrils,
 eyes and spiny back above the surface of the water.
 Payne's Prairie State Park, Florida.
American Crocodiles (Crocodylus acutus) are even larger than American Alligators.  Large males can reach 20 feet and weigh up to 2000 pounds.  American Crocodiles are found in northern South American, Central America, Caribbean Islands and extreme South Florida.  American Crocodiles are lighter in color than American Alligators and have a pointed snout with teeth protruding from the lips.  Populations of American Crocodiles have increased in South Florida and they are now classified as threatened rather than endangered.  There are some documented cases of attacks on people by American Crocodiles and a few fatalities.  

American Crocodile (Crocodylus acutus) basking on the banks of the
Rio Tarcoles, Costa Rica.

An American Crocodile in the Rio Tarcoles, Costa Rica.  Crocodile's teeth
are visible when the jaw is closed.  
There is no question that some reptiles are dangerous.  When someone is bitten by a snake or attacked by an alligator there is a tremendous amount of public interest.  Around 20 people died of alligator attacks in the United States since the year 2000.  About five people per year die from snakebites.  Despite these relatively low numbers of fatalities, reptiles have an exaggerated place in our collective sense of danger.  I say, resist your ancient dread, be cautious, and enjoy the reptiles. 

Tuesday, March 24, 2020

Something About Maples


Maple trees run deep in our consciousness.  These magnificent trees grace the national flag of Canada, give us maple syrup and even give us some of the bats in Major League Baseball.  Maples are classified in the genus Acer and most are found in the Northern Hemisphere from Asia through Europe to North America. All maples have opposite leaves (two leaves come out at a node) and the leaves are lobed, or in a couple of species compound.  In the fall of the year, maple leaves turn red or orange or yellow and generally put on a spectacular show.  Another characteristic of maples is their winged seeds that fly like helicopters to disperse the plant.  There are more than 120 Acer species worldwide.  Asia has the highest diversity of maples but there are about a dozen species in North America. 

The winged fruits, the samaras, of Red Maple (Acer rubrum)

Acer rubrum, the Red Maple is perhaps the most common deciduous tree in North America.  It grows from the Canadian Maritimes, west to the Great Lakes, South to Texas and down the length of the Florida peninsula.  Red maple’s great range is due to its adaptability.  This tree can grow in poor rocky soil or with its feet wet in a river bottom swamp.  Red Maple thrives in rich, slightly acidic, soil and can grow to a height of more than 100 feet.  Red maple reproduces in late winter when it puts out small red flowers. Each tree bears separate male and female flowers.  The petals of maples are tiny because they are not trying to attract insects but are wind pollinated.  The female flowers produce winged fruits, the samaras.  Red Maples usually make a pair of samaras per flower and these are bright red.  The fruits mature and fly from the tree during the summer. 

Early spring male flowers of Red Maple.  These flowers have highly
reduced petals and five stamens.


Female flowers of Red Maple.  Each has two
stigmas extending from the top that accept pollen .


Female flowers of Red Maple with young developing fruits.


Red Maple with maturing samaras.  They
will turn red in a few days.


A large group of Red Maple fruits beginning to turn red.

Sugar Maple (Acer saccharum) has a more northerly distribution than Red Maple.  It was originally absent from the Southeastern United States but is now widely grown as an ornamental tree.  Sugar Maple’s claim to fame is as the source of maple syrup.  In late winter, the tree begins to mobilize sugars that were stored in the roots and transports them to the shoots.  There the sugar is used to power the growth of the new leaves.  For the last couple of winters students and professors at Catawba College in Salisbury, NC, have been tapping maples on campus and making their own syrup.   These sugarers inserted taps into the sapwood of the tree, collected the sap and boiled it to make the syrup.  North Carolina is not the best place for a maple syrup operation but these students and professors collected 20 gallons of sap and made a half gallon of syrup.    

Fall leaves of Sugar Maple (Acer saccharum).

A Catawba College student using a drill to tap
a Sugar Maple tree. Photo courtesy of Dr. Jay Bolin.



                                         
                                              Sap dripping from a tap in a Sugar Maple tree.
                                                       Video courtesy of Dr. Jay Bolin.


A Catawba College student sampling maple syrup.
Photo courtesy of Dr. Jay Bolin.

Maples offer delight throughout the year.  They signal the end of winter with their red flowers.  They enchant with helicoptering fruit. And in the fall, they dazzle with their brightly colored leaves.  Enjoy.