Monday, August 20, 2018

Ramble Report August 16 2018



Today's Ramble was led by Linda Chafin.
Here's the link to Don's Facebook album for today's Ramble. (All the photos in this post are compliments of Don.)
Today's post was written by Linda Chafin and Dale Hoyt.
Today’s Focus: Butterflies and flowers in the International Garden and Flower Garden.
24 Ramblers met today.
Announcements:
1)     Emily reviewed the Congaree National Park trip that a few ramblers are going to make on Nov. 9 – 11 this fall. The details are on the Announcements page of our website. The short version is: make your own reservations and arrangements.
2)     Emily also offered suggestions for when there are a large number of people attending our weekly rambles. When the group is large it is difficult for everyone to hear what the leaders are saying. This is made more difficult by the varied social conversations that the group breaks up into. If you can’t hear and want to, feel free to force your way closer to the leader and/or “shush” those around you that are speaking. Those engaged in conversation should keep their voices down and step away from the leaders to leave space for those who want to listen. Please don’t be offended if you’re shushed.
Today's reading: Bob Ambrose recited Trust, by Susan Kinsolving.

Show and Tell:
Southern Flannel Moth caterpillar
Jeff brought in a Southern Flannel Moth caterpillar, one of the most venomous caterpillars in the U.S. – it is thickly coated with a “comb-over” of fur-like bristles that range in color from tan to orange. Hidden among the “fur” are stiff stinging spines that have venom glands at the base. Jeff read this account of the effect of the stings: “The sting produces an immediate intense burning pain followed by the appearance of a red grid-like pattern on the skin that matches the pattern of the venomous spines on the caterpillar. Swelling and sometimes also lymphadenopathy follow. In addition to the characteristic localized symptoms, more general systemic manifestations may also occur including headache, fever, nausea, vomiting, tachycardia, low blood pressure, seizures and more rarely, abdominal pain, muscle spasms, and convulsions.” [source: http://entnemdept.ufl.edu/creatures/misc/moths/puss.htm]  Clearly NOT a fellow to mess with!

Richard brought several native grasses for Linda to identify: Big-top Lovegrass, Greasy Grass, Yellow Foxtail Grass, and Gama Grass (one of the grasses that is thought to be an ancestor of modern corn or maize). There will be more in-depth discussion of grasses as we move into fall and visit the powerline prairie.

Today's route: From the Visitor Center we walked through the International Garden and to the lower level of the Flower Garden, pausing where ever we found butterflies or interesting flowers.

Visitor Center Plaza:

Two color forms ("morphs") of the Eastern Tiger Swallowtail
The dark tiger stripes are visible on the melanistic (dark) form
Both are nectaring on Mexican Sunflower.
.
American South Garden:

  
Sweet Pepperbush
Coastal Plain Sweet Pepperbush is a common shrub of the southeastern Coastal Plain, usually occurring in swamp forests and around the edges of other wetlands where its flowers are very attractive to both native bees and European honey bees. Like many wetland species, it will also thrive in upland gardens if watered. It spreads by both seeds and underground stems (rhizomes). The “pepper” part of the name refers to the resemblance of its dried fruits to black peppercorns.

    Late summer and early fall is the time when plants in the composite (or aster) family really come into their own. Today we saw several species in this family:

Eared Coneflower is one of the rarest plants in Georgia, occurring only in two southwestern Georgia counties. Found naturally along creeks and in seepy wetlands, it will also thrive in upland gardens, where it can reach a height of 10 feet or more. The large cone in the center of the flower head is covered with tiny, dark brown disk flowers, a give-away that this species is actually one of the Black-eyed Susans (genus Rudbeckia), in a different genus altogether from Purple Coneflower (genus Echinacea).

Elephant's Foot
Elephant's Foot is also in the composite family, but you would be readily forgiven for doubting that. There are no ray flowers (“petals”) surrounding a central disk or cone, an arrangement that is the hallmark of the composite family. Instead, Elephant’s Foot has only a few pink disk flowers, each deeply divided into five narrow segments. Beneath the disk flowers are three conspicuous, oval, dark green bracts (bracts are leaf-like structures associated with flowers). The stem is leafless but at ground level several large, blunt-tipped leaves are pressed flat against the ground. If you see a similar plant with leafy stems, it is a close relative called Leafy Elephant’s Foot (Elephantopus carolinianus).

Joe Pye Weed visited by Fiery Skipper
Joe Pye Weed is one of the showiest of the species in the composite family. It’s native to most of the U.S. east of the Mississippi, including north Georgia. Pollinator-gardeners love this plant–its huge pinkish-lavender inflorescences attract dozens of different insect species. Like Elephant’s Foot, its flower heads lack ray flowers and consist of only 5-7 disk flowers. However, each plant may have hundreds of florets that provide both nectar and pollen to insect visitors.

Mexican Sunflower visited by Long-tailed Skipper
Mexican Sunflower is also popular with butterflies. Native to Central and South America, this species has the classic composite head, with a whorl of orange ray flowers surrounding a center of small, orange disk flowers, where nectar is produced, as this foraging Long-tailed Skipper demonstrates. Not a true sunflower (which would be genus Helianthus), this plant is sometimes called Tree Marigold, but it’s not a marigold either! 

Orbweaver spider (Neoscona sp.)
We captured an Orbweaver spider near a large web, possibly the one that had done the weaving.


Carolina Phlox
Carolina Phlox is one of a few summer-flowering phlox species in our area (most flower in the spring). It’s a great garden plant: likes dry soils and full sun but will also thrive in moister, somewhat shadier areas. It attracts pollinators whose mouthparts are long enough to reach the base of the flower tube, such as butterflies, skippers, moths.


Spanish America Section:

Tibouchina is a genus of the American tropics, hence not a Georgia native. However, the Meadow-beauty family, of which it is a member, is well represented in our state by 12 species of meadow-beauties, all in the genus Rhexia, and all very pretty in flower. While the four colorful petals and the persistent, urn-like fruits are reason enough to love this genus, what really fascinates me are the eight “hinged” stamens. Each deeply curved anther (the part of the stamen where the pollen is produced) is loosely attached to the top of the filament (the stalk part of the stamen)–the anther rocks back and forth if you touch it–and provides what seems to be a precarious “handhold” to the bumblebees that visit the flowers for pollen. (There is no nectar.) The pollen emerges only from a pore at the tip of the anther by way of buzz pollination. When a bumblebee grabs hold of the anther, it vibrates its thoracic muscles, which vibrates the anther, and shakes the pollen out through the pore. Although none are planted at the Garden, Maryland Meadow-beauty (Rhexia mariana) is common throughout Georgia and occurs in Athens around ponds and in wet ditches, where it flowers from mid-summer through early fall.
Maryland Meadow Beauty

Tibouchina with stamen parts identified.
Compare the anthers with those of the Meadow Beauty above.


Two native species in the mint family that we saw today, Spotted Bee-balm and Southern Mountain-mint, are in peak flower and attracting a variety of pollinators.

Spider Wasp nectaring on Spotted Bee-balm
Here, Spotted Bee-balm, with its showy pink bracts and spotted yellow flowers, has attracted the attention of a Spider Wasp.

A Carpenter Bee visits a Southern Mountain Mint


Purple Salvia is a South American member of the mint family, and exhibits four defining characteristics of that family:  square stems, opposite leaves, strongly smelling leaves, and tubular flowers with two flaring lips at the top. The flowers are too narrow to allow Carpenter Bees to enter in search of nectar.
Carpenter Bee robbing nectar from Salvia blossom
Instead, these large bees use their chewing mouthparts to make a hole through the calyx and into the base of the flower where the nectar is. Although we humans refer to this practice pejoratively as nectar-robbing, studies have shown that the plants’ reproductive success doesn’t seem to suffer from this “thievery.”
Tiny metallic-colored bee on Salvia
This wonderful close-up photo by Don of a green metallic bee visiting the flower also shows the tiny, ball-tipped glands that cover the flower of Purple Salvia. Each of these glands exudes essential oils that are responsible for the strong smell we associate with salvias.


Mediterranean and Middle East Section:

The fruit of Jumson Weed is known as a "Thorn Apple"
The large, white, fragrant flowers of Jimson Weed are gone now and have been replaced by spiny, green developing fruits. The fruit will eventually turn brown, split into four sections, and release its large, brown, highly toxic and hallucinogenic seeds (20 seeds from one fruit can kill a child).

Melanistic Eastern Tiger Swallowtail nectaring on Lantana
The crescent-shaped marks on the hind wings indicate that this is a female;
females can be either yellow and black or melanistic; males are nver melanistic.
The melanistic females are thought to mimic Pipevine Swallowtails (see text).


Giant Swallowtail nectaring on Lantana
Lantana and Butterfly-bush are both in full flower and today are living up to their reputation as butterfly magnets–we saw many Eastern Tiger Swallowtails, Giant Swallowtails, Gulf Fritillaries, and Fiery Skippers visiting their flowers.
Gulf Fritillary nectaring on Butterfly bush
Both of these plants are exotics–Lantana is from Central and South America, and Butterfly-bush hails from China–and both are known to establish in natural areas. Lantana is listed by the Georgia Exotic Pest Plant Council as “Category 3: Exotic plant that is a minor problem in Georgia natural areas, or is not yet known to be a problem in Georgia but is known to be a problem in adjacent states.” Butterfly-bush is invasive in the Pacific Northwest and Mid-Atlantic states, but not yet considered a problem in Georgia.

Chaste Tree is in fruit now, and Susie shared a great story on the origin of the common name:  also known as monk’s-pepper, the fruits were thought to suppress libido, rendering Medieval monks chaste. However, Southern Living writer Steve Bender reports that “wearing a house dress with orthopedic shoes and multiple nose piercings is much more effective” than Chaste Tree fruits for curbing a monk’s libido (https://www.southernliving.com/garden/grumpy-gardener/chaste-tree-is-pure-delight).

Herb and Physic Garden:
     
   
Obscure Bird Grasshopper found on Mountain Mint


Today’s Butterflies: There has been a literal explosion of many butterflies in the last week or so. Ed and Sue alerted us to the abundant Tiger Swallowtails, as well as another species, at various locations in the garden. It was true, for we saw more than a dozen Tiger Swallowtails, plus at least one Pipevine Swallowtail, one or two Giant Swallowtails and a Black Swallowtail.



Questions about today’s butterflies:



Scales from Eastern Tiger Swallowtail clinging to my finger after handling a yellow and black male butterfly. Note that each scale is a single color, either black or yellow, and roughly rectangular in shape.
Why does a butterfly have scales on its wings? The upper and lower wing surfaces in most butterflies and moths are covered with microscopic scales. Each scale is shaped like a rectangle and attached by one of its narrow ends to the wing. The scales are arranged like shingles on a roof and each scale has a single color, but there can be many different scale colors. The color pattern arises like a pointillist painting, each scale contributing a single point of color.

The color pattern on the wings is species-specific and enables butterflies to find an appropriate mate.

The scales are easily removed, a feature that makes butterflies and moths harder for spiders to catch in their webs. The moth that blunders into a spider web may leave behind many scales stuck to the sticky strands, but it can escape with its life. The wings look slightly more worn.



Can a butterfly fly if it loses its scales? The butterfly wing is more than the scales attached to it. It is part of the tough exoskeleton of the insect and can function perfectly well even if it has lost all of its scales. As a butterfly ages it gradually loses its wing scales. Such old butterflies look as if their color pattern has faded.



Why are some Tiger Swallowtails black while others have the yellow and black “tiger” pattern? The dark, melanistic, form of the Tiger Swallowtail is only found in females. All the males sport the yellow and black tiger pattern, while females can be either melanic or yellow and black. The black coloration is controlled by a single gene that is expressed only in females. Males can carry this gene, but it will not be expressed. The number of melanistic females in a population varies from zero to > 75%. The gene for melanism is commonest in areas where another dark-colored butterfly, the Pipevine Swallowtail, is also common. In areas where the Pipevine Swallowtail is less common there are fewer melanistic Tiger Swallowtails.



How does the presence of Pipevine Swallowtails affect how common melanistic Tiger Swallowtails are? Melanistic Tiger Swallowtails are thought to be Batesian mimics of the Pipevine Swallowtail. Pipevine Swallowtail caterpillars feed on plants in the Pipevine family, Aristolochiaceae. These plants contain a very toxic substance, aristolochic acid, that the Pipevine caterpillar stores in its body. The toxic substance is transferred to the adult butterfly during metamorphosis, making the adult butterfly both distasteful and toxic. (This is like the Monarch butterfly, but the toxic material is different.) A single attempt to eat a Pipevine Swallowtail butterfly is enough to keep a bird from eating another one, or a butterfly that resembles it.

This kind of mimicry, in which an edible or harmless species resembles a toxic, distasteful or harmful (e.g., stinging) species, is called Batesian mimicry, named after the English naturalist Henry Walter Bates who discovered it.

In areas  where Pipevine Swallowtails are abundant the melanistic Tiger Swallowtails are “protected” from bird attacks because they are mistaken for Pipevine Swallowtails.



Why don’t all the female Tiger Swallowtails become melanistic? Because male Tiger Swallowtails seem to prefer to mate with the yellow and black females. (This was determined by counting the number of sperm packages in the female reproductive tract. The yellow and black females contain more sperm packages than melanistic females.) If male mating preference were the only factor, the melanistic form would eventually disappear. This is seen in the northern areas of the United States and Canada where there are no Pipevine Swallowtails. There the females are all yellow and black. But, as you move further south, in areas where Pipevine Swallowtails live, the melanistic form becomes more common. This suggests that the darker female picks up a survival advantage that compensates for her lower frequency of mating.



Why don’t other butterflies mimic the Pipevine Swallowtail? The short answer is that they do! In the southern US there is a mimicry complex in which several species of butterflies, including non-swallowtails, mimic the Pipevine Swallowtail.



What does it take to mimic the Pipevine Swallowtail? Viewed from above, the PVST is black with metallic blue hind wings. The actual color of the hind wings depends on your viewing angle. The color is structural, rather than due to a pigment. From some angles the hind wings will appear metallic green; from others, they are blue and, from still others, black. Metallic bluish green is probably the best description.



Pipevine Swallowtail; the metallic blue color is structural, not a pigment, and will vary from blue to green to black, depending on the angle of view.
By Renee from Las Vegas, USA (Pipevine Swallowtail) [CC BY 2.0  (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0)], via Wikimedia Commons

The proposed mimics of the Pipevine Swallowtail are:

1)     Eastern Tiger Swallowtail melanistic female; black above with blue crescents on the margin of the hind wings. (See photos elsewhere in this post.)



Black Swallowtail female
Kenneth Dwain Harrelson [GFDL (http://www.gnu.org/copyleft/fdl.html) or CC BY-SA 3.0  (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0)], from Wikimedia Commons

 2)     Black Swallowtail female; mostly black above with blue crescents on the margin of the hind wings.

Spicebush Swallowtail female
By Meganmccarty [Public domain], from Wikimedia Commons


3)     Spicebush Swallowtail; dark above, hind wings with greenish (male) or bluish (female) color.

4)     Diana Fritillary; female dark above, hind wings with blue border. (male is completely different: orange and brown)



Red-spotted Purple
By Jacob Abel (Bugguide.net) [Public domain], via Wikimedia Commons

5)     Red-spotted Purple; both sexes dark above and with blue border on hind wings.



The Batersian mimicry hypothesis has been tested with some of the above species. Florida Scrub Jays that had never seen a Pipevine Swallowtail attacked and swallowed the first one  offered. They immediately retched and regurgitated the butterflies. When subsequently offered the melanistic female tiger swallowtails, spicebush swallowtails or black swallowtails, they declined to eat them. Other captive birds that had, presumably, already experienced pipevine swallowtails prior to being captured, also did not eat the offered species.


SUMMARY OF OBSERVED SPECIES
Eastern Tiger Swallowtail
Papilio glaucus
Mexican Sunflower
Tithonia diversifolia
Sweet Pepperbush
Clethra sp,
Tachinid Fly
Family Tachinidae
Cut-leaf Coneflower
Rudbeckia lacianata
Elephant's Foot
Elephantopus tomentosus
Orbweaver spider
Neoscona sp.
Goldenrod
Solidago sp.
Carolina Phlox
Phlox carolina
Eared Coneflower
Giant Black-eyed Susan
Rudbeckia auriculata
Tibouchina
Tibouchina sp.
Purple Salvia
Salvia sp.
Carpenter Bee
Xylocopa virginica
Jimson Weed AKA Thorn Apple
Datura stramonium
Beautyberry
Callicarpa americana
Lantana bushes
Lantana sp.
Butterfly Bush
Buddleia davidii
Gulf Fritillary
Agraulis vanillae
Scoliid Wasp
Scolia bicincta
Chaste Tree
Vitex agnus-castus
Joe Pye Weed
Eutrochium fistulosum
Giant Swallowtail
Papilio cresphontes
Fiery Skipper
Hylephila phyleus
Silver Spotted Skipper
Epargyreus clarus
Bumblebee
Bombus sp.
Asian Elm
Ulmus sp.
Mountain mint
Pycnanthemum sp.
Obscure Bird Grasshopper
Schistocerca obscura
Spotted Beebalm
Monarda punctata
Spider Wasp
Family Pompilidae