Thursday, June 20, 2019

Ramble Report June 20 2019


Today's Ramble was led by Linda Chafin.
Here is the link to Don's Facebook album for today's Ramble. (All the photos in this post are compliments of Don, unless otherwise credited.)
Today's post was compiled by Dale Hoyt; Linda Chafin is the author of the fern guides (links below).
Today’s Focus: Ferns
28 Ramblers met today.

Announcements: Linda made the following request: “please put a link to this new Georgia Trees website. It’s newly posted by Richard and Teresa Ware, who have been studying and photographing trees for decades. The photos are wonderful! And the text is too. They plan to create webpages for shrubs, ferns, wildflowers, etc. as they get to it.”

Today's reading: Bob Ambrose read an excerpt from Walden, by Henry David Thoreau:
"We need the tonic of wildness, to wade sometimes in marshes where the bittern and the meadow-hen lurk, and hear the booming of the snipe; to smell the whispering sedge where only the wilder and more solitary fowl builds her nest, and the mink crawls with its belly close to the ground. At the same time that we are earnest to explore and learn all things, we require that all things be mysterious and unexplorable, that land and sea be infinitely wild, unsurveyed and unfathomed by us because unfathomable. We can never have enough of nature. We must be refreshed by the sight of inexhaustible vigor, vast and titanic features, the sea-coast with its wrecks, the wilderness with its living and its decaying trees, the thunder cloud, and the rain which lasts three weeks and produces freshets. We need to witness our own limits transgressed, and some life pasturing freely where we never wander."

Today's route: Past the Children’s Garden and through the Shade Garden on the sidewalk. Then through the Dunson Garden.

Observations:
Ferns: Here is the link to Linda’s Guide to Ferns of the State Botanical Garden. These files cover everything Linda said about ferns today and then some.

A sight for sori
Don created a nifty little poster for the sori of several ferns. (Remember that the sori (singular: sorus) are clusters of spore-producing structures. Their color, shape and arrangement are often useful in fern identification.
 
Don's sori poster
(click to enlarge)

Comments on Animals Observed:

Hammerhead planarian, a terrestrial flatworm
(click to enlarge)
Hammerhead Planarian. A planarian is a free-living flatworm (Phylum Platyhelminthes). Most people have never encountered one, except in biology courses. Those planarians are aquatic, dark in color and have two eyespots in their head end. They have the ability to regenerate complete worms when cut in half, either transversely or longitudinally. When cut lengthwise the right and left halves regenerate the missing side. If cut the other way, the head end grows a new tail and the tail end grows a new head.
Flatworms lack a body cavity and a circulatory system. The free-living species have a mouth in the center of the body (not the head!) that leads to a  complexly branched digestive tract. Its many branches and projections allow the products of digestion to diffuse directly into the surrounding tissue, a function provided by the circulatory system of other kinds of animals. This is probably why flatworms are flat – all their cells are a short distance from as source of oxygen and food.
Other kinds of flatworms are parasitic; you may have heard of liver flukes, tape worms or schistosomes, all of which are parasitic flatworms. These flatworms live in the digestive tract or circulatory system of their host animal, places where they are immersed in fluids containing food that can be directly absorbed.
The Hammerhead planaria is a free-living, terrestrial predator of earthworms. There are many species that are found all over the world. The commonest species in the USA was probably accidentally introduced via the soil in pots containing plants. They are commonly seen in and around greenhouses. On a ramble a few years ago we found one attacking an earthworm on the sidewalk in the Shade Garden. A UGA professor found a number of them on the greenway while riding his bicycle in the rain. Emily found one on the porch near some potted plants after a heavy rainfall.
The Hammerhead produces an very sticky adhesive secretion. If you pick it up, it will stick to your fingers and be very difficult to remove. This enables the Hammerhead to hold tight to its prey, an earthworm.
One more thing – the Hammerhead is the only terrestrial invertebrate known to posses tetrodotoxin, a nasty neural poison. By attacking the nervous system tetrodotoxin causes paralysis. That makes it useful in subduing earthworms. The only other terrestrial organisms known to produce tetrodotoxin are some salamanders and tropical frogs (the poison dart frogs.)

Florida Fern caterpillar
(click to enlarge)
Florida Fern caterpillar:
Found feeding on Widespread Maiden Fern.
Ferns seldom show any signs of insect damage, probably because they are so heavily defended, chemically. Any insect that feeds on a fern has to deal with those defenses in some way. In previous years we have seen a moth caterpillar that feeds on the terminal pinnae of Christmas fern by rolling them into a ball and feeding on them from the inside.

Ebony Jewelwing Damselfly
(click to enlarge)
Ebony Jewelwing Damselfly: This lovely, metallic blue-green damselfly with black wings is related to dragonflies in the insect order Odonata. The female has a white spot on the tip of the wings and is a browner color. Like their dragonfly cousins, the damselflies are predators, feeding on flying insects like mosquitoes, that they capture while flying.

Mantis nymph; note the grasping front legs.
(click to enlarge)
Mantis: The mantids we find this time of year are not yet adults. You can tell this by the absence of functional wings. A young mantis has a pair of wing buds behind the second and third walking legs, on the top side of the thorax. As a mantis nymph grows it periodically molts (sheds its skin). With each molt the wing buds get larger. Finally, with the final molt, the wings become functional and the mantis doesn’t have to walk to work to find food.
The first pair of legs are modified for grasping and holding its prey while it is being eaten. At rest the mantis folds its forelegs so they appear to be “praying,” hence, the common name “praying mantis,” not “preying mantis.”

Gray Hairstreak on Rattlesnake Master
(click to enlarge)
Gray Hairstreak: There are over a dozen kinds of Hairstreak butterflies in the state of Georgia. All share one feature: one or two hair-like projections from their hind wings and, where these hairs emerge, a colored spot that resembles an eye.
When an hairstreak lands its wings are folded vertically above its body and the two hind wings are rubbed together. To understand this motion hold your hands In front of your body with your thumbs up and your fingers together and pointed forward. Next, place the palms of your hands together. Then rub your hands together, up and down so your fingers slip over the fingers of the opposite hand.
Next, imagine that each of your little fingers has a small, dark hair projecting straight out, away from your body. That hair will wiggle up and down as you rub your hands together. The motion of the hair on each little finger will resemble a butterfly antenna wiggling up and down. Add a dark eyespot to each little finger nail and you have an imitation butterfly head.
When the hairstreak butterfly performs this motion, it may attract the attention of a predator and cause it to attack the hind wings, thinking that this is the head of the butterfly. At least that’s the theory.

Eyed Elator
(click to enlarge)
Eyed Click Beetle (Eyed Elator):
This handsome beetle has two large “eyespots” on its first thoracic segment. I have heard several times that the light colored borders of the eyespots can glow like a firefly, but I’ve been unable to find confirmation for this. There is a related species that has two spots on its prothorax that can glow, but not the Eyed Elator.
Click beetles have the ability to flip into the air when they are lying on their back. This is made possible by a spine on the thorax that fits into a groove on another segment. When on its back the beetle tilts its thorax toward its abdomen and engages the spine with a groove. Thoracic muscles contract, increasing tension. When the tension reaches a certain point the spine snaps out of the groove and the thorax snaps back against the substrate with enough force to hurl the beetle into the air, head over heels, so to speak. If the beetle lands on its feet it will trundle off. On its back, it gets to try again. The smaller the beetle the higher it can jump.
The larvae of the Eyed Elator are predators of wood-boring beetles. They inhabit rotting wood and seek out beetles in the family Cerambycidae (Long horn beetles or Sawyer beetles). 

SUMMARY OF OBSERVED SPECIES

Rattlesnake Master
Eryngium yuccifolium
Small black “sweat” bee
Family Halictidae
Decumbent Trillium
Trillium decumbens
Chattahoochee Trillium
Trillium decipiens
Southern Lady Fern
Athyrium filix-femina
Bottlebrush Buckeye
Aesculus parviflorum
Widespread Maiden Fern
Thelypteris kunthii
Florida Fern Moth (caterpillar)
Callopistria floridensis
Planarian Worm
Bipalium kewense
New York Fern
Thelypteris noveboracensis
Christmas Fern
Polystichum acrostichoides
Southern Maidenhair Fern
Adianthum capillus-veneris
Ebony Spleenwort Fern
Asplenium platyneuron
Sensitive Fern
Onoclea sensibilis
Oyster Mushroom
Pleurotus ostreatus
Broad Beech Fern
Phegopteris hexagonoptera
Northern Maidenhair Fern
Adiantum pedatum
Ebony Jewelwing Damselfly
Calopteryx maculate
Goldie’s Wood Fern
Dryopteris goldieana
American Sycamore (bark plates)
Platanus occidentalis
Cinnamon Fern
Osmunda cinnamomea
Goldenseal
Hydrastis canadensis
Marginal Wood Fern
Dryopteris marginalis
Praying Mantis
Order Mantodea
Netted Chain Fern
Woodwardia areolata
Ostrich Fern
Matteuccia struthiopteris
Common Silverbell
Halesia tetraptera
Running Ground Cedar/Fan Clubmoss
Diphasiastrum digitatum
Rattlesnake Fern
Botrychium virginianum
Gray Hairstreak
Strymon melinus
Eyed Click Beetle
Alaus oculatus