Friday, March 13, 2020

Ramble Report March 12 2020


Today's Ramble was led by Dale Hoyt.
Here's 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 written by Dale Hoyt.
22 Ramblers met today.
Announcements:
Don announced that Debbie Cosgrove needs someone to assume her duties as curator of the Durham Herb Walk at Scull Shoals in the Oconee National Forest in Greene County. Anyone interested can contact Don here.

Don has created two maps of the Shade Garden and Dunson Garden areas, each labelled with the names of the subareas used by the curators in charge of each garden. We will put these online for your use. Thank you, Don!
 
As of March 13, the Botanical Garden will remain open while the University suspends instruction for two weeks, beginning March 16. Check often for updates.

Today’s Focus: The Dunson Native Flora Garden and the power line right of way.

Today's reading: March is Aldo in Athens month and the Nature Ramblers are participating by beginning each Ramble with a reading from Aldo Leopold’s work. Today was a slightly condensed reading of The Geese Return from Leopold’s Sand County Almanac, pp. 18-23. (You can find a slide show with the complete text of the essay here.)

Today's route: From the Arbor to the Dunson Garden, then to the power line right of way and down to the river. Return via the power line right of way and the White Spur Trail to the Children’s Garden.

LIST OF OBSERVATIONS:
Remember, you can enlarge any photo by simply clicking on it. Click again or press ESC to return.

Trilliums started blooming in the Dunson Garden about a week and a half ago. All the Trilliums in Dunson were planted by the Garden staff as there were none found here when the Garden was surveyed by Charles Wharton in 1998. He remarked that why they were absent was a mystery as they were found in the Gainesville Nature Center.
The Trilliums are divided into two groups: the Toad-shades and the Wake-robins. In the Toad-shade group the flowers sit directly atop the three leaves. They also have strap-like petals the range in color from yellow through green, bronze and dark brown or purple. In contrast, the Wake-robins have stalked flowers that project above or below the level of the three leaves.
Like many spring ephemerals the trilliums produce seeds that have elaiosomes, fatty, protein-rich "handles" that attract ants. The ants carry the seed back to their nest, remove the elaiosome to feed to their brood, and discard the seed. Thus the seed gets dispersed a short distance from its parent plant.
After the seed germinates it spends the first year in the soil, growing its rhizome. The next year it will produce a single leaf above ground and the following years it adds one leaf until it reaches three leaves. Altogether it will take five to seven years before it produces a flower. 

Cluster of Sweet Betsy Trillium

Year old Sweet Betsy Trillium single leaf


Many of the trilliums in the Dunson Garden show mixtures of features that suggest they are hybrids between the species planted there. In particular the Chattahoochee Trillium seems to be involved many of the putative hybrids.

Chattahoochee Trillium with its tall stem and silvery white stripe down the middle of the lear.
Another early blooming species is the Golden Ragwort. A perennial plant, it overwinters as a rosette of kidney shaped leaves that resemble those of violets. In early spring it sends up flowering stalks and their leaves have a completely different shape; they are elongate and finely lobed. Ragworts are in the aster family and produce seeds with fluff that enables them to disperse carried by the wind.
Most species of ragwort are highly toxic, carrying compounds that attack the liver.

Golden Ragwort
Many of the fallen trees are decorated with bracket fungi, mushrooms that resemble the tail feathers display by "tom" turkeys. All these mushrooms are at work breaking down the woody tissue of the tree. The mushroom is the reproductive structure of the fungus; it produces spores. Unseen by the human eye is the body of the fungus. It's a group of microscopically thin threads that penetrate the wood, secreting digestive enzymes that break down the walls of the tree's cells and absorbing the resulting carbohydrates. Without the fungi the dead trunks of trees would accumulate and soon we'd be up to our waist in tree limbs and trunks.

False Turkeytail Mushrooms
Dunson Native Flora Garden:

The first cluster of trillium we encountered appeared to be extremely short stalked. The leaves looked like they were resting directly on the ground. But looks are deceiving. It is the stalk that lies on the ground, turning up at the leaf end. This is how this trillium gets its name: Decumbent Trillium.
Decumbent Trillium
Growing almost everywhere in the Garden is Leatherwood, one of the earliest blooming shrubs. I first saw it in flower in the first week in February, the flowers coming out before the leaves.
 
Leatherwood flowers
Christmas Fern is one of the commonest ferns in the natural areas of the Garden. It is evergreen, but by the end of winter the fronds are looking the worse for wear and the rhizome begins to put out new fronds. They emerge from the leaf litter tightly coiled and then the coil unrolls as fronds elongate. At that stage they resemble the ends of a stringed instrument, hence, the name "fiddle head."

Christmas Fern "fiddleheads"
One of the wake-robin trilliums is blooming, the newly named Georgia Trillium. It was formerly a subspecies of the Dwarf Trillium.
Georgia Trillium
Allegheny Spurge, sometimes referred to by its genus name, Pachysandra, makes a nice ground cover. The sexes of its flowers are separate, male flowers occupying the upper part of the inflorescence and female flowers the lower portion. It is possibly pollinated by beetles.

Allegheny Spurge flowers; male flowers are white, femle flowers below the male flower and dark red.
 Cut-leaf Toothwort is still blooming.

Cut-leaf Toothwort
 There are two kinds of Trout Lilies in the Garden, American Trout Lily and Dimpled Trout Lily. The American forms a large colony of plants at the base of tree; the Dimpled is planted elsewhere. The name refers to a depression the develops at the end of the seed capsule, marking the place where the style was attached to the ovary.

Seed capsule of Dimpled Trout Lily
The dimple has the remnants of the style projecting from it.

Dimpled Trout Lilies
 Virginia Bluebells start out pink and change to blue as the petals open. A similar change occurs in Hydrangia where it is controlled by the pH of the flower.

Virginia Bluebells

 Autumn Fern is native to Japan and seems to becoming a little invasive. It should probably be removed from the Dunson Garden.
Autumn Fern
Autumn Fern sori (the dark spots) on the underside of the frond.
Southern Lady Fern
Autumn Fern and Southern Lady Fern were both found growing among some rocks beside the path.

Celandine Wood Poppy flower bud
Celandine Wood Poppy will be blooming before long. Right now it's still beginning to develop flower buds.

Purple Cress
Purple Cress, also known as Douglass’s Toothwort is found in the northwestern corner of Georgia where the limestone deposits of the Cumberland plateau enter our state.
Bloodroot 
Bloodroot is blooming in the Lower Bog area of Dunson, next to the path.

British Soldier lichen
If you look carefully between the slats that make up the small footbridge to the access road, near the Yucca planting, you will see some tiny, red-capped lichens. They are known as British Soldiers and have been growing in this same location for as long as we can remember.

Pussytoes
Pussytoes are blooming, but it's hard to tell. The flowers never open much. They are the favored food plant for the caterpillars of the American Painted Lady butterfly.


ROW:
Purple Dead-nettle

Purple Dead-nettle is a naturalized non-native in the mint family. It is typically found in disturbed area: lawns, the edges of roads, plowed fields. The odd name is really descriptive. First, the flower is purple in color. Last, the leaves resemble those of stinging nettles. Second, the leaves don't sting or irritate, so you could consider them dead as far as stinging goes. So . . . Purple Dead-nettle.
Two other mint species, Ground Ivy and Henbit, are often confused with Purple Dead-nettle;  here's hot to tell them apart. 
Henbit flowers are redder and the stem leaves clasp the stem.
Ground Ivy grows horizontally over the ground and has wider, darker purple flowers.
All three of these mints have flowers that never open; they produce seed by self-pollination. This is insurance for when the regular flowers fail to attract bees.

Goldenrod Spherical Gall
Avis found one of last year’s Goldenrod Spherical Galls. A gall is an abnormal growth on a plant. The spherical gall is induced when a fly lays an egg in the growing tip of a goldenrod plant. The plant continues to grow and the part where the egg was laid begins to swell, providing food for the fly maggot inside. The larva overwinters and the following spring pupates. During the winter small birds like Chickadees and Titmice discover the galls and peck a hole in them to extract the fly-sickle. A yummy winter treat, rich in fat and protein.


American Wild Violet, sometimes called Johnny-Jump-Up.
Another common early spring plant is the Johnny-Jump-Up, also known as the American Wild Violet. It often grows in disturbed areas and is similar to two other Violas that look very much like it.

We stopped at the temporary pool that forms after every flood/heavy rain, hoping to see frog eggs. We did find tadpoles, but the egg masses of Leopard Frogs weren't visible. 


WHITE TRAIL SPUR:

Witch's brooms in Hophornbeam tree
Witch's broom is like a gall in that it is produced by a foreign organism interacting with plant tissue. What causes these bunches of twig-like growths is not known for certain. It is likely to be a fungus infection and may have been transmitted by an insect. Trees in the birch family seem to be unusually susceptible; we find them on many of the Hophornbeams in the Garden.

Rue Anemone
Just inside the woods there is a decaying log at the edge of the path. This area has been home to a large colony of Rue Anemone for many years.

Violet-toothed Polypore mushrooms
Another bracket fungus, the Violet-toothed Polypore mushrooms are growing on tree near the Rue Anemone. These look superficially like the False Turkeytail and they perform the same function -- they are digesting the tree.

SUMMARY OF OBSERVED SPECIES:

Sweet Betsy Trillium
Trillium cuneatum
Chattahoochee Trillium
Trillium decipiens
Golden Ragwort
Packera aurea
Rue Anemone
Thalictrum thalictroides
False Turkey Tail
Stereum ostrea
Decumbent Trillium
Trillium decumbens
Leatherwood
Dirca palustris
Georgia Trillium
Trillium georgianum
Allegheny Spurge
Pachysandra procumbens
Cut-leaf Toothwort
Cardamine lacinata
Virginia Bluebells
Mertensia virginica
Dimpled Trout Lily
Erythronium umbilicatum
Autumn Fern
Dryopteris erythrosora
Southern Lady Fern
Athyrium filix-femina ssp. asplenoides
Celandine Wood Poppy
Stylophorum diphyllum
Purple Cress/Douglass’s Toothwort
Cardamine douglassii
Bloodroot
Sanguinaria canadensis
British Soldier Lichen
Cladonia cristatella
Pussytoes
Antennaria plantaginifolia
Purple Dead-nettle
Lamium purpureum
Goldenrod Spherical Gall
Eurosta solidaginis
American Wild Pansy
Viola bicolor
Grape Hyacinth
Muscari spp.
American Hophornbeam
Ostrya virginiana
Violet-toothed Polypore fungi
Trichaptum biforme