Monday, July 2, 2012

Welcome to the pit


Well, hello, folks!

Here's a little platform where I plan to share my field trip notes with you throughout the semester. Whether the format/content/whatnot is up to your standards/needs/requests, we can discuss on Tuesday. For now, just check out the first two entries. I also plan to put it up for debate whether we should limit the visibility of this material only to you guys, or leave it available for the public.

You are more than welcome to comment. If you have a piece of information that I missed, or even worse I have it incorrect, feel free to comment and I'll add it/fix it. BUT, this is not Facebook or a chatroom, so please no unrelated private anythings in the comments. As you will see, I kept the tone pretty easy and casual, but we don't want to necessarily probe the limits of professionalism :)!

Alas, that's all my pep talk for now. Enjoy!

Kata

Fentastic Fen June 28th

wild parsnip
Teri pointed out some nasty exotic invasives on the roadside that are definitely worth remembering. Here is wild parsnip (Pastinaca sativa). This little innocent-looking plant has invaded pretty much all of Wisconsin, and it likes all sorts of open habitats like roadsides, prairies or abandoned fields. Almost all the parts of the plant contain chemicals called furocoumarins, which with the help of ultraviolet light cause bad burns on human skin (phyto-photo dermatitis). If you get the juice on yourself, wash it off right away, and/or stay in the shade (clouds don't help, UV still comes through).
Our next candidate is honeysuckle (Lonicera spp.). Pretty much all the bushy honeysuckle species non-native, our native honeysuckles are vines, so they are easy to distinguish. Honeysuckle is one of the species that invade an area if there is no fire. Once it took over, fire is not even possible anymore, since there is no fuel. So to get rid of it, first we have to cut it down and then burn it.
honeysuckle
Moving on to buckthorns (Rhamnus cathartica - common buckthorn and Rhamnus frangula - glossy buckthorn), these shrubby plants were introduced as ornamentals, and (despite their status as a serious invasive) are still legally sold in the state for hedge rows. They form an impenetrable understory layer, which is especially bad for native, woody habitats such as oak savannas. Fire gets rid of the seedlings, but does not eradicate them, so you have to keep burning an area annually until native vegetation takes over to get rid of buckthorn. It spreads very fast, because the berries contain a laxative, and as birds eat them, well, they poop it everywhere. On the picture the branch with greener, larger leaves in the foreground is common buckthorn, and the darker green leaves in the background belong to glossy buckthorn.
buckthorns

Now that we are depressed enough of invasives, let's take a look at this wonderful fen here. Fens are one of the rarest plant communities in Wisconsin. There is a ridge passing through the landscape which provides the water pressure that feeds the fen. Walking towards the center of the fen the vegetation changes like this: tussocks - sedge meadow - (marsh) carr - fen (mound). The
shrubby cinquefoil

internal flow of groundwater is rich in calcium and magnesium bicarbonates, and sometimes calcium and magnesium sulfates as well. The calcium and magnesium bicarbonates and sulfates precipitate out at the surface (peat), creating a harsh, alkaline soil condition. Only a select group of calcium-tolerant plants, referred to as calciphiles, can tolerate these conditions. 

Chara
watercress


One of these plants, which we also referred to as an excellent community indicator, was shrubby cinquefoil (
Pentaphylloides floribunda). In the water we observed watercress (Nasturtium officinale), a  non-native edible herb, monkey flower (Mimulus ringens), Chara and cut-leaved water parsnip (Berula erecta), which is a poisonous member of the carrot family, and often grows together with watercress, so don't mix them up.
cut-leaved water parsnip

monkey flower (yellow) and watercress (white)
hard-stem bulrush

beaked spikerush

Last, as we were mounting the mound, we observed some pretty cool hard-stem bulrushes (Schoenoplectus acutus), and believed Teri that beaked spikerushes (Eleocharis rostellata)are also somewhere there, but since we didn't see them, here's a pic. Besides these, we found some native broad-leaved cattails (Typha latifolia), which is different from the exotic one, although it's not always easy to tell them apart, as they often hybridize.
broad-leaved cattail

Saturday, June 30, 2012

Scuppernong Prairie - June 28th

Scuppernong Prairie is one of the largest natural areas of Wisconsin, possibly even of North America, with an area stretching somewhere around 30 acres. Natural should not mislead anyone, it`s not intact, but still a prairie in a very good shape, maintained by regular restoration efforts and fire management. Of the two parts we were looking at one was a former agricultural land slowly taken over by prairie vegetation, and the other one is a real, remnant prairie patch.

Queen Anne`s lace
The first plant Steve pointed out was Queen Anne`s lace, alias wild carrot (Daucus carota). It`s an exotic invasive, so we`re not happy about it. The coevolution of leaf shapes in the carrot family and its herbivores was simply hilarious, so here it goes:

...Once upon a time, there were carrots. Herbivorous insects were chewing on there leaves, so they invented secondary compounds that the bugs couldn`t eat. But the toxins were activated by sunlight, so the savvy bugs quickly figures that they could roll up the leaves, and chew from the side that was in the shade. The carrots, of course, couldn`t leave it at that, so to get back at the bugs, they developed strongly divided leaves, and laughed at the bugs who were trying to roll them up. We`re currently waiting for the bugs` response to the challenge...

hybrid
prairie dock
compass plant

Next we got to know prairie dock (Silphium terebinthinaceum), compass plant (Silphium laciniatum), and their - assumed- hybrid. Normally there are isolating mechanisms at work when it comes to fertilization between species - this is, in fact, one of the criteria when defining species. This is why we can`t mate with a lettuce and produce offspring. Although there are examples of different species producing offspring (horse + donkey = mule), but these are more often than not sterile. There are two ways to ensure that there`s no crossing between species, pre-and postzygotic isolating mechanisms, infertile offspring one of the latter. These prairie dock-compass plant hybrids are typically located at the edges of the prairie, which tells us that normally they wouldn`t survive, but the disturbed habitat allows them to be competitive. Looking at these plants we can see that the leaves are thick and hard, with many little hairs, which are all ways to reduce heavy water loss. Another interesting little fact: in case of compass plant, the outer flowers are fertile, the inner ones are not, which is the complete opposite of how a sunflower works.

reed canary grass
mountain mint
Some other species we pointed out on the go were native mountain mint (Pycnanthemum virginianum), prairie willow (Salix humilis humilis), and invasive exotic reed canary grass (Phalaris arundinacea), which was imported for the pleasure of cattle, who apparently hate it, but now it`s freakin` everywhere.
prairie willow
We also learned that the way to tell grasses and sedges apart, is to check their stems, because`sedges have edges` and grasses have round stems. If you want to see a sedge, google it. Parts of the prairie we called a shrub carr, which is funny, because carr means shrubby place, so to ensure you really get it, we say it twice. Like those idiots who say something is the most optimal...  Even a little change in elevation changes vegetation in the prairie, and this variation in topography favors patches of shrubs at certain places.
As this is a wet mesic prairie, it needs to burn every now and then, otherwise woody things take over. It`s soil is very fertile, which is the precise reason why most of these ecosystems were plowed for agriculture. There is a difference between cutting and burning the prairie, in multiple counts: 1. cutting does not create black, burned patches where temperature is higher than nearby places, 2. legumes lose their advantage if there`s no burn and 3. small seeded plants also loose their advantage if we only cut.

goldenrod gall
Moving on we pointed out goldenrods (Solidago genus) (goldenrods are a pretty big family with multiple species native to Wisconsin), and the fact that often you can find so-called galls on its stems. There are two common insects that form galls, the goldenrod gall fly (Diptera) and the goldenrod gall moth (Lepidoptera). The former lays one larva into the stem of the plant, inducing the plant to form a growth around it, which protects the larva from a parasite that would otherwise lay its eggs into the larva. The adult fly emerges in May.


spiderwort
lead plant
rattlesnake master
We also saw spiderwort (Tradescantia ohiensis), the stamens of which turn pink to radiation, lead plant (Amorpha canescens), a legume, which does NOT indicate the presence of lead, despite the common misbelief. The last interesting plant we came across was rattlesnake master (Eryngium yuccifolium), a member of the carrot family (Apiaceae), which looks very much like a monocot with its parallel veins, but is in fact a dicot with an interesting story. It started with normal, carrot-like leaves, but due to the dry climate, it lost most of its blade tissue, with only the mid-rib left. Then the climate became wetter, and it was once again worth having larger leaves, so rattlesnake master flattened and spread its mid-rib - hence the parallel veins. It's leaves are waxy and point to the sun, to  prevent water loss.


Last but not least, some observant students spotted a crayfish chimney!

crayfish chimney