Saturday, May 21, 2011

Running Buffalo Clover, Orchids and a Native Honeysuckle, Oh My!

Hamilton county, Ohio is home to some of the rarest and most interesting of all our flora.  Being so far to the south with its rolling, forested hills overlooking the mighty Ohio River, it's not hard to imagine the diversity and beauty on display in late spring.  Personal friend and botanist extraordinaire Dan Boone was kind enough to accompany me on our hike around the county to see what interesting flora we could find!

Lonicera sempervirens
Lonicera sempervirens























First up is one of Ohio's own native species of Lonicera or Honeysuckle.  It's sad that in today's Ohio the genus Lonicera and names like 'Honeysuckle' conjure up feelings of hatred and resentment if even for good reason.  While the non-native and grossly invasive Asian species are clogging our forests and woodlands with their monoculture creating terror, our native species, such as the above pictured Trumpet Honeysuckle (L. sempervirens), are losing habitat and their rightful chance to show off some color.  When not in bloom, these very inconspicuous vines are hard to pick out from the sea of surrounding green but when you catch them at the right time as we did today it's nigh on impossible to not be stopped in your tracks at their stunning beauty.  Some botanists and ecologists will argue that this species is not truly indigenous to Ohio and all populations are simply landscaped cultivation escapees but I strongly disagree with that stance.  Scattered irregularly throughout the state, many instances may in fact be escapees but it's my opinion that we definitely have naturally occurring populations.  This species is known from the depths of Shawnee State Forest in Scioto County, far away from any locations of civilization/cultivation.  Several years ago a severe winter ice storm downed many trees in Shawnee, creating numerous openings and clearings throughout the forest.  Come spring some of these openings exhibited a strongly increased showing of this plant in bloom.  It's clear L. sempervirens had been biding its time in the seed bank until nature created the necessary disturbance for it to make a comeback.  How long these seeds remained viable in their patient gamble for sunlight who knows but it all strongly points to this plant naturally occurring in Shawnee without any human intervention.  Not to mention most of the cultivated varieties I've seen of this plant do not so strongly resemble those of the wild blooming plants.

Corallorhiza wisteriana
Corallorhiza wisteriana























Growing unknown to almost all who walk past it in its cloak of secrecy is the Spring Coral-root orchid (Corallorhiza wisteriana).  Typically Ohio's earliest blooming Corallorhiza orchid, this diminutive saprophytic orchid has no chlorophyll (no 'green' parts to these plants) and thus is unable to produce its food via photosynthesis.  Instead it uses its vital symbiotic relationship with mycorrhizae fungi in the soil to help derive its nourishment from decaying organic material.  Usually less than a foot tall and brown colored, you can imagine the depth of difficulty it can take to find this plant growing out of the leaf litter in well-drained, upland forest communities.  This specific plant was found growing in a fantastic representation of a southwestern Ohio Oak/Hickory forest on its lower, mesic slopes.

Corallorhiza wisteriana

While the Corallorhiza genus of orchids may not hold a candle to the previously showcased Cypripedium's for most people, I think they are stunning and beautiful in their own right.  Take a close look at those snow white lips adorned with a peppering of brilliant magenta spots.  This plants chasmogamous flowers may only be a few millimeters wide in size but they more than make up for their tiny size in their splendid display of color.

Ray (front) and Dan (back) admiring the T. stoloniferum in the forest opening


I was certainly impressed and overjoyed at getting these two rare and beautiful specimens on my species list for 2011 as well as on the camera's memory card but it was time to make for a small opening/path in the woods that provided the suitable habitat for one of Ohio's and the United States rarest species of vascular plants, the Running Buffalo Clover (Trofolium stoloniferum).  Currently listed as endangered on Ohio's rare plants list as well as Federally endangered, this plant has an incredible story to go along with its visually stunning floral displays (at least I think so!).

Initially described to the scientific world and community back in the early 1800's, this plant quickly waned in numbers as the century closed out and by the middle of the 20th century it was considered extinct.  A sad end to such an incredible species tied to our part of the country's natural history.  Then, out of nowhere in 1985 two populations were found in West Virginia, igniting a fire under the behinds of botanists throughout the Midwest in a race to find more extant populations in the Running Buffalo Clover's original range.  Since that initial rediscovery in 1985, five of the eight states formally known to harbor this species can proudly claim naturally occurring populations.  West Virginia, Ohio, Indiana, Kentucky and Missouri are the lucky five, while Illinois, Arkansas and Kansas are still searching for their lucky break.

Trifolium stoloniferum
Trifolium stoloniferum























The clovers habitat requirements of moist, fertile soils in regularly disturbed deciduous forests with partial filtering sunlight give the impression that this species would exist in much higher numbers since this habitat exists with reasonable occurrences throughout southwestern Ohio today.  Unlike many other rare and endangered plants that need undisturbed, mature habitat, Trifolium stoloniferum relies on long-term disturbance of moderate proportions such as mowing, grazing and foot traffic.  Oddly enough this species preferred habitat was not nearly as frequent and common in the primeval Midwest environment and relied on the time periods mega-fauna,  most notably the North American Bison as well as the Native Americans to artificially create its grassy woodland openings.  In pre-settlement times this species was probably found most commonly along the natural Bison and Indian trails as well as along the margins of woodlands and prairies.  Once the Bison were hunted to near extinction this species vital relationship with the massive quadrupeds ceased to exist and followed its necessary counterpart down the road of oblivion.  Due to T. stoloniferum's seasonal need for disturbance, proper landscape and habitat management is critical in keeping this plant around for years to come.  Without management, its forested gaps and openings would quickly fill in.  Unable to survive the dense shade of the forest, the Running Buffalo Clover would quickly meet its unfortunate fate.

Trifolium stoloniferum
Trifolium stoloniferum























For most people a clover, is a clover, is a clover and how to tell them apart is wasted words on their ears.  Fortunately, Trifolium stoloniferum is one of the easiest of the clovers to I.D. and has a couple key distinguishing characteristics.  The flower head (which is made up of many, small pea-like inflorescences) sits atop vertical, unbranching stalks that are adorned with a pair of three-parted leaflets oppositely arranged on the stalk an inch or two down from the flower head.  No other Ohio clover, native or introduced, has this 'platform' of leaves sitting directly below the flowers.  This plant is also notoriously stoloniferous, meaning it has stolons or long 'runners' that spread out and extend from the base of the plants stems.  These runners are able to take root and help continue the propagation and growth of a small population.  The leaflets also lack the common Trifolium arrow-shaped 'watermark'.  Taking a look at the individual flowers reveals the delicate beauty of the all-white inflorescence tinged with purple.  Just your average, yard clogging clover?  Hardly!

Trifolium stoloniferum leaves

Imagine finding a four-leaved clover leaf to this Federal endangered rarity.  Now that is what I would call good luck if there ever was some!  I can't thank Dan enough for sharing the location of this spectacular little patch of Running Buffalo Clover nestled in a random woodland opening.  I've had this species high on my 'life list' for a while and to finally mark it off brought one heckuva smile to my face!  Now to search out Ohio's only other native species of Trifolium, simply called the Buffalo Clover (Trifolium reflexum) that is likewise endangered in our state.  Call me crazy, call me a weirdo but who would have thought a species of Clover would get me this excited.  I found it very fitting that today was National Endangered Species day (the third Friday in May) and I celebrated the most proper way imaginable with a visit to one of Ohio's and the United States endangered species!

6 comments:

  1. I never considered having someone show me their find anything like finding it oneself, thats like finding a rare plant at the zoo.We have the reflexum here in K.Y. as well. But it is rare as well.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Bob, I spend plenty of time out in the field making my own rare plant discoveries but sometimes between work and school it's hard to find the time and gas money to spend on a gamble. I associate myself with an extraordinary group of botanists who all point one another in the right directions for plants we are searching out.

    I agree that it is much more special and memorable finding plants such as T. stoloniferum on your own and have enjoyed many experiences like that but to say it's like seeing it in a zoo being given a helping hand...well I full-heartedly disagree.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Funny how plants bloom one place and aren't even close in another part of the same County?

    ReplyDelete
  4. I admire you and your fellow botanists for your education and your desire to preserve rare flora in its natural habitat!

    ReplyDelete
  5. I came across this page while doing some research on Japanese Honeysuckle for a class...and I'm very glad I did! I do a lot of fieldwork for my job in NKY and have often wondered how best to identify Running Buffalo Clover (looking at plants has absolutely nothing to do with my job by the way). Thanks so much for passing this information along. The pictures are fantastic as well!

    ReplyDelete
  6. That was so amazing!

    ReplyDelete