Thursday, March 24, 2011

The Botanical Find of a Lifetime


As a botanist I am always dreaming of coming across a rare species of plant nestled somewhere for only the sharp-eyed naturalist to see.  Dreaming even deeper is the thought of discovering a plant or population that is new to Ohio or science altogether.  Well yesterday was the day I got to experience that high and raise my excitement in the botanical world to new heights!  Be prepared for some rambling and story-telling because the excitement is still flowing very swiftly through my veins and fingers.

Back in 1963 the famous botanist E. Lucy Braun was walking through a mesic forest in the Rocky Fork drainage of Scioto County, Ohio when she came across a species of plant that caught her eye.  The plant's flower was long gone but the interesting fruit is what got her attention.  She returned the next year in time to catch it flowering and discovered what is to this day the ONLY known population/area of Erythronium rostratum in the state of Ohio.  For over 40 years this population of Goldenstars has bloomed and gone to seed time and time again with no one ever finding another population...until now.

Yesterday I planned to spend the day botanizing and hiking with friend and Edge of Appalachia Preserve manager, Chris Bedel to see what unusual Spring bloomers we could find.  When I walked into the offices of the Eulett Center at 10a.m. little did I know what the day had in store for myself, Chris and fellow preserve manager Rich McCarty.  The day before while trudging through an area of forest way off the beaten path on the preserve, Rich found a patch of Erythronium americanum, commonly known as the Yellow Trout-lily that he thought to look a bit different.  He brought back a specimen to the office and encouraged Chris and I to take a look.  While it was too early for any E. americanum to be blooming (we checked several areas where it is known to bloom to find no evidence of it anywhere), it seemed even less likely that this could be the other plant easily confused with the Yellow Trout-lily; a plant found nowhere else in the state but one spot an hour or so to the east.  The more we looked at the plant Rich brought back the more curious and unsure of its true identity we became so we asked him to lead us to the spot where he found it.  After walking through several old fields, crossing a stream and entering the edge of an old woodland we came before a carpet of mottled green, fleshy leaves all adorned with a striking yellow bloom.  The woods was relatively undisturbed and mature with large Ash (Fraxinus spp.), Sugar Maple (Acer saccharum) and White Oak (Quercus alba) trees in the canopy and a thin understory of Spicebush (Lindera benzoin) and one of my personal favorites, Leatherwood (Dirca palustris), both starting to bloom.  Old fields bordered two sides of the woods while the opposite end sloped down into a valley.  As I pulled out my camera and set it up to snap some photographs little did I know I would be the first person to ever photograph a new population of Erythronium rostratum in Ohio's history!

Erythronium rostratum
Erythronium rostratum






















Some of you may be thinking, 'geeze, this looks just like the normal and much more common Yellow Trout-lily to me'.  That's potentially what makes this plant less rare and elusive than it really could be.  Some people may see these blooming in southern Ohio and mark them down as Erythronium americanum, not knowing we have a third member of the Erythronium genus hiding in amongst the foothills of Appalachia.  Rocky Fork has several areas where this plant blooms which I personally consider to be all one population since it grows in the same immediate area.  This is the first time it's been found in Ohio outside of this original range.  Special thanks to Daniel Boone and Rick Gardner for quickly confirming the identity of this plant from the pictures in my emails. 

Erythronium rostratum
Erythronium rostratum






















There are two relatively easy ways to distinguish this as E. rostratum in the field.  Both the White Trout-lily (Erythronium albidum) and Yellow's blooms hang down from their peduncle in a drooping fashion.  To me it's almost like they are shy and a bit demure about their flowers appearance and don't want to show their faces.  The Goldenstar is on the other end of the spectrum.  It is quite proud of its blooms, standing them up on their stalks for all the world to see.  Maybe they know they are a rarity and are trying to get noticed.  It worked in Rich's case!  The other means of identification on the blooms is a bit more open to interpretation depending on who is looking at it.  On the other two Erythronium's the tepals (petals) are strongly reflexed, meaning they curve back from the plane of the flower.  With E. rostratum the tepals do not reflex and instead are spread out in a flat, star-like fashion.  What is flat and what is slightly reflexed is where the arguments can start but just about every flower in the area showed little to no reflexing while the other Erythroniums are obviously reflexed.  Gold color, star-like...wonder how they could have ever earned the name Goldenstars?

Erythronium rostratum
Erythronium rostratum






















Taking a look at the back of the bloom the sepals exhibit a purplish-brown color while the golden yellow petals are striped with a few thin, brown lines.  The single best way to identify this species is once the plant goes to fruit.  If you are familiar with the other two species of Erythronium you know the ovary swells up into a green capsule at the end of the long peduncle and lays prostrate along the ground.  In the Goldenstar's case the peduncle curves upward towards the apex and holds the capsule erect, up off the ground.  Also the capsule itself provides the distinguishing characteristic of having a 'beak'.  In fact the latin species name of rostratum translates to 'beak'.  I plan on going back sometime in the next week or so to get some photographs of the maturing fruit.  I fear with nighttime temperatures in the 20's and daily highs only in the upper 30's and lower 40's forecasted for the next few days these already notoriously quick bloomers won't last very long at all.  Glad Rich, Chris and I came across them when we did!  As isolated and secluded as this population is I find it hard to believe that even after nearly 50 years and hundreds of botanists and naturalists looking for it this is the first time it's been discovered out of the Rocky Fork valley.  Crazy stuff!

Erythronium americanum
Erythronium americanum






















Above are some photographs from last Spring of Erythronium americanum for comparative purposes.  Notice the heavy reflexing of the tepals in both photographs as well as a speckling of red dots on the inner petals.  Also in many of the Yellow Trout-lilies I see have red/orange stamens while the Goldenstar's are yellow.

This discovery goes to show just how important preservation and conservation of the natural world is; you just never know what is going to turn up where!  I am very thankful this population is already under the protection of the Edge of Appalachia's Preserve as well as being way off the beaten trail and not anywhere near any of the public trails.  Rich McCarty is well known for many other botanical discoveries in the Adams County area; including the finding of the rare White Lady's Slipper orchid (Cypripedium candidum) on the preserve a few years ago (can't wait to bring that to you when it blooms in May!).  I think this may be his best find yet and I am proud to say I was one of the first people to sit down amongst these rarities and truly soak in and appreciate their existence.  It's not everyday you get to be a part of something this exciting and groundbreaking!  Perhaps there's more Erythronium rostratum out there waiting on the Edge and beyond...I'd love to dedicate some time to finding out!





Sunday, March 20, 2011

An Adams County Spring Break

Spring Break 2011!  For most college students that means packing up the car with swimming trunks and booze and heading someplace warm and wild.  Maybe I'm just weird but a few days down at our property in Adams County sounds better!  For the next four days I will be combing the most botanically diverse and geologically interesting region of Ohio for rare and beautiful early spring bloomers, returning birds, awakening amphibians and so much more.  I've got my eye on some specifics but I'm sure I'll find just as many surprises along the way.  The mystical and never-ending supply of adventures and discoveries in Adams County never disappoint...even if the weather threatens to try.  I look forward to sharing my experiences and photographs with you on the other side!  Here's to a good first half of break...and no turkeys or any other wildlife getting in front of my car either! 

Fall photo of the large unbroken tracts of highly diverse forest the Edge and Shawnee Forest are known for

Thursday, March 17, 2011

A Perfect Spring Sunrise

There is something transcending of the mind and spirit to watch the sun rise on a perfect Spring morning.  The black and blues of nights chill warm to pink and orange as the first rays of light pierce the sky with the promise of a new day.  The first birds begin to sing and warble, draped in the soft glow of the morning light as it filters through the mist and trees.  Droplets of dew collect, glistening in the strengthening radiance like thousands of tiny diamonds.  These moments in time will tattoo themselves in your mind for you to relive and enjoy for the rest of your days.  I decided I don't experience nearly enough sunrises in my life and had a hunch that today would be worth the early wake up despite it being my day off.  Trading my day to sleep in for witnessing the sunrise over the misty waters of Dow Lake at Strouds Run State Park certainly paid off.

Morning sunrise over Dow Lake
Perfection


















 
The pale first morning light peering over the foggy hillsides created a very pretty start to a chilly day.  The temperature dropped into the upper 20's overnight creating a layer of frost on everything that added to the scenery.  I love bodies of water on a cold morning that show the layers of stratification of fog as it rises off the water.

Red-wing Blackbird sings in the mist
Frosted Oak leaf



















One of my favorite surefire signs of Spring is the return of the Red-winged Blackbirds.  Their unique calls breaking the silence really added to the mood of the morning.  Just about every 50 yards or so along the shore a male was perched, proudly vocalizing this was his territory and any willing and able female is more than welcome to pay him a visit.  Mixed in with the calls of the Red-wings were many other birds all adding their own song to create a custom choir for my ears enjoyment.  Cardinals, Towhees, Chickadees, Song Sparrows, White-breasted Nuthatches, Pileated woodpeckers, Wood ducks, Titmice, Robins, Phoebes and Canada geese were the noticeable vocalists that comprised my private choir of performers.  I sat and watched several Great Blue Herons slowly stalk their breakfasts in the shallows for a while.  Fascinating to watch them freeze and then suddenly thrust their heads down into the water to spear a fish or frog.

Red-wing Blackbird
Canada Geese on the water

















 

While making my way along the lakeside trail I noticed many small shrubs looked like they had been sprayed with cans of yellow silly string.  Being right outside of Athens and a popular hangout for students from Ohio University (please pick up your trash, I'm sick and tired of seeing your beer cans and bottles scattered everywhere along the trail) it wouldn't be too far a guess that someone in a drunken stupor actually made the silly string mess but right away I knew that wasn't the case at all.

Staminate flowers of the Hazelnut
Pistillate flowers of the Hazelnut



















 The strands of 'silly string' are the male catkin flowers of the American Hazelnut (Corylus americana).  Hanging in clusters of one to three from the ends of the twigs, they contain the pollen that pollinates the very inconspicuous and tiny female flowers seen in the photograph to the right.  These flowers only consist of the stigma and styles that protrude from the buds along the ends of the twigs.  You would never notice these unless you were specifically looking for them.  Lucky for me my macro lens was up to the task of giving you an up close and personal look at these charming little flowers.  Hard to believe that something so tiny that a dozen or so could easily fit on your pinkie fingernail eventually becomes a nut about the size of a marble.

Hazelnut's from the previous year
Hazelnut bud and hairy stem



















Hazelnut shrubs can really blend into the understory during the growing season and are hard to pick out during the winter unless they have their telltale papery husks of nuts still clinging to the twigs.  Spring is easily the best time to find them since everything else in the woods is still naked except for the 'silly string' covered Hazelnuts.  The hair covered, zigzag twigs are another identification method before these monoecious shrubs flower.

I hope to indulge myself with more experiences like the one I had this morning.  There are few things more satisfying than being out in nature as the world wakes up for another day of life and survival.  Sleeping in is always nice but knowing what you're missing out on outside can really make you question just how much is it worth sleeping your life away and skipping the endless wonders of the morning.


I have an added bonus story that really makes this morning's excursion extra unique.  While driving along a backcountry road on my way to Strouds I got a lot closer to some wildlife that I didn't intend on doing.  I'm going down the road with forest to either side of me and a small stream flowing alongside the road on the right.  As I crest over a small hill I suddenly see movement out of my peripheral vision.  A male wild turkey, and a big one at that,  flushed from out of the creek bed and decided to try and fly across the road...big mistake.  I only had enough time to notice the big gallinaceous bird coming my way and yell a favorite &%$#!@ word of mine before...THWACK!  The gobbler was pegged by my side-view mirror and made bone-braking contact against the window and windshield.  A quick look in the rear-view only showed a flying spectacle of feathers and pieces of what used to be the plastic housing of my side mirror.  A few minutes later I arrived at my parking spot and jumped out to survey the damage.  It wasn't nearly as bad as I thought it would be.  The window and windshield were ok, no body damage and just a few scratches.  Amazingly enough the side-view mirror was still attached and even the electronics worked.  It's a perfectly functioning mirror, just naked and missing its shell.  A few hours later I pulled over where I hit the poor guy and looked around for him.  I found plenty of tail feathers and plastic pieces but no body.  I'm 99.9% sure he died when he hit...I did have what appeared to be "gut juices" for lack of a better term on my window.  Maybe someone driving by stopped and grabbed him.  I mean this as no disrespect to some of the locals of Athens county but I wouldn't put it past 'em to grab a big, fresh roadkill turkey on the side of the road.  If you don't believe this account a picture is below with some feathers and dried guts to boot.  What a morning!

Turkey vs my sideview mirrow...looks like the Turkey won :/