Pollinators, Plants, Milkweed, and Monarchs

Over the course of six weeks, I progressed the Mt. Pinos Ranger District initiative of creating a pollinator friendly garden at the Chuchupate Ranger Station. I surveyed Milkweed populations for evidence of Monarch reproduction, and made incidental observations about Monarchs and native pollinator and native plant interactions.

For the pollinator garden, activities included removing the noxious pepperweed (Lepidium sp.), researching planting and propagation methods for candidate plants in the garden, collecting seeds of native plants, and watering and measuring success of milkweed plants in the greenhouse. For the pepperweed, I performed one half day of removal on the property, filling a trash bag. However, the plant was back in full force within three weeks. I recommend aggressive removal and monitoring every two weeks. Collecting native seeds involved identifying healthy populations (>10 individuals) of pollinator-friendly, local plants, attempting to focus on those plants planned for the garden. In total, I collected 4,273 seeds, 2,204 of which are planned in the xeriscape garden (Seed Collection.xlsx). Seeds were collected in paper bags, counted in the office, and accessioned in a spreadsheet according to the quadrangle in which they were collected. Three times a week I watered the milkweed seedlings in the greenhouse at Frazier Mountain High School, measuring germination success at the beginning of each week. As of the end of July 2016, 44.1% of the seedlings have germinated and survived, 14% of the seedlings produced more than one shoot. I designed a straightforward data sheet for continued measuring of seedling success, corresponding to the layout of the greenhouse.

In addition to seed collection, I made observations of pollinator-plant interactions, Monarch adults, recorded milkweed populations, and surveyed for Monarch reproduction on Milkweed. I made 44 observations of pollinators, 25 of which included pollinated plants, and 22 of which were Monarch adults. I recorded the location, number, and behavior of Monarchs (Pollinators MPRD.xlsx). Milkweed observations were made incidentally within Mt. Pinos Ranger District (Milkweed MPRD.xlsx, Sheet 1). Each data point corresponds to a 1 m2 presence of one of three species of milkweed (Asclepias eriocarpa, Asclepias fascicularis, and Asclepias californica). Within the data sheet I included known populations of milkweed that were not recorded for GPS coordinates, elevation, and flowering status data. These locations may be visited at a later data for observations, field collection, or Monarch surveys (Milkweed MPRD.xlsx, Sheet 2). Four locations on the Mt. Pinos Ranger District were visited for Monarch surveys, following the protocol on mlmp.org, measuring the total area, estimate or count of milkweed plants, number of sampled plants, and number of Monarch eggs, instars, or chrysalis’. I designed a datasheet for these surveys. Over the four locations and five survey days (one site was surveyed twice) we observed 5 Monarch instars. Results of the surveys are located on “Monarch Data.xlsx” and are able to be registered on the mlmp.org but have not been registered at this time. The monarch survey results file also contains a sheet of all incidental observations of adults on the MPRD.

Other duties of the internship included removing cliff swallow nests surveys and removal to prevent avian window injury, designing and posting fire closure signs, surveying springs for water flow and use, collecting herbarium vouchers (Herbarium collections.xlsx), writing native plant newsletters for education and distribution in the MPRD, identifying and referring seed collection sites for an AT&T restoration project, and editing and participating in the production of a rare plants field guide for Mt. Pinos Ranger District by local botanist, Pam De Vries.

My recommendations for the pollinator initiative at MPRD are 1) Create a restoration-like plan for planting pollinator plants. Ideally, it would look like a hybrid of the AT&T Frazier Park to Pine Mountain Telecommunications Project: Habitat Restoration Plan and the USDA Technical Note: Plants for Pollinators in the Inland Northwest. The plan would apply to all candidate sites within the MPRD 2) Design a sampling method for population density of milkweed on the MPRD. 3) Design a sampling method for population density of Monarchs on the MPRD. Every year, record the first and last observations of Monarchs and make estimates of density. 4) Create an insect collection with an emphasis on pollinating insects, taking perfect note of the pollinated plants.IMG_2173 IMG_2159 IMG_2135 IMG_2123 IMG_2111 IMG_2071 IMG_2054 Twin Spring DSC_0359 DSC_0363

Week in the life of a NYC seed collector

I’m working at the Greenbelt Native Plant Center on Staten Island, NY. Our small regional seed bank is working to make upwards of 300 collections of native plant seeds this year. These seeds will be used for restoration projects in areas damaged by hurricane Sandy. The first few weeks were filled with intensive training in plant identification and seed collection strategies. But now we’ve been loosed into the wild to do the work! We were assigned to teams in different geographic regions from which to collect. I’m working with my fellow intern, Laura, and we’re doing seed collection in the forests, dunes, and marshes of Long Island (which, in fact, is QUITE long, and quite a bit greener than I had expected). We have started to get into the swing of things, so here’s a look at what we did this week!

Monday: Every successful trip into the field starts with thorough planning in the office. Laura and I assess which species might be ready for collection and chose which new sites we want to scout. We book accommodation, plan meals, pick up our rental car, and contact park managers to let them know we’d be on site. We organize our tools: Plant press, clippers, GPS. rain gear, data sheets, collection envelopes etc. With (almost) everything accounted for, we head home and got an early night to prepare for the next day’s work.

Tuesday: I tote my backpack full of supplies through the subway crowded with commuters. I get some odd looks (my khaki field pants and and tie-dye t-shirt do not blend in with typical New York fashion) but I arrive on time at the subway station near Laura’s apartment in Brooklyn. We drive two hours until we reach our first field site: Rocky Point Pine Barrens Preserve. We spend a couple of hours hiking around, eagerly noting the abundance of bearberry (Arctostaphylus uva ursi) and wild indigo (Baptisia tinctoria). After we’ve sufficiently scouted this site, we head to Brookhaven State Park. We find some nice populations around several small ponds, and along a powerline cut.

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pondside Cephalanthus occidentalis (Buttonbush)

Wednesday: Today we visit two new sites: Robert Cushman Murphy County Park and Sears Bellows County Park. Both are full of dried up pond beds, filled with interesting species. One of my favorite finds was a beautiful collection of Rhexia virginica growing happily in the mud of the dried up pond.

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Rhexia virginica

Around the main pond on site we find an abundance of a rush called Juncus effusus that is seeding. It takes a bit of bushwhacking through the surrounding thickets, but we collect from the entire population.

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We also find this little guy.

Thursday: We return to a site that we visited last week, Connetquot River State Park, to finish a collection of two grasses. We move swiftly through the roadside grasses, stopping to find another population of Juncus effusus around a stream that flows through the middle of the park. We finish up the day happy with our three completed seed collections.

Friday: Back in the office, we lay out our seed to dry in the lab, and plan for more botanical adventures ahead!

Halfway through the season

Can’t believe it’s already halfway through the season! It was a slow start in April but now it has been constant work outside. We had a nuisance bear at one of our campsites so no more picnic baskets for Yogi and Boo Boo.

One of the engineers welding for the bear proof garbage.

One of the engineers welding for the bear proof garbage can.

End product to keep the bears away from the trash.

End product to keep the bears away from the trash.

 

My cointern and I have also been on a mission to change out BLM road signs and so far have accomplished about twenty transitions from old and decrepit to new and refreshed signs.

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New sign

 

Old sign we replaced.

Old sign we replaced.

We have also been monitoring our WSA’s, which can be an interesting truck ride, considering some roads are not maintained. Monitoring consists of us pounding in carcinites and putting on stickers to mark the boundary, scoping for wildlife, and checking for intrusions from people not using designated trails.

Wild horses by one of our WSA's

Wild horses by one of our WSA’s

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Rocky Mountain Columbine in another one of our WSA’s

and here’s an encounter with a prairie rattlesnake in town.

He's a big one

He’s a big one

Until next time from the Rawlins Field Office.

Rebecca Radtke

4 reasons why my blog is late

In the thick of summer, I am in the thick of seed collection.  The target list that my mentor and I developed consists of over 30 species and I am the only CLM intern here!  So, I had to solicit the help of some great local Youth Corps.  They work 10hr days, so with transportation that adds up to over 12hr days for me (leaving not sooo much blog time).

Reason 1. Had 12 hr work day, the majority of which was at Yaquina Head Lighthouse collecting Gaultheria shallon.

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Reason 2. Spent a wonderful morning with my mentor schooling Youth Corps on how “mossome” nonvascular plants are!

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Then my parents came to visit all the way from MD!

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Dad and me at Cascade Head on the Oregon Coast: Where the Salmon River meets the sea.

Reason 3.  Had 12 hr work day, some of which was collecting Rubus leucodermis with a great crew.

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Reason 4.  Had 2 12 hr work days, the majority of which was collecting Bromus vulgaris and carinatus as well as Elymus Glaucus.  We need 10 pounds of each species for BLM grow out, and I could not have gotten the collection started without the Columbia River Youth Corps!

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I think a stonefly, on Elymus glaucus

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So after a busy week and more to come, I kinda feel like this…Slime Mold and Me

Trading the Sagebrush for the Forest

Hey all!

This has been a great week in the Salmon, Idaho BLM office because we got to trade our normal work for the forestry tech work.

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The biggest tree we found- a DBH of 67.1″

 

It was quite a nice break to try doing another job. The forestry work was a lot of data measurements, and it involved hiking up so massive hills with some radically steep inclines. It was tough work but we got it done.IMG_7395

And as a trade off we got to take the forestry techs out on one of our collection days. That way they could see what our job entails as well. We collected bluebunch wheat grass and we were very thankful for the set of extra hands on the site to help us with a difficult collection. They in the end, decided that they much more preferred the sanctity of the cooler temperature that the forest canopy provides, and didn’t want to be out in the open sage heat as often as we were.

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It was a nice week of shared learning experiences, and a gain of new job perspective within the field office.

Hope you guys finish out the summer strong!

-Sierra Sampson

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FRGE Redux

This past month has been an exercise in nostalgia– we’ve been revisiting our earlier FRGE sites to record a more in depth survey of the vegetation. We’ve also been ‘data mining’, a phrase I’ve never heard. It basically means we spend hours in the office pouring over old rare plant site forms. It’s a hoot~

We still get to see the bird's eye view of these little towns sometimes~

We still get to see the bird’s eye view of these little towns sometimes~

Visiting our old sites is pretty exciting because we get to see how the plant communities have changed over the summer. At the beginning of my internship the oak trees were just starting to bud and we had to use fallen leaves and acorns to identify them. Now, we walk through fully leaved oak woodlands. It feels magical and it’s a major relief from the harsh and relentless sun.

This hillside is a beautiful oak woodland, but you can't really tell from this picture.. but you can see highway 238!

This hillside is a beautiful oak woodland, but you can’t really tell from this picture.. but you can see highway 238!

Not all of the sites we are revisiting are our old sites, however. Some are contractor sites that we don’t have site forms for. It’s been interesting to go to these new sites, especially ones that had quite a few FRGE plants. Seeing flagging with nothing under it strikes me as funny, for some reason.

We found a dried up seed FRGE seed pod underneath a dried up FRGE plant. It's been lovely watching these plants go through their life cycle!

We found a dried up seed FRGE seed pod underneath a dried up FRGE plant. It’s been lovely watching these plants go through their life cycle!

One of the sites we went to was in the Cascade-Siskiyou National Monument. Stacy joined us, and along the way we were walking on a decommissioned road that was paved with Calochortus greenei. It was exciting to see this rare and beautiful plant! But commingled with it was a startling amount of invasive and noxious weeds. I wondered how different the road would have looked if it had been left to nature’s devices rather than turned over and seeded.

A very pretty plant! The cup the petals form is so deep, I was surprised. It's a warm little hiding place for bugs!

A very pretty plant! The cup the petals form is so deep, I was surprised. It’s a warm little hiding place for bugs!

We’ve been seeing a lot of pretty lilies on our hikes this time around! They’re so big and beautiful, they lift morale instantly!

This lily is tall! We've seen some that are taller than me! (But, if we're being honest, I'm a pretty short Lillie)

This lily is tall! We’ve seen some that are taller than me! (But, if we’re being honest, I’m a pretty short Lillie)

These lilies have huge flowers!

These lilies have huge flowers!

Our hikes don’t go quite as deep into the backcountry as they used to, but we still work up a sweat and see interesting things. Kiki and I have had a busy field season, so it’s odd to be in the office so much. It makes me nostalgic for the days when I would complain about how sore my feet were and how much plant material was in my hair. Our longest hikes were the ones we avoided for our revisits, but I almost wish we would have gone back to some of them. Almost. One thing is certain– office days don’t provide much material for good blog posts.

This trunk is interesting to me, it reminds me of Freddy Krueger's face.

This trunk is interesting to me, it reminds me of Freddy Krueger’s face.

This bee impostor sat next to me all during lunch one day.

This bee impostor sat next to me all during lunch one day.

You can't stop Kiki from climbing trees and pretending they're horses.

You can’t stop Kiki from climbing trees and pretending they’re horses.

We always make time for selfies.

We always make time for selfies.

It’s berry season here in southern Oregon and we have been reaping the benefits. Blackberries grow all over town, making it easy to stroll around in the evenings (tasty free snacks are good incentive for casual exercise). We stumble on blackberries, thimbleberries, and strawberries on our hikes as well. These boost morale even more than seeing the pretty lilies! There’s nothing better than a handful of wild strawberries after a hot hike.

These blackberries are a bit more tart than the ones in the store. Kiki says it's because they're not totally ready yet but I like them this way~

These blackberries are a bit more tart than the ones in the store. Kiki says it’s because they’re not totally ready yet but I like them this way~

Wild strawberries are the most delicious food to eat. Just thinking about them makes me swoon~

Wild strawberries are the most delicious food to eat. Just thinking about them makes me swoon~

On our off time, Kiki and I visited a lavender festival. It was very hot but we cooled down with some delicious lavender ice cream. We walked through the growing fields and reflected on how hot it was that day. The lavender plants were very pretty though!

There were quite a few different varieties of lavender but they all smelled the same to me.

There were quite a few different varieties of lavender but they all smelled the same to me.

We also went on a backpacking trip to the Devil’s Punchbowl! It’s a big snowmelt lake at the top of a mountain. The hike was pretty, with blankets of twin flower (Linnaea borealis) lining the sides of the trail for most of it. The punchbowl itself was very bowl-like indeed– it seemed as if the devil’s hand might reach over the rim for a taste at any time. The water was cool and refreshing~ I recommend it!

The sign is spooky, especially in the middle of the woods!

The sign is spooky, especially in the middle of the woods!

Our cute little campsite~

Our cute little campsite~

We, of course, made time for scrabble on our journey.

The most relaxing game.

There’s nothing like a game of scrabble next to a beautiful lake.

I went home for a week to see my sister before she moved away for graduate school. It was really nice to be at home without any responsibilities, but I’m glad to be back.

Officially, I went home to see my sister. But seeing my dog was a huge bonus.

Officially, I went home to see my sister. But seeing my dog was a huge bonus.

I’ve now entered my last month here. My heart aches to think about it!

Lillie Pennington

Grants Pass, OR

Lizard Lovin in the Desert

This past month, we’ve been mega busy setting up and monitoring pitfall traps in various locations as well as doing recon for seed collections here in Carlsbad. Our pitfall traps are set up in dunes for a presence/absence survey of the dunes sagebrush lizard, Sceloporus arenicolus. This species is not yet listed as endangered, but it’s been proposed by the US Fish & Wildlife Service. Its numbers have dramatically decreased because its habitat in sandy dunes dusted with shinnery oak and sand sagebrush are also prime locations for oil wells. Although we haven’t yet found any dunes sagebrush lizards in the locations surveyed, we have found many side-blotched lizards as well some Texas horned lizards and common lesser earless lizards.

Side-blotched lizard- Uta stansburiana

Texas horned lizard- Phrynosoma cornutum 

Common lesser earless lizard-

Common lesser earless lizard-Holbrookia maculata

Rifling through the pitfall t

Rifling through the pitfall traps

To determine whether or not we are recapturing the same individuals, we sharpie the digits of any lizard caught before releasing it from the trap. On the tinier juvenile lizards which are starting to become abundant as eggs hatch, this can be a little tricky! In addition to lizard monitoring at these sites, we’ve also started on an insect collection since so many insects are often caught in the traps. There hasn’t been much study on the insect diversity in the area, so I look forward to identifying the insects we’ve collected so far.

Besides our weekly lizard monitoring, we did our first seed collection this month!

-our first seed collection!

Ratibida columnifera– our first seed collection!

Along with the HACU interns at the BLM, we also did a cleanup at a nearby recreation area, Conoco Lake, which included milkweed planting to set up monarch waystations! The cleanup was super, and we are planning on planting more milkweed in several other sites in the coming weeks both for restoration and to set up more waystations.

Me and two of the HACU interns, Jorge and Nicole, planting some milkweed!

Me and two of the HACU interns, Jorge and Nicole, planting some milkweed!

Meridith McClure- Carlsbad, New Mexico BLM

Nearing the End…

Greeting from Rawlins, WY!

Things has begun to change here for me in terms of work. It is hard to believe that I only have 5 weeks left! We have finished most of our campground maintenance and have moved on to Wilderness Study Area (WSA) monitoring. Our field office has 5 WSAs that we are responsible for. When out monitoring our WSAs there are a few things that we are looking for. We are mostly looking for trespass and vehicles that are driving where they are not supposed to. Another thing that we are looking for is carsonites and stickers to replace along the boundary. We also want to know the condition of our WSAs so we are on the lookout for dreaded invasive species! When monitoring, we also record any people recreating in the area as well as wildlife or wild horses.

Encampment River WSA

Encampment River WSA

Prospect Mountain WSA

Prospect Mountain WSA

Another thing that we have been monitoring is the Continental Divide National Scenic Trail. The trail is a 3,100 mile trail that travels between the Mexico border and the Canadian border. It runs through 5 states with Rawlins being about the halfway point on the trail. This mostly involves making sure that the trail is clearly marked so hikers know where they have headed. We have been seeing lots of hikers on the trail while doing field work.

With only 5 weeks remaining in my internship and most of our recreation duties met for the summer, I am taking this time to expand my experience and go out with others in the office. Last week I had the opportunity to go out with the fisheries biologist and his techs and remove some beaver dams for a project coming up. This week I am going to go out with the forester and learn more about what she does in preparation for a timber sale. I am also hoping to make it out with the Hydrologist at one point before the summer is over. I really enjoy that the CLM internship gives me the chance to get experience in other fields then just the one my internship is focused on.

Beaver Dam to be removed

Beaver Dam to be removed

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BLM Rawlins Field Office

Getting into the Swing of Things in Wyo

Life in Buffalo has been an adventure so far. After what seemed like a lifetime of trainings, my co-intern, Nick, and I finally were able to begin going to our monitoring sites. Before we started going to our AIM sites on our own, we spent some time going out with the entire Range crew as they did their assessments of past year’s monitoring sites. This was not only a great way to practice our plant ID, but also a good way to learn about soils and other qualities of the land. It also gave us some insight as to what they’ll be looking for a year from now when they return to the sites Nick and I monitor this field season.

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Arnie, the soil scientist in our office, showing us how it’s done. What a guy!

Some highlights of the past month or so:

-Getting stuck behind a herd of sheep on our way to an AIM site, and quite the massive herd at that…
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-Camping for a week to accomplish AIM sites at the Hole in the Wall on BLM land.
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-Meeting up over the Fourth of July weekend with some interns I met in Chicago (at the CBG training) and the Rocksprings training to camp and celebrate the holiday.
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-Spending my free time hiking, camping, and exploring the Bighorn Mountains/National Forest as well as exploring other cool towns in Wyoming such as Lander and Sheridan. The picture below is of one of the various gorgeous wild flower meadows on the edge of the National Forest and the Cloud Peak Wilderness Area.
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-Meeting all different kinds of people during my travels as well as in town since Buffalo is a tourist stop of some sort during the summer for people on their way to Yellowstone.

Time seems to be flying due to how busy I am, but I’m truly enjoying it. The learning hasn’t only been limited to plants and BLM related things but it’s also been useful to hone my skills as a camper (although if I am being honest, I still have a lot to learn in that department), learning to drive a truck on somewhat sketchy roads, and appreciating the Western lifestyle.

Until Next Time,

Corinne Schroeder
Buffalo BLM Field Office

Learning to Drive, Hunt, and Gather

As things swing into full seed collecting mode here at the Santa Fe office, I’ve been working on all kinds of skills, including how to drive. Driving, that is, on rutted out, muddy, wash-board, and/or sandy roads.

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Sandy arroyo crossing

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A very steep hill, much steeper in person!

The powerful 4-wheel drive truck enables us to explore a lot of territory, and the purpose of exploring all that territory is, of course, to hunt for plant populations! Once we’ve been lucky enough to discover a swath of plants with ripe seed, the engine is off, we’re far from paved roads, my collecting bag is in hand, and sometimes I feel as though I may be more close to the great depth of human ancestral experience than I have ever been before — simply out in a field gathering wild fruit.

This line of thought leads me to think how wild fruit can be so scarce and so small, and what an amazing thing all of our cultivated plant varieties with fat, juicy fruits are.

And then sometimes I get a big surprise. I’ve been familiar with flax seeds as a food source for quite some time, and even bought a bottle of flax oil recently. I knew the pretty blue flower was called flax, and yet when we went to collect seed from Linum lewisii, blue flax, I was struck by how its seed looked nearly the same as flax seed that can be bought in the store!

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Linum lewisii with fruit

With this in mind, I look forward to hunting and gathering Eriogonum (buckwheat), Helianthus (sunflower), and hopefully at least one fleshy, sweet berry! Luckily we have already scouted a large population of Rubus parviflorus (thimbleberry), a relative of raspberry I was shocked to find so far from Oregon, where I know it as one of my favorites.

Laura Holloway

Santa Fe (New Mexico State Office), BLM