Native Plants For Creatures Big and Small

While fall is in full swing where I’m from in New England, it appears to be just now taking hold in Delaware. It is certainly not the same New England fall I’m used to. For example, there are hardly any apple orchards or sugar maples turning blazing hues of orange and red in Delaware. Instead, I’ve come to love a different fall color palette, the deep burgundy of sapling sweetgum trees in a mosaic of fluffed out groundel-tree shrubs (Baccarhis halimifolia) and the tan of dried grasses in a managed field habitat. Instead of apples the fruit of the season are persimmons, which are admittedly rather unpleasant until they are practically overripe. If you can get over the baby food-like texture and large seeds, the flavor is comparable to an orange popsicle.

As the plants begin to senesce with the cooler weather, I find myself coming across the insects I always enjoy finding with less and less frequency. Some are still moving across the landscape, most notably adult monarch butterflies undoubtedly making their multi-generational migration south to their wintering grounds in Mexico. Others are hungry – bees are still scouring the landscape for the remaining fall asters and occasionally mistake the red blotches on my tie dye shirt for the sort of vibrant flowers long out of season. One very large bumblebee decided I needed a very thorough inspection to make sure I wasn’t hiding any nectar from her and proceeded to crawl all over my shirt for a solid ten minutes as I very gingerly attempted to continue to collect Spartina alterniflora seedheads from the side of a dike.

Noticing the absence of the invertebrate curiosities of summer provoked me to think about the role they play in seed collection and subsequent habitat restoration projects, besides from when they ruin what we thought would be a great collection. From what I’ve noticed, or at least from my personal experience, there hasn’t been an awful lot of consideration and appreciation of the little things we’re protecting when we collect and utilize wild seed. There’s always ‘restoration’ and ‘wildlife use’ in the broad sense of things, but how often do we consider the tiny creatures so undervalued by most of human society in management efforts? In light of this, I want to dedicate this blog post to all of the fascinating insects I’ve come across this summer. Most of these critters were found utilizing species on our collection list, just in case you need another reason to be proud of the work we’re doing and the diversity of species it supports!

This black swallowtail caterpillar (Papilio polyxenes) was found feeding on Queen Anne's Lace near some Strophostyles helvola we were collecting

This black swallowtail caterpillar (Papilio polyxenes) was found feeding on Daucus carota near some Strophostyles helvola we were collecting. Their coloration doesn’t look like much of a disguise, but they actually blend in surprisingly well against the finely cut leaves of the plants in the Apiaceae that they feed on.

 

cicadeexuvia

Cicada exuvias (exoskeletons left behind when they turn into adults) can be still be found clinging to the various species of pine trees whose roots they feed on before they emerge. This is probably an annual cicada.

 

iocaterpillar

I was beyond excited when I found this guy, an io moth (Automeris io) caterpillar feeding on Sassafras albidum leaves. It’s a sizable caterpillar with painful stinging hairs if you’re careless enough to touch it. The adults are large silk moths famous for the false eyespots on their hindwings they flash to startle predators.

 

owletcaterpillar

I tend to be fairly decent at identifying insects, but this very colorful caterpillar had me stumped for quite some time. It reminded me a bit of a monarch caterpillar and was the about the size of a small one as well. As it turns out, this beauty (finally IDed to Cucullia alfarata) turns into the most drab little brown moth once it goes through metamorphosis. The larval host plants are camphorweed and as seen here, seaside goldenrod (Solidago sempervirens).

 

redspottedpurple

Stunning red-spotted purples (Limenitis arthemis) were abundant at all of our freshwater wetland sites throughout Delaware. They frequently could be seen drinking from mud in a behavior called puddling in which butterflies take up supplementary minerals.

 

stingingrosecaterpillar

If only I had kind words to say about this caterpillar besides commenting on its fascinating appendages and bright colors. While collecting beach plums, my hand and arm started having this rather unpleasant burning sensation. I wrote it off as just being scratched too many times reaching into the bushes with my famously sensitive skin. It wasn’t until a few minutes later I realized it was in fact a reaction to something when Lucy mentioned that her hand “was on fire.” We looked and looked around the bushes, not finding any likely suspects until we stumbled across this crazy looking caterpillar. One look at it between its bright warning colors and visible stinging hairs, it was evident what we’d been stung by! Apparently the stinging rose caterpillar (Parasa indetermina) is a common culprit of caterpillar stings, feeding on a variety of plants in the Rosaceae.

 

yellowargiope

A familiar garden spider of my childhood, I could have never expected the overwhelming abundance of the yellow argiope (Argiope aurantia) in the salt marshes of Delaware. These buggers are everywhere, and I mean EVERYWHERE. Not only that, but they can be enormous! The one above is slightly less than two inches from leg tip to leg tip, although admittedly much larger than most I’ve come across. Take solace, spider haters, in the fact that these guys are in my experience very skittish, so much so that they can be difficult to photograph!

 

Delawhere?

We’re just getting through the dog days of summer, with hopefully only a few more weeks of days so hot and humid you feel like you’re swimming underwater and not just because you’re drenched! Down a few hours away from the city where I’ve been travelling to in Delaware to collect the fruit and berry season is starting to wind down. We’ve made a few huckleberry and black cherry collections, but after the beach plums ripen we’ll be mostly done with fleshy fruit. It’s getting a bit slow with many of the early grassy species being empty by now, especially since I’m collecting farther south than the other NY interns. Lately it’s been a lot of scouting to prepare and plan for what is shaping up to be a crazy fall season. It’s fascinating to watch what we’ll be collecting ripen as the weeks fly by! We won’t be collecting any nuts, but I’m really excited to see what ripe wild hazelnuts look like. I couldn’t help but take a picture of this ripening American hazelnut (Corylus americana) in Brandywine Creek State Park and tease my mom who’s a huge hazelnut coffee freak. Dunkin Donuts of course, we’re from Massachusetts after all!

hazelnut

 

Recently I went on a collection trip with my collection partner, Lucy, to northern Delaware. After weeks of spending time in southern Delaware on the ocean, we were beyond ready to explore some new territory in the shade of the forest in search of some freshwater wetland species, notably a few Carex (sedge) species that were ready and waiting. What a shock it was to us when we got there to find a landscape absolutely overrun with invasive species! We’re talking entire riverbanks that we were hoping to be covered in our freshwater list species instead covered in mats of Japanese hop vines.  Not only that, but most areas were thick with stinging nettles! Sadly, there wasn’t much to see besides some interesting invasive species. One of my personal favorites were the osage orange trees (Maclura pomifera). Is it just me or do they look kind of like tree brains!

Osage orange

 

The trip was far from hopeless however, as we ended up making a fantastic Carex lurida collection as we fortuitously walked through what we later determined was the only wetland area when looking as USGS topo maps and vegetation survey maps. Like they say, hindsight is 20/20, so from now on topo maps and vegetation surveys are our best friends. Thirty minutes of extra research is much less painful than thirty minutes of waiting for the nettle stings on your hands to stop burning!

Scouting is always a great adventure, not just to see what native plants on our collection list are there, but also to see what surprises Mother Nature has in store for us! Lucy and I have found all sorts of natural marvels, from stunning Turk’s Cap Lilies (Lilium martagon) to dead Luna Moths to the exotic looking fruits of Skunk Cabbage (Symplocarpus foetidus). Of course I’m not one to turn down a photo op of nature’s curiosities!

Turk's Cap Lily

Turk’s Cap Lily

lunamoth

Skunk Cabbage Fruit

Skunk Cabbage Fruit

So here’s to enjoying the last summer has to offer in the unexpected beauty of the tiniest state in the Mid-Atlantic. Fall is just around the corner, as this field in Brandywine Creek State Park turns the familiar shades of yellow as goldenrods (Solidago juncea here) start to bloom and milkweed (Asclepias syriaca) pods start to ripen.

solidago

 

Paige Carncross

CLM Intern with SOS East at the Mid-Atlantic Regional Seed Bank (MASRB)

Camping to Collect – Escaping the City!

Recently while talking to friends and family everyone asks me how my new life in the city is going. I’m a pretty honest person, so I tell them how it is – I adore my internship (Hiking around to scout and collect seeds all day? Best gig ever!) and my coworkers and I are all already really close friends… But for someone who just spent most of the last four years in the nature lover’s paradise that is Vermont, the city is just about the worst. It’s loud, there are always trash bags everywhere, trying to get anywhere is insane, stores try to charge you $6 for a box of cereal, and in general it is terribly inconvenient. Thankfully I took this position knowing that I’d be travelling outside the city a lot for work and this past month the MARSB team finally got to go on some scouting and collecting trips!

For our first trip we spent three days scouting state parks and learning our collection list species on Long Island. While the traffic was still awful and most places were either fancy residential areas or a giant tourist trap, I was surprised that the conserved land on this built up island still appeared to have healthy ecosystems. Many of the beaches were even gorgeous to boot! We focused primarily on dune and beach species there, most of which I was already familiar with from growing up on the coast. Our mentor Clara also taught us about how to tell when certain seeds are ripe. Below is her sharing some very unripe beach pea seeds (Lathyrus japonicus).

P6191142

 

We also went back to some areas closer to the city on Long Island for two day trips at the end of the week. Probably the most exciting moment for me on the trip was getting to see one of these beauties (below). They’re called Grass Pink (Calogpogon tuberosus) and are an orchid which grows in bogs and other wet areas. A small colony of them were growing in a boggy swale between dunes with other (in my opinion) exciting species such as two sundews (Drosera spp.). We were intent on covering ground though, and I regret not being able to key them out, although they were probably the typical roundleaf sundew (Drosera rotundifolia) and threadleaf sundew (Drosera filiformis). I’m not sure where the guys on the team had run off to at the time, but my female coworkers, Clara, and myself had quite the laugh after what we thought was a frustrating mystery orchid we had found growing along a clearing edge. After many attempts to key the plant out Clara finally pulls it out of the back of her mind that the plant was actually a strange, showy-flowered plantain (Plantago patagonica) and we had managed to be looking at a specimen with poorly developed leaves the whole time!

P6161139

 

The next week was an even bigger, busier week but it was by far the best yet! We spent six days camping and travelling to state parks and Nature Conservancy properties throughout New Jersey and Delaware. We also finally got to make our first collections, six in total! All that was really ready then were Vaccinium spp., some Rubus spp., some graminoids, and beach heather (Hudsonia tomentosa). 
The past two weeks we’ve mostly been in the office planning our partner collecting trips which start next week. I was assigned Delaware, which while it’s by far the farthest away from the city, I’m still excited about it since I’ll be able to learn more southerly species I’m not familiar with. Yesterday we spent the day looking through the Brooklyn Botanic Garden’s herbarium at the New York Botanic Garden studying specimens of the species on our list to compare to similar species or to see for the first time. It was a bit of a nostalgic experience for me, having worked at the Pringle Herbarium at the University of Vermont for the last year. I’m happy to say I can still easily spend hours in one! Here’s some of the crew getting up close and personal with some specimens.
herbarium
 
Next week’s adventure: Camping in Delaware!
Paige Carncross
SOS East Seed Collection Intern

Introduction and the First Two Weeks!

Growing up in coastal eastern Massachusetts and having spent the last four years in Vermont, I would have never imagined myself living in New York City. I’ve always been surrounded by large tracts of conservation lands, particularly beautiful tracts of northern hardwood forest and dune communities. I was curious about the state of the natural areas in and around New York City and admittedly did not have high expectations for the areas. After spending a week with a few trips to natural sites around the city I’m happy to say that so far I have been pleasantly surprised by the state of the area. As expected, there is a fair about of trash strewn about and some areas have been subjected to heavy public use. However, the amount of plant diversity and native species still remaining in what seemed like a jungle of invasive species was surprising to me.

Over the course of the week we were able to identify about 15 species on our collection list. For someone who is fairly well versed in the flora of the Northeast, I was thrilled to find myself learning new species. I’ve recently been working on getting better at identifying grass and grass-like species. I find them somewhat challenging to key out if you can’t identify them through familiarity and gestalt. Everyone’s favorite so far seems to be the black rush, Juncus gerardii, due to its minute yet stunning flowers and ease of identification.

P6101117

Our collection list also includes a few groups of species in what I consider to be troublesome genera and closely related genera, specifically Viburnum, Vaccinium, and Gaylussacia. We encountered a few mystery Viburnum during our field days, which we concluded were likely ornamental non-natives. We also found these Vaccinium and Gaylussacia species growing side by side, which helped us process the differences between the two. In this photo the Vaccinium is on the right and the Gaylussacia is on the left.

P6101126

While of course the plants were interesting and I was excited to learn new species, the scenery wasn’t bad either! For such a developed landscape, there are certainly some hidden gems of natural areas in the city. In the next few weeks to come I can’t wait to discover even more hidden paradises in Long Island, New Jersey, and Delaware!

P6101118

 

Paige Carncross

SOS East Intern for the Mid-Atlantic Regional Seed Bank