Wednesday, August 18, 2010

Whorled Milkweed -SAVANNA



Whorled Milkweed / A. verticillata

Order: Gentianales Family: Asclepiadaceae Genus: Asclepias


-Greenish-white flowers, 1/4 inch long, in round clusters 1-2 inches across on the upper part of the stem.
-Whorled milkweed is a single-stemmed, unbranched perennial, 1-3 ft. tall.
-narrow, linear leaves are whorled along the stem.

Special Adaptations:

- nectar source for butterflies

Buckeye Butterfly -SAVANNA


Buckeye Butterfly / Junonia coenia

Order: Lepidoptera Family: Nymphalidae Genus: Junonia

-The caterpillar is dark and has yellow stripes and dark spines.

-The hindwing also has 2 eyespots; the upper one is largest and contains a magenta crescent. The underside of the hindwing is brown or tan in the wet season (summer) form and rose-red in the dry season (fall) form.


Special Adaptations:
-The Buckeye Butterfly widespread and easily recognized by its prominent eyespots that probably help protect them against inexperience birds
Adult males patrol a territory and wait for females to fly overhead.

-Because adults can’t over winter in cold climates, large scale southern migrations of Buckeye butterflies can be found along the East coast of America in the Autumn. Adults live for a little over a week. Dark green eggs are laid on figwort and plantain plants.

Lipstick Powderhorn Lichen -SAVANNA


Lipstick Powderhorn /Cladonia macilenta

Order: Lecanorales Family: Cladoniaceae Genus: Cladonia


-Fruticose lichens are characterized by their erect stalks which have no distinguishable upper and lower surfaces. They are typically highly branched and shrubby (these are the types often used for "shrubbery" in model train displays).
-Tall, slender, podetia topped with small, bright red, apothecia. Podetia often thicker at the top.

Praying Mantis -SAVANNA



Praying Mantis/ T. aridifolia sinensis

Order: Mantodea Family: Mantidae Genus: Tenodera

-Three distinct body regions: head, thorax (where the legs and wings are attached), abdomen.
-Part of the thorax is elongated to create a distinctive 'neck'.
-Front legs modified as raptorial graspers with strong spikes for grabbing and holding prey.
-Large compound eyes on the head which moves freely around (up to 180°) and three simple eyes between the compound eyes.
-Incomplete or simple metamorphosis


Special Adaptations:

-Praying mantids are often protectively colored to the plants they live on. This camouflage facilitates their predaceous behavior. Mantids are usually found on plants that have other insects around. Some mantids live in grass. Winged adults may be attracted to black lights in late summer and early fall.

-Predators: Many fish and predatory aquatic insects eat larvae and pupae. Bats, birds and spiders eat flying adults.

-The mantis is not only a study in patience but also speed. They lie in wait with the front legs in an upraised position. They intently watch and stalk their prey. It can grab its prey – like birds, snakes, small lizards and even rodents – in one swift move. They will eat each other. The adult female usually eats the male after or during mating

Flower Fly /Hoverfly -SAVANNA


Flower Fly /Hoverfly

Order: Diptera Family: Syrphidae

-Hover flies are a diverse family and are found in many habitats.
Many people recognize the familiar "flower fly" that pollinates flowering plants and whose pointy-headed offspring (maggots) blindly tap their way through the foliage searching for juicy aphids and other small, soft-bodied insects.

-The adult "flower fly" and many other syrphids are bee/wasp mimics, sporting the typical yellow and black warning markings common to bees and wasps (order Hymenoptera). Of course, syrphids are just bluffing with these show-off colors and can not bite or sting in any way.
One can easily separate the syrphid flies from bees/ wasps by 1) the typical "hovering" flight common to hover flies (they can hold absolutely still in flight - except for their wings, of course), and 2) all flies have only two wings; all flying hymenopterans have four.

Wild Indigo -SAVANNA



Wild White Indigo/ Baptisia alba macrophylla

Order: Hemiptera Family: Fabaceae Bean family Genus: Baptisia



-Tall upright inflorescence of pure white flowers. Rounded blue–green pea–like compound leaves grow on several stalks.
-These perennial, plants are up to 4 feet tall, with leaves made up of 3 leaflets. The stems are smooth.

Special Adaptations:

-This plant is not fussy about growing conditions, and is easy to grow. However, it dislikes alkaline soil and may fail to bloom in shady conditions. Like other wild indigos, this plant may take several years to reach blooming size, but it is long-lived. The roots increase nitrogen levels in the soil.

-The adult weevils eat both the leaves and flowers, while their grubs stay in the pods and eat the seeds. Because White Wild Indigo is poisonous, it is not much bothered by mammalian herbivores. If cattle, horses, or other kinds of livestock consume sufficient quantities of this plant, they can be seriously poisoned.

Stink Bug -SAVANNA


Brown Stink Bug /E. servus

Order: Hemiptera

Family: Pentatomidae

Genus: Euschistus

-broad, shield-shaped bugs
-5 segmented antennae
-5-18 mm
-produce odors from thoracic glands for self-defense

Special Adaptations:

-Brown and green stink bugs have been reported as far north as Quebec. In the United States, however, they are more often injurious in the South. Both adults and nymphs of plant-feeding species may damage plants, mostly by piercing the plant tissues and thus opening a path for pathogens to enter the plant.

-Each female deposits up to several hundred eggs, usually in mid- or late June. These eggs are laid in clusters (averaging 36 eggs) primarily on leaves and stems but also on pods. Nymphs hatch from these eggs and pass through five instars before becoming adults. Approximately 5 weeks elapse between hatching and adult emergence.
Stink bugs inflict mechanical injury to the seed as well as transmit the yeast-spot disease organism. The degree of damage caused by this pest depends to some extent on the developmental stage of the seed when it is pierced by the stink bug's needlelike mouthparts. The younger the seed when damaged, the greater the yield reduction. Although late season infestations may not affect yield, bean oil content and germination will be reduced.

Mullein -SAVANNA


Mullein /Verbascum Thapusus

Order: Lamiales Family: Scrophulariaceae Genus: Verbascum

-Soft, fuzzy, strikingly large, flannel-like, velvety-woolly, long-oval, gray-green, leaves nearly two feet long (leaves make up the first year basal rosette).

-First leaves spread into a circle along the ground, sheltering the plant and maximizing the sunlight. The second year, the basal leaves precede a stout, erect flowerstalk that may reach six feet in height.
-The flowers bloom sequentially from late spring to early fall, growing in long, tight, spikes. They're yellow, with five radially-symmetrical petals, about 1-1/2" across.

Special Adapatations:

-Mullein grows in old fields, roadsides, and disturbed habitats throughout the United States It does well in dry, sandy conditions, especially in alkaline soil, so itís especially common near the seashore.

-Mullein tea provides vitamins B-2, B-5, B-12, and D, choline, hesperidin, PABA, sulfur, magnesium, mucilage, saponins, and other active substances.
People use the tea as a beverage, but it's best known as one of the safest, most effective herbal cough remedies. Mullein is an expectorant, and a tonic for the lungs, mucus membranes, and glands.

Sunday, August 15, 2010

Bitter nightshade


Bitter nightshade / climbing nightshade (Solanum dulcamara)
Order: Solanales
Family: Solanaceae
Genus: Solanum


- a perennial woody vine with little star-shaped purple flowers and green berries that turn red when ripe.
-Bitter night-shade spreads by seed, but its stem can also root as it creeps along the ground.
-It is mildly poisonous, however; the toxic substance, solanine, is most concentrated in the unripe berries.

Arrowwood Viburnum


Soft Arrowwood Viburnum dentatum
Caprifoliaceae (honeysuckle Family)

-a dense, multistemmed shrub, typically 5' to 9' tall and wide,
deciduous native plants can be as tall as 15'
-oppositely arranged simple leaves, either a shiny or flat dark green
-leaf margins coarsely toothed, leaf bases are shallowly heart-shaped
-veins are prominent, with the leaf puckering between veins
-branching is upright and spreading, eventually arching over at the tips
-overall shape is rounded
-blue-black fruits in flat clusters
-dense, twiggy, suckering habit
-flat clusters of small creamy white flowers

Special Adaptations:
Viburnum flowers always have five petals and dogwood flowers always have four. And if you carefully pull a dogwood leaf in two lengthwise, the two parts will tend to stay connected by the threadlike strands of the leaf veins. Viburnums don't do this.

Red Osier Dogwood



Order: Cornales, Family: Cornaceae, Genus: Cornus,

-Two main groups of Cornus are "red line" dogwoods, with showy bracts below the flowers and red fruit, and "blue line" dogwoods, without bracts and blue or white fruit.
-Red Osier Dogwood is widespread and variable; similar populations have been considered variously as separate but interbreeding species, subspecies, and varieties.

-Leaves opposite with prominent lateral veins that curve toward the tip and smooth edges.
-Stems and twigs dark red when young, gradually fading to grey-green, becoming red again in the fall and winter.

-Flowers small and white, borne in a flat-topped cluster and, unlike many dogwoods, there are no large, showy bracts.
-Fruit berrylike, white or lead colored at maturity.

Food and cover for white-tailed deer, moose, cottontail rabbits, snowshoe hares, and numerous birds, including grouse. Fruit also eaten by mice and other mammals. Deer mice, meadow voles, and other small rodents feed on the young stems and bark. Beavers use it for food and to build dams and lodges. Particularly important to moose in the winter; it is also used in the summer and in the fall when leaves that have escaped and May. Provides valuable cover for birds and other small animals, especially where it grows in thickets.
Fruit is low in sugar so it is initially less attractive to wildlife and less inclined to rot than other fruits, staying on the plant through the winter and availabile when other fruits are gone. Eaten by songbirds, grouse, quail, partridge, ducks, crows, and other birds.

Crane Fly & Raccoon -Shrub Carr

Raccoon / P. lotor

Order: Carnivora Family: Procyonidae Genus: Procyon
-omnivorous and opportunistic.
- mostly nocturnal. It is also solitary, except for mothers and their young. In the winter the raccoon may sleep in its den for a few weeks but it does not hibernate.
-has gray to brown fur. It has a black mask around its eyes with white fur around the mask. It has a stripe that runs from its forehead to its nose and white fur around its nose. It has a bushy, ringed tail and black paws with five toes. The raccoon's paws look a little like human hands. The raccoon's toes are flexible and it is very good at grabbing, pulling things apart and holding things. The raccoon is a very good climber and can go down a tree backwards or face first!


Crane Fly

Order: Diptera
Family: Tipulidae

-Crane fly adults only live for a couple of days and do not usually feed.
-Their larval stages are usually aquatic.
-These flies easily loose their long spindly legs if handled. Because of their size, you can study the “halteres” organs. Halteres function as balancing gyroscopes and are located just behind the first set of wings on the thorax.
-This large crane fly is sometimes mistaken for a giant mosquito due to conspicuous mouthparts. In England, they carry the common name of “daddy-long_legs”, not to be confused with Phalangida group of arachnids which also carry this common name. The French call these insects “cousins”.

Longhair Sedge & Grape Vine - Shrub Carr


Longhair Sedge / C. comosa

Order: Cyperales Family: Cyperaceae Genus: Carex

-Flowering: July-August.
-Field Marks: This Carex is recognized by the male and female flowers in separate spikes, the perigynia less than 1/2 inch long and with a prominent beak with 2 teeth, and the lowermost perigynia in a spike pointing downward.
-Habitat: Swamps, around lakes.
- Habit: Perennial herb with slender rhizomes.
-Stems: Erect, smooth, up to 5 feet tall.
- Leaves: Long, narrow, rough along the edges, up to 1/3 inch broad.
-Flowers: Many in spikelets, each flower subtended by a scale; the male flowers in separate spikes from the female flowers, only 1 male spike per stem, long and slender; the female spikes usually 2-6 per stem, up to 3 inches long, up to 1/3 inch across, on slender stalks that droop at maturity.



order Vitales
Family Vitaceae – Grape family
Genus Vitis L. – grape
Species Vitis vinifera L. – wine grape

Grape-vine is a perennial plant.
It is a deciduous woody vine (30-40 m tall) with long (3-5 cm), thin annual shoots and a powerful root system that penetrates the soil to a depth of 7 m or more. Grape-vine's trunk is coarse and barbate.
Its crust peels off in strips. Grape-vine leaves are alternate, from full, rounded or angular to very much divided into lobes. They may be glabrous or pubescent.
Grape-vine plants cling to their supports with tendrils. Grape-vine flowers are very fragrant and polygamous: they are functionally female (with short, distant and bent sterile stamens) or bisexual.

Special Adaptations: Vitis vinifera (grapevine) is native to Europe as well as East and Central Asia and is suggested to have first appeared ~65 million years ago.
Grapevine has been planted all over the world for the wine, raisin, and table berries production and is the most economically important fruit crop in the world. The earliest evidence of wine production was found in Iran at the Hajji Firuz Tepe site about 7,400-7,000 years ago. Seeds of domesticated grapes dated from ~8,000 years ago were found in Georgia and in Turkey. Remains of wild grape seeds at various archeological sites suggest that the grape berries were collected and used since Neolithic period. Grapevines were introduced in New World in 16th century and to South Africa, Australia, and New Zealand in the 19th century.

Eastern Wood Peewee -Shrub Carr


Eastern Wood Peewee Species: Contopus virens/Pibí oriental, pioui de l'est
Order Passeriformes -- passereaux, Perching Birds
Family Tyrannidae -- tyrans gobe-mouches, Tyrant Flycatchers
Genus Contopus

* Length: 5.25 inches
* Triangular head
* Grayish-olive upperparts
* Dark bill is yellow at base of lower mandible
* Breast has olive wash
* Whitish throat, belly and undertail coverts
* Wing bars
* Commonly feeds high in the canopy by flying out to catch insects and returning to same perch

Monday, August 2, 2010

Swamp...


1. Eastern American Toad

Order:Anura
Family:Bufonidae
Genus:Bufo
Species:Bufo americanus americanus

The skin color of American toads is normally a shade of brown, but it can also be red with light patches, olive, or gray. The bellies are a white or yellow color. Toad skin color changes depending on temperature, humidity, and stress. The color change ranges from yellow to brown to black. American toads have four toes on each front leg and five toes connected together by a webbing on each hind leg. The pupils of American toads are oval and black with a circle of gold around them. The sexes can be distinguished in two ways. Males have dark colored throats, of black or brown, while females have white throats and are lighter overall.





2. Black Willow Salix Nigra

Order: Salicales
Family: Salicaceae
Genus: Salix

Leaves: Alternate, long narrow lance-shaped, finely toothed on edges;
Very slender, brittle twigs, "whip-like". They are shiny green on top, and pale green below. Leaves are three to five inches long

Habitat: Wet sites -lake borders, along stream banks, wet woods.

Bark: Dark brown or black with ridges; seen as a shrub and as a large tree, up to 100 feet tall. This tree often has multiple trunks, with many small drooping branches.

Flowers: Called catkins, they are yellow and one to three inches long. Fruit is a small capsule, turning reddish-brown. It contains tiny, hairy green seeds.

Special Adaptation:
-They are a food source for White-tailed Deer, rabbits, small rodents, and Beaver which eat the bark, stems and twigs. Black Willow nectar is consumed by bees, butterflies and other insects. Leaves are eaten by the caterpillars of many species of butterflies and moths.

-supplies cover for many birds and small mammals, and cavities for creatures such as woodpeckers, raccoons, and others.

-one of the first to take over a field.

-depend on bees, butterflies, and other insects to help pollinate them. Seeds are also spread by wind and water.


3. Zoned Cork Hydnum /Phellodon tomentosus
Genus: Phellodon

Thin, small to medium, brown cap; flat or shallowly depressed.
Surface velvety, cap is pale color, light to dark brown toward center.
Stalk: often flattened or irregular shape, expanding upward into cap. 2-5 cm long, less than 0.5 cm thick. Spores spherical or nearly so.

4. Slippery/ Red Elm


Slippery Elm / Red Elm ulmus rubra

Leaves: Alternate on twig from single buds, bases strongly asymmetrical, tips pointed;edges coarsely doubly saw-toothed. Dark green above and very rough to the touch. Note how the broad leaves abruptly narrow to a long, thin point. The leaves of Slippery Elm tend to be a little more coarsely toothed.

Bark: Gray-Brown to reddish-brown with shallow furrows and flattened ridges; outer bark uniformly reddish-tan to light brown in cross-section, where as in American Elm, it is more distinct dark layers/ridges running through the inner bark.

Flowers: greenish to reddish cluster on very short stalks before leaves emerge.

Habitat: Floodplain forests

5. Clearweed /Pilea pumila
Order:Urticales Family:Urticaceae Genus:Pilea


-The stems are smooth, round, hairless, and translucent. They are light green, greyish green, or reddish green in appearance; some of the large stems may be slightly ribbed.

-The opposite leaves are 1-5' long and half as much across. They are ovate, hairless, and coarsely serrated. Each leaf has a thin membranous texture with a prominent central vein and two conspicuous side veins. The upper surface is green or dark green, while the lower surface is light green or nearly white.


Special Adaptations:
The flowers are wind-pollinated, therefore they don't attract many insects. The caterpillars of the following butterflies feed on the foliage: Nymphalis milberti (Milbert's Tortoiseshell), Polygonia comma (Comma), Polygonia interrogationis (Question Mark), and Vanessa atalanta (Red Admiral). These caterpillars feed on other members of the Nettle family as well.

6. Jewelweed /impatiens
Order: Ericales Family: Balsaminaceae Genus: Impatiens L.

-smooth annual; 3-5 ft. Leaves oval, round- toothed; lower ones opposite, upper ones alternate.
-A bit trumpet shaped, the flowers hang from the plant much as a jewel from a necklace, Pale Jewelweed has yellow flowers, Spotted Touch-Me-Nots have orange flowers with dark red dots.
-Particularly on the underside of the leaves, tiny air bubbles are trapped under the leaf surface, giving them a silvery sheen that becomes pronounced when held under water. The name "jewelweed" possibly refers to these shiny leaves, particularly obvious after rains when water drops reflect the sunlight like a prism.

7. Black Ash /F. nigra

Order: Lamiales Family: Oleaceae Genus: Fraxinus

Leaves: broad, flat, compound, pinnately compound, margins toothed. Leaflets similar in size and shape -leaves opposite
-The Black Ash has a tall trunk with a fairly uniform diameter up to the branches. The soft, ash-gray bark is fissured into scaly plates, which easily can be reduced to powder by rubbing.
-It favors the wet soils of cold swamps, peat bogs, and stream bottoms that periodically are flooded. This is the most northern of the ash trees.

8. Swamp Smartweed /P. hydropiperoides



Order: Caryophyllales Family: Polygonaceae Genus: Polygonum

-A native of North America, swamp smartweed is a highly variable perennial. It exhibits two forms, terrestrial and aquatic. For this reason, the plant will invade shores, wet prairies, swamps, ponds, ditches, and quiet streams.
-Swamp smartweed may also exhibit a red-striped stem. The leaves of the plants are alternate, oblong, and tapering at both ends. They are usually pointed at the tip and exhibit smooth margins.
- The leaves of the land plants are generally more oval than those of aquatic plants, which exhibits floating, arrow-shaped leaves. The leaf stalks of both plant forms encircle the stem to form nodes.
-The plants display extensive root systems. They are known to grow roots at the nodes of the stem. Swamp smartweeds exhibit tall, slender, and erect flower clusters.

Sunday, August 1, 2010

Marsh -Long Dash Skipper



Long Dash Skipper
Order: Lepidoptera
Family: Hesperiidae
Genus: Polites
Species: P. mystic

-Dark brown reddish to yellowish orange markings. The forewing of the female has a broad black patch at the base. The forewing of the male has a long, slightly curved stigma which may be connected to the dash near the apex. Underneath the hindwing, the species is orange-brown with a curved band of equal-sized yellow spots.