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Muscadine Grape: big history and tiny hidy-holes

Vitis rotundifolia

Vitaceae

 

vitis rotundifolia fruits

Muscadine Grapes (by John Bradford)

John and George savored the kind of weather today, the first day of 2016, that migrates snowbirds.   A slice of heaven complete with trapdoor spiders, antlions, dragonflies, and delicate white mushrooms in a dry sand pine woods near Hobe Sound, Florida.

 

vitis with dragonfly

uscadine with Dragonfly (JB)

One of my running themes in botany is that a trip to the local state park reveals more fascination than an eco-tourism trip to Shangri-La with a khaki-clad guru pointing out some exotic orchid.   The very thing that makes nature so much fun is its universal accessibility. So today’s state park marvel is Muscadine Grape.   Everybody sees it, or trips over it, one of the most abundant lianas everywhere you go.   It has heart-shaped leaves with big marginal teeth.

Vitis rotundifolia

(By JB)

Muscadine has odd features, even compared with other grapes.   Most grapes have 38 chromosomes, but Muscadine and a few others have 40, making it tough to hybridize.  It does not graft well with other grapes, although you can graft Muscadines onto one another.

The flowers are usually male and female on separate plants.   And the stems are a little weird, because, although they climb by tendrils (little clingy fingers), they also can sprout roots.   The roots either remain small until the stem contacts the ground, or alternatively much later, the roots dangle like cables from the woody stems high in the tree canopy.

Vitis roots

In most grapes the tendrils are forked,  contrasting with the unbranched tendrils in Muscadine.

Vitis rotundifolia flower

JB

A hand goes up in the back of the room:

“Do they use Muscadine for wine?”   You bet your sweet bippy. It is the oldest cultivated grape in North America, which is easy to assert because Native Americans had the pleasure before Europeans got the knack (see below). Today there are hundreds of cultivars, including the Scuppernong Grapes, originating in North Carolina.

A jumbo Scuppernong vine on Roanoke Island is one of the most intriguing individual plants in all the U.S.   The exact history is unknown, with different versions in different references, but here are the broad facts. The “Mothervine” appears in account(s) by original settlers on the Outer Banks in the 1500s, with Revolutionary War soldiers chiming in on it 200 years later.  Fast-forward two more centuries.  The beast remains alive, well tended, and big despite an accidental brush with road-clearing herbicide. The trunk cluster is multiple feet in diameter, and the leafy bits supported by trellises covered 2 acres before some trimming.

The Mothervine probably is the horticultural work of Native Americans. Were Native Americans in eastern North America wine snobs? Reportedly so, to a limited degree. Did they fancy sun-dried grapes? Actually yes, according to a British sea captain in 1565. It’s only raisin-able after all.

Vitis rotundifolia babies

Simple tendril (JB)

Muscadine and other grapes have a secret. Flip over the leaf and look closely where the petiole joins the blade to spot tiny caves with the doors surrounded by shaggy teeth.   These “domatia” are homes to mites lurking like the Once-ler in their tiny lerkims.

Vitis domatia4

The domatia look like caves (microscope picture)

So, why you ask, would a plant bother to host mites? They’re good predatory mites, it seems, interpretably guarding the plant from bad leaf-munching mites as well as from fungi.

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vitis domatia AI

Have a Mitey Fine New Year

 
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Posted by on January 1, 2016 in Muscadine Grape, Uncategorized

 

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Water-Lettuce – You Can’t Get It Wet

Pistia stratiotes

Araceae

evan 788

Honeymoon salad (lettuce alone) (by Evan Rogers)

John is away for Christmas, so my substitute field companion today was son Evan, down from North Carolina with camera in hand. We’ve been out in recent days hanging around with hawks and sandhill cranes, mostly by canoe with water-lettuce impeding navigation.

hawk

Hawk guarding the marsh (by Evan Rogers)

Is water-lettuce native? One of my most-used local plant handbooks says, “native to Africa,” but that’s the trouble with single sources. Weeds get around, and the small seeds are conceivably transported by migratory birds or even on floating debris.

evan 852

All strung together by stolons…canoe traps (by Evan Rogers)

Who’s to say it didn’t arrive on is own? Aroid specialist Sue Thompson in the Flora of North America is open-minded (and see Notes below):

“Some botanists consider the genus to have been introduced into the United States and many regional floras state that fruits and seeds are not produced in the flora area. However, s Seeds with high rates of germination have been reported from many sites in Florida, however … The status of Pistia as native to the United States has not been resolved; available evidence suggests that it is indigenous.”

Whenever and however it arrived, Water-Lettuce goes back in Florida about as far as botanical exploration.

Water-Lettuce is one of the odder members of the odd Aroid Family, known to native plant enthusiasts for arrow-arum, golden-clubs, and jack-in-the-pulpit. Gardeners and florists love aroids as anthuriums, philodendrons, and spathiphyllums. Funeral homes like them too, as calla-lilies. The sign of an aroid is having small flowers in a spike called a spadix, and a colorful specialized leaf called a spathe wrapped around the spadix.

IMG_8344

Pixie spathe  (white)  around spadix

The spathe and spadix in water-lettuce are pretty, reminiscent of a tiny peace-lily. The folded water-lettuce spathe has two expanded openings, the top gap allowing a whorl of male flowers to jut out; below those a single female flowers peeps from its own gap.

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The yellow star is a whorl of male flowers. Below it is one white female flower.

Naturally hydroponic, the fuzzy rosette floats with its roots dangling.   With full sun, swimming in water, nutrients in the soup, and stolons to sprawl forth and conquer, this weed can expand!   That’s bad if it clogs and shades waterways, jams pumps, or decays and stinks.

evan 818

Dangling participles (by Evan Rogers)

On the good side, however, here’s a plant able to pull “sewage” nutrients out of over-enriched waters, suck heavy metals and pesticide residues out of canals, and generate truckloads of biomass if you want biomass. It is not a true lettuce so put away the croutons, but water-lettuce is easily generated compost, although not on edible crops.  And we all cheer for biomass biofuels not competing with food crops, fertilizer-free, and providing bioremediation as a bonus.

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Notes:

Just try to get it wet:   SPRINKLE HERE

For more on the native vs. non-native question CLICK

Crane2

Seed spreader (by Evan Rogers)

 

 

 

 
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Posted by on December 25, 2015 in Uncategorized, Water-Lettuce

 

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Christmasberry, Wolfberry, Goji Berries

Lycium carolinianum

Solanaceae

Friday John and George swatted mosquitoes in the mangrove swamp by Peck’s Lake near Hobe Sound, FL. We celebrated the season with Christmasberry in one of its favorite habitats, the smelly briny mangrove marl. The Mangrove Tree Crabs enjoyed the rain, scampering up and down the branches like mouse-sized nightmare spiders.  An invasive fern the size of a human, Giant Brake (Pteris tripartita) looks primitive in the swamp.

pteris

This fern is an oversized weed. It looks much like Bracken Fern. (By John Bradford)

That Christmasberry grows in wet saltwater habitats is interesting, given that its relatives, some 80 species of Lycium, tend toward dry deserty lands all around the world.   Salty is “dry” in a physiological sense, thus not a big jump from arid to mangrove swamp. Another “dryland” plant, a standard in Florida scrub, skipping to mangrove habitats is Hogplum, Ximenia americana.

Christmasberry (this and the close-up below by John Bradford)

Christmasberry (this and the close-up below by John Bradford)

Useful plants comfortable in saline soils raise eyebrows as potential crops in a hungry world with rising soil salinities.   Christmasberry crops you say?

Lycium species have bushels of uses, none of them blockbusters, yet worth a second look. Some benefits are ancient, some maybe in the future, and some here and now. Gogi berries from Asian Lycium species are a dietary-health fad. Goji history goes back just about forever, in teas, foods, and medicines.

I dislike enjoying nature by eating it!   Love that yummy blackened scrub jay with goji sauce! Are Christmasberries edible? Yes, no, maybe so.   They have been on the menu for a few thousand years.   At the same time, Lycium represents the druggy Potato Family, related to deadly nightshade, datura, henbane, and other witch’s delights. Reports of Lycium poisoning exist.   So please don’t eat the Christmasberry, even if other web sites urge us onward. Not much of a temptation, really, because they taste bad. The berries contain bioactive alkaloids to help explain Lyciums in ethno-remedies.

Looking into the ethnobotany of Lycium, applications against toothache are repeated abundantly and transcontinentally. Lending some credence to that, the Potato Family has long comforted civilization with pain-reducing extracts. So if Mr. Toothache visits, mash a soothing Christmasberry into the cavity, and e-mail me the result.

lycium 2

Maybe the greatest Christmas gift is to wildlife.   As the human-nutritional literature attests, goji berries bear good things for life, including fatty acids which may explain their service as dried fruit on a string.    Fatty fruits are power-packed fuel for migratory birds, and Christmasberry propels some of the biggest, longest-distance migrators of all, cranes, including our friendly Sand Hill Cranes. Far more-studied, Christmasberries can sometimes account for over half the early-winter energy budget for Whooping Cranes in South Texas, “snowbirds” down from as far yonder as the Yukon, arguably the rarest, most charismatic, magnificent and iconic endangered birds in North America. These avian jumbo jets with 7-foot wingspans need a lot of fuel.

 
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Posted by on December 19, 2015 in Uncategorized

 

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Shade Leaves and Variegation

Deep Shade and Velvety Leaves

This post is unusual, and certainly not of universal interest!  But it represents what I’ve been chewing on for a few days, so what the hay,  it relates to native plants in a broad way.

Our local Dull Leaf Coffee doesn’t have dull leaves it all. They have a lustrous velvety sheen, and are an example of a widespread adaptation of many understory shade species. Gardeners may be familiar with similar leaves on begonias, on aroids, and on shooting star clerodendrum.

PsySulzneri

Dull Leaf Coffee with velvet leaves. (By John Bradford)

Those velvety surfaces reveal a microscopic array of lenses and solar collectors so “optical” that such leaf surfaces have been studied from the standpoint of lenses. Florida can claim the modern world’s authority on leaf optics, although 19th Century German botanists had a good go at it. Today’s material springs from a couple publications by FIU Prof. David Lee with an assist from “The Life of a Leaf” by Duke University Prof. Steven Vogel. As Dr. Lee notes, it’s not all figured out!   But there’s plenty to discuss, and don’t blame on them shortcomings in my interpretation.

How often do we stop and think of the diversity of leaf surfaces?   What’s more conspicuous in the plant world than all those shades of green, variegations, textures, sheens, twinkles, and lusters?   That green rainbow has meaning.

Some deep-shade species have a blue iridescent aspect, uncommon in Florida native plants, although visible in garden species (for instance Selaginella uncinata shown below) and sometimes in young native Virginia Creeper.   Such iridescent species absorb useful light especially effectively while reflecting wavelengths we perceive as near-blue.

Selaginella uncinata at Fairchild

Leaves apparently use “fiber optics” along their cell walls to transmit light from the surface down deep. Purplish layers toward the bottom of the blade seem to backscatter escaping pass-through light back up into the photosynthetic region for a double dip. Good examples include some begonias, prayer-plants, zebrina, oyster plant, and shooting star clerodendrum.

To get now to today’s feature, velvety shade leaves have convex lens cells on top. They focus incoming light so sharply that bright focal points are sometimes visible through a microscope from these little magnifying glasses.   Additionally, the cells refract into the leaf light arriving at diffuse angles.   The drawing below from a paper by Dr. Lee from the 1980s shows a lens cell with rays arriving at an angle, refracted, and focused into the cell and on downward.  Light arriving obliquely might otherwise be more wasted reflecting off the surface.

snip 2

The photo below shows lens cells on the surface of a Dull Leaf Coffee.

Psychotria sulzneri 600

You might ask, if a certain amount of light enters a leaf, why focus the dose into a smaller brighter beam? And to sharpen that question: Sometimes even under the dense canopy light can be too bright, say during fleeting moments of sun flecks, or maybe dawn or dusk as the sun peeks in.   Couldn’t bright focused beams then be excessive?   Probably, and one protection might be variegation, which we’ll consider in a moment.

There’s more to light entry than merely striking a static surface. The leaf adjusts internally to light intensity.   The sun beams strike tiny Frisbees, chloroplasts, within the layered leaf cells.   Chloroplasts in modest light cluster on the horizontal floor of the cells with their broad faces exposed to maximize capture. Think of closed venetian blinds. When the light is too strong, however, the chloroplasts migrate away from the light and align themselves along the vertical cell walls facing the illumination with their narrow edges.   Open venetian blinds. When the blinds are open a bright focused beam reaches into deeper layers. Thus a benefit of a focused beam might be controlled penetration into the blade with overall great effect.

chloroplast orientation

In the illustration above, the two leaf cells on the left under a lens cell have their chloroplasts oriented face-up for maximum light capture.  On the right, the more intense focused beam penetrates as the chloroplasts orient safely edge-wise, capturing the light eventually, just deeper into the leaf.

It is possible demonstrate chloroplast adjustment by covering part of a shade leaf, then shining light on it. The covered portion stays dark green with its chloroplasts in their “shade orientation,” while the exposed portion lightens in color as the chloroplasts adjust into the “open blinds” orientation.

Leaf Variegation

Gardeners oh so love variegated leaves.   Although I think they are pretty, they don’t send me into raptures, maybe due to my preference for native species in landscaping, with so few natives being variegated.   To my eye a highly variegated garden tends to look contrived and unnatural. We do have a few though: some Smilax,   for instance.

Smilax auriculata jb

Smilax dabbed with the brush. (By John Bradford)

 

There’s no single known answer for, “what’s variegation good for,” and little hard data.  I’m less confident of the discussion that follows than of the one above. Brace for rampant speculation.

Variegation, defined as patterns in leaf coloration, has arisen many times in many ways. Some of it comes from viral infections, probably no benefit to the plant.   This is the case for the so-called Flowering-Maple, Abutilon pictum.   Many other variegated plants owe their patterns, usually streaks or blotches, to minor mutations during foliar development.   Again, if these are beneficial it is not clear how or why.

But some variegation is clearly genetic, heritable, complex, patterned, and almost certainly usefully adaptive.   But even that is tough to interpret. Botanists have considered various explanations, which are not mutually exclusive, and which may apply differently, combined, or not at all to different species. Ideas about leaf coloration patterns include signals to herbivores of poor nutritional quality or of toxicity (so leave me alone);  or false damage making it look to herbivores like a different pest beat them to the salad bar;  or as camouflage to throw off the herbivore’s innate “search image.’”   Some observers have suggested  leafy colorifics to attract pollinators.

Such critter-based hypotheses may hold water, remembering especially that variegation has arisen many times , but the creature-centric interpretations  don’t take into account an apparent correlation between variegation and dark shaded habitats.

Variegation in deep shade presents an apparent dilemma: variegation diminishes the photosynthetic surface, seemingly not a “good idea” for the very shade-bound plants prone to patterned leaves. But here’s a possible explanation, neither original with me nor “accepted fact”:   deep-shade leaves are good at catching light when the intensity is low, but intensities above the usual gloom can impair photosynthesis, especially in leaves “designed” for low light, including those with lens cells.     Every gardener knows that shade species popped into bright sun suffer.

Those shade-adapted leaves are more delicate than sun-loving leaves, dandy down where it is dark, moist, and still.   But intermittent bright light may be a problem as winds blow, as the shifting sun peeks under the canopy, as sun flecks dance through the foliage. Or where light exposure changes with plant age and stature.

Variegation may sometimes give shade-leaves protection from sporadic sunny moments.

Some plants, such as some Cecropias, tend toward variegation when young and shaded in the understory but not variegated when older, taller and sunnier.   As David Lee illustrated, at least one African-Violet has its variegation increase as the day progresses.

It may be—and there is need for far more research—that some leaves with a varied coloration pattern enjoy the best of both worlds, the non-variegated portions function best in low light, with variegated portions less light-sensitive and thus happier at the brighter moments. A leaf able to function well only in deep shade may waste a lot of photosynthetic opportunity at brighter times, but a two-toned job is ready for anything.

maranta1 extra01

Image above: Apparent advantage of variegation. This graph shows two tissue regions from the same Marnata (Prayer Plant) leaf monitored simultaneously under changing laboratory light exposure conditions (adjustable lamps). The vertical axis shows photosynthesis/respiration as CO2 usage/release. The horizontal axis shows seconds with increasing light intensity. (And heat increased with light intensity.)   The top line (Y2) shows performance by the variegated portion of the leaf. The bottom line (Y1) shows the unvariegated green portion. Under low light they behave similarly, with the green unvariegated portion slightly more responsive to the increasing light. At about 3600 seconds the increasing light and associated warmth caused the unvariegated portion to stop constructive photosynthesis and switch to destructive respiration, releasing carbon dioxide abruptly.   The variegated tissue passed that threshold unscathed, clearly standing up more successfully to the increased simulated sun exposure

 
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Posted by on December 10, 2015 in Shade leaves, Uncategorized, Variegation

 

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Corkwood

Stillingia aquatica

Euphorbiaceae

 

A curious shrub common in local marshes is Corkwood, a confusing English name applied to more than one species. If you prefer, another “book” name is “water toothleaf,” but I’ve never actually heard anybody use that name out loud.  Oh look—it’s water toothleaf!  A stroll along any marsh boardwalk reveals the odd shrub rising stiffly above the herbaceous vegetation.  The giveaway feature is a finger-sized yellow vertical flowering spike, maybe with a dragonfly perched on it.

stillingia mid

Our Stillingia aquatica is probably the only aquatic representative of the poorly studied genus Stillingia, made up of roughly 30 species mostly in western North America to South America. Oddly, a handful of species inhabit Madagascar and Tropical Pacific Islands.   The Old World species prefer maritime habitats, hinting at arrival from the American Tropics on ocean currents?

We have two species around here, the locally common Stillingia aquatica, living up to its name in aquatic habitats, and the locally scarce Stillingia sylvatica, living up to its name preferring the sylvan glen. Some call that one Queen’s Delight. (Don’t ask.)

That vertical flower spike is a curiosity, with male (pollen-making) flowers above and female (seed- making) flowers below.  The male portion snaps off as it ages.  Any second-grader knows fowers attract pollinators with gifts of pollen and/or nectar.   The nectar generally comes from glands, nectaries, within the flower. Duh.

But nobody told Stillingia. Its nectar organs are not part of the flower, but rather enlarged stipules (basal appendages) on the small leaves associated with the flowers. Some Stillingias have similar ant-feeding (stipular?) glands on the petioles of the regular foliage leaves. These ant-food glands probably evolved into the flower-adjacent nectaries in the inflorescence.    (Stillingia sylvatica is reportedly pollinated by ants, which needs a much better look.   I’m not sold on that.)    What a weird scenario: flowers losing their real nectaries to have leaf-antfood-glands take over that function. Or so it seems.

To continue with ants, seeds on our two Stillingia species have a food packet, called a caruncle , to attract ants who disperse the seeds. Many plants attach nibbles to seeds to induce ants to drag the seeds home. The food body on the dry-habitat Stillingia sylvatica seed is large, and that in the wetland S. aquatica is small.

stillingia close

Every plant has a history of medicinal uses.   All that gets old, redundant, and unexciting when encountered species after species after species.   But few Florida plants have more prominent and controversial histories in remedies than Stillingias. Name an ailment, and Stillingias have served against it somewhere by somebody, although I’m aware of no authentic applications in modern scientific medicine. Close though!

A prominent recurrent application is against Syphilis.   What makes that more interesting is an old name for Stillingias is yaw-root.   Yaws is an ancient disease, generally not a STD, caused by a spirochaete bacterium similar to that of Syphilis.  Convergence of uses is always noteworthy.

An even-more prominent role for Stillingias turns up repeatedly with a little Google research: against cancers, and in no quiet way. It is an ingredient in the Hoxsey Herbal Therapy initiated by Harry Hoxsey in the 1920s, outlawed in the U.S. in 1960, object of much hulabaloo, and surviving defiantly today at the Hoxsey Clinic in Tijuana despite universal repudiation by modern medicine

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Today’s photos are Stillingia aquatica, by John Bradford.

 
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Posted by on November 29, 2015 in Uncategorized

 

Blue Eyed Grass and Blue Eyed Grass

Sisyrinchium xerophyllum (and S. solstitiale)

Iridaceae

Today John and George enjoyed an autumn day in the Martin County Scrub.   So pretty outside now, with all the invasive exotics colorfully in flower: Pendulous Senna dangling sprays of egg yolk blossoms out of the woody shadows over the roadside snowdrifts of Mexican-Clover. No wonder they call it Florida! The native species were nice too, with the belle of the ball being Blue-Eyed-Grass, a purty lil’ “Iris” with blue flowers having a contrasting starry yellow eye.  (All photos today are S. xerophyllym, by John Bradford.)

Sisyrinchium xerophyllum 2

Sisyrinchiums may be beautiful to the eye, but they have an ugly history classification-wise, with umpteen regional variants, many of them with different chromosome numbers. A good example of a narrowly distributed species is Sisyrinchium funereum from a postage stamp in Death Valley. The same botanist-cum-ornithologist who came up with that handle in 1904, Eugene P. Bicknell, also named the species John and I admired today, or at least gave it its original name, back in 1899.   Remember that year.

If you look at older museum specimens from our general area you find specimens of today’s species consistently labeled using Bicknell’s designation  “Sisyrinchium solstitiale.”   But then comes a mystery….all those older specimens were re-labeled abruptly in recent years as Sisyrinchium xerophyllum, the name you’ll find in current manuals. That might raise your eyebrows. Something’s happening here, and what it is ain’t exactly clear.

Sisyrinchium xerophyllum 3

Now this may sound like boring bookkeeping, and maybe it is, but bear with me a moment: it is not THAT darn boring.   The label-name hijinks revealed an intriguing example of the twists and turns in the classification game.   Call it an example of why I think it is more fun to try to understand nature than to compete in fool’s arguments unrealistically forcing messy evolution into artificially tidy categories.

Looks like the problem is we’re dealing with two names for the same thing.   Oops, did I say “the same thing?”   Not so fast.   Where did that second name, Sisyrinchium xerophyllum, come from anyhow? It too dates to 1899, conceived by Civil War Veteran, erstwhile priest, and California botany professor Edward Greene.

Was this a case of an East Coast botanist and another in California merely unaware of each other  separately naming “the same thing”?   Or is life more complex?

Fast forward to the 70s. Local botanist, the late Dr. Daniel Austin and his colleague Royce Oliver studied these two “things” in depth, concluding that we’re dealing with two distinct species. One being S. solstitiale mostly autumn-flowering, evergreen, living in scrub, and having a special fondness for Sand Pine woods. The other being spring-flowering, losing its leaves each year, and preferring high-pine and flatwoods habitats.     Oliver and Austin suspected the couple to have been separated by ancient cross-Florida oceanic inundation, and further suspected the scrub species to have switched to fall flowering to avoid the dreadfully dry scrub spring drought.  They listed eight physical characteristics distinguishing the two.

sisyrinchium xerophyllum

As so often happens, despite all that documentation, the tide of opinion drifted in the other direction, with more recent taxonomists lumping both under a broadly defined S. xerophyllum.   Sisyrinchium solstitale extincted by the stroke of a pen!   Who needs a meteor strike?

I’m not interpreting what’s right and wrong.   There is no definitive right or wrong here.   Just imperfect data and interpretation. Whatever interpretation prevails, today we stared the ghost of S. solstitiale in its blue eye: in the scrub, among the Sand Pines, evergreen, and blooming in the fall.   Get’s you wondering as you’re wandering…

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Note: Oliver and Austin’s study was published in the Journal of the Arnold Arboretum 1974: 291.

 

 
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Posted by on November 20, 2015 in Blue-Eyed Grass, Uncategorized

 

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Spatterdock is a Pumpin’ Posie

frogs on nuphar

Spatterdock

Nuphar advena (N. lutea)

Nymphaeaceae

John and I tromped scrub and swamp yesterday, focused on spiders, not posies, so I’m going to turn back time one more day to my native plants class field trip Thursday with our toes in the Loxahatchee riverbank mud. A curious plant swimming with the fishes is Spatterdock, the common water lily with egg-yolk-yellow flowers shaped like tennis balls.

These simple species is a confounded series of confuddlements, beginning with its classification within the flowering plants. Every botany student knows the flowering plants divide into two huge groups, monocots and dicots.   But water-lilies stand apart.   They were around before the monocot-dicot divide.   Primitive as can be.

Spatterdock rhizome floating

Spatterdock rhizome floating

Within the genus Nuphar, species concepts remain unsettled, so if you look up our local species you’ll find different names in different books.   Folks who lose sleep (or send condescending corrective e-mails) over such cognitive dissonance should embrace the currents and eddies of evolution. You just can’t shoehorn an enormous dynamic evolving system into division, class, order, family, genus, species. More fun to watch the sky than to name the clouds.

So let’s try to get to something interesting.   The flowers start out female (pollen-receptive), and in a day or so become male (pollen-releasing).   Their fundamental main pollination syndrome, at least in the U.S., may be more or less like this: The flowers start out a little bit open during the female phase, so that visiting beetles brush across the stigma, thus pollinating the flower if they carry pollen. The beetles may become trapped temporarily. Subsequently, as pollen release ensues, the blossoms open. Any trapped beetles would then become dusted, and newcomers could stop by, get dusted, and fly off to entrapment in other flowers still in the female phase.

Presumably in the female phase. Come on in! The stigma is just inside the door. (By John Bradford)

Presumably in the female phase. Come on in! The stigma is just inside the door. (By John Bradford)

To whatever extent all that is so, it is not the whole truth and nothing but the truth, because numerous other critters visit, including flies and bees, and in the Old World the spatterdocks clearly don’t have beetle mania.

Male phase, wide open, stamens showing. (By JB)

Male phase, wide open, stamens showing. (By JB)

The fruits ripen above the waves, and contain seeds cooked historically in mush and gruel.   Spatterdock patches in places speculatively owe their existence to pre-European aquaculture, and fossil remains (pollen) is known from ancient human coprolites here in Florida.

The rhizomes are several feet long and many inches in diameter, and starchy. They too have been on the ancient menu, and have history in medicines, often mashed into poultices.   Laundry lists of ancient medicinal uses tend to be boring, unless there are patterns or repetitions.   A recurrent use in old records now on-line perhaps useful to some readers is, “hung up inside to keep witches away.”

The rhizomes live down in stinky oxygen-deprived pond-bottom mud.   How plants manage breathe where the sun don’t shine is always a curious matter, and spatterdock is a rock star in this area. It is an example of something there ought to be (and probably is undetected) more of: active ventilation…pumping….as opposed to the passive diffusion, with wind assistance, so universally attributed to plant gas exchanges.   Spatterdocks have a genius method of “forcing” air through the plant, starting with young leaves, on down through their petioles (leaf stalks) to and through the rhizome, then up and out through older leaves.   The internal air pipes run continuously the whole nine yards.

Young leaves floating (some are red). Old leaves flapping in the breeze above the surface. (JB)

Young leaves floating (some are red). Old leaves flapping in the breeze above the surface. (JB)

Air enters the system through the floating young leaves, slowly by diffusion, and more “air” (oxygen) accumulates as a byproduct from the photosynthetic activity in the leaf. Unlike most plants, that “waste” oxygen is not wasted. Instead, the oxygenated air collects in hollow ducts toward the bottom of the leaf. The trapped air cannot escape upward to the outside because a tight barrier (palisade mesophyll) separates the air ducts from the exposed leaf surface above. (The lower leaf surface is in the water, not in contact with the air.)   With the vapors accumulating and unable to escape, pressure builds up in the young leaves.   The botanist who documented all this several decades ago, John Dacey, noted that the young leaves are often reddish.   Botanists generally interpret red in young growth to be sun screen, but in this case Dr. Dacey suggested that the red pigment absorb solar energy, heating the leaf and raising the internal pressure.

The older leaves are different. Instead of building pressure, they release it. They are the vents. The older blades are held above the water in the breeze, presumably able to release water vapor and gases from both surfaces, and the barrier that prevented vapor escape in the young leaves is stretched out with gaps, it has become porous in the old leaves.

Young red leaf at left. Old leaf elevated on right. Rhizome buried in pond mud. Blue lines are air ducts. Arrows show predominant vapor flow.

Young red leaf at left, with tight restrictive vapor barrier.  Old leaf elevated on right. The vapor barrier has big openings.  Rhizome buried in pond mud. Blue lines are air ducts. Arrows show predominant vapor flow.

So then a mix of oxygen and other vapors flows from the pressurized young leaves, down through the air-hungry sunken rhizome, and then out through the leaky older leaves.   You may ask, “if vapors escape easily through big holes on old leaves but enter reluctantly through a tight barrier in young leaves, how can pressure continue to build and flow?”   The answer is gas-generation inside the plant; it self-pressurizes with its own metabolic activity: oxygen from photosynthesis, carbon dioxide from respiration, and internally released water vapor.

I just love it when plants “do stuff.”

 
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Posted by on November 7, 2015 in Uncategorized

 

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Coastalplain Golden Aster and the Florida Marcescent Lifestyle

Chrysopsis scabrella

Asteraceae

Golden Asters in the sun (John Bradford)

Golden Asters in the sun (John Bradford)

Every time John and I botanize through an open scrubby area, such as today, we enjoy an odd-looking species, Coastalplain Golden Asters rising awkwardly from the white sand at varied angles to attain irregular heights. Very martian! To add drama, the funny stems retain a covering of dead withered foliage, more properly called “marcescent” leaves.

The dead leaves stay put.

The dead leaves stay put.

Dead leaves usually fall away and decay in most plants, but not always. The Golden Aster appearance always evokes the same old memory for me. Back in the Reagan Administration I had the good fortune to work at high elevations in South America where several unrelated plants resemble Golden Aster by having marcescent leaves covering an otherwise bare stem.   Around the world, this life form has evolved repeatedly, usually in exposed habitats where a drying risk is coupled with fluctuating temperature extremes, often intermittent frost alternating short-term with warm temperatures. Of a few examples here in South Florida,  Golden Aster is the most striking.   (We’ll look at Rabbit Tobacco another day.)

Coastalplain Golden Aster is generally described as a “biennial,” hunkered down the first year as a rosette on the ground, with the stem then rising the second year to flower and fruit.   New rosettes form at the stem base.   I’m not 100% sure the plant always obeys its biennial characterization.

Here is Espeletia in Ecuador:  CLICK

Here is Golden Aster in Stuart, Espeletia Jr.:

Every stem with a skirt of marcescent leaves.

Every stem with a skirt of marcescent leaves.

We might say blithely, “well, the dead leaves protect the stem.”   OK, but exactly how, from precisely what?   If anyone has looked into it at a physiological level in Chrysopsis, I can’t find it. But botanist Alan Smith back in the 70s took a hard look at Espeletia in Venezuela, and provides inspiration for a better look at our similar local case. Dr. Smith found the Espeletia habitat to feature strong seasonal differences in rainfall, like us. And there were wide strong short-term temperature fluctuations, like us. The greatest temperature stress and moisture stress occurred during the dry season, likewise the case in Florida if the main temperature stress is frost. (We live near the southern limit of the all-Florida geographic range for Chrysopsis scabrella.)

Smith and other botanists have interpreted marcescent leaf blankets as a buffer against fluctuating temperature extremes. Removal of the dead leaves cost a lot of Espeletias their lives.   The main apparent reason was that during times of frosty nights alternating with warm days stems with their dead leaves intact never dipped below freezing, whereas the ones with marcescent leaves removed dipped and died. Those dead old leaves don’t radiate heat at night.

It may seem odd to speculate that frost protection might be the “main” benefit of marcescent leaves, especially in a plant like Golden Aster so obviously exposed to extreme drying.   Don’t those dead leaves merely protect the stem from hot dry winds? Maybe, but two reasons suggest otherwise:

A.  In general, water loss from stems is not severe.   The stem probably does not need much protection from direct drying.  (Cacti are all-stem.)

B. Frost stress is drying stress. One of the worst aspects of frost for a plant (in a not-very-frosty borderline setting) is that freezing in the stem diminishes water passage from the roots to the leaves. An plant in a super-dry setting with temperatures hitting 80 degrees by day and dipping below freezing by night has much to fear from Jack Frost.   The warm day, especially at dawn, creates high demand for water to the living leaves, but if frost-impaired stem tissue can’t deliver, well that’s tragic.  Walking through the scrub in 90 degree weather and 90 percent relative humidity, it takes some faith to see those stem-blankets of dead leaves as possible winter coats.

Fruiting heads (John Bradford)

Fruiting heads (John Bradford)

 
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Posted by on October 9, 2015 in Uncategorized

 

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Slash Pine and T. rex

Pinus elliottii

Pinaceae

This afternoon I just couldn’t decide what to write about, and then in flew inspiration: an e-mail from PBSC Interim VP for Academic Affairs Dr. Ginger Pedersen about a state champion challenger slash pine near PBIA , and an old stand of uncut pines in Dade County.     So I’m now in a pine kinda mood, and that’s a nice way to be.    Long ago in this blog we looked at slash pine, the turpentine industry, and the nasty toxaphene insecticide spin-from that.   Today it’ll just be pretty pine trees.

Pretty pines. Today's pictures by John Bradford.

Pretty pines. Today’s pictures by John Bradford.

Two native pines grace our immediate area, Sand Pine in scrub habitats, and Slash Pine all over the county. Divided into two varieties, the latter species is native throughout Florida and across much of the southeastern U.S., and cultivated worldwide in warm climates for turpentine, pulp, and wood. Variety elliottii is in North and Central Florida and in nearby states. Variety densa, with heavier wood and a fire-resistant grassy stage, is mostly in southern Florida, and their natural ranges don’t overlap much.

Pines are tough and diverse, a hundred species resisting drought, poor soils, and extreme weather from the far north to the equator.   Very few true pines occur naturally in the southern hemisphere (although the name “pine” gets applied to many posers).

Slash Pines in Jonathan Dickinson Park.

Slash Pines in Jonathan Dickinson Park.

Pines have weird wind-dispersed pollen grains with two airbags suggesting Mickey Mouse ears.   The pollen ears possibly help orient the grain for its job of fertilizing the egg in the young cones, which take 3 years to mature.      Anyone who has parked under a pine in the spring has brushed the yellow pollen off the windshield. It comes from small papery male cones that bust apart and evaporate.   The female cones are big and woody, and release wafer-thin windblown seeds from between the scales if squirrels don’t chew the cones up.

Slash Pines maintain fungal root associates. Perhaps sometimes in relation to those symbiotic fungi, the trees often don’t like certain suburban yards, altered water regimes, ozone, over-fertilized soil, alkaline soil, irrigation that renders the soil alkaline, and a number of insect pests.

Many types of trees to varying degrees shed lower branches from the trunk.   Some snap off cleanly, others break irregularly and decay.   Slash Pine is a leader in branch shedding, although the anatomical-physiological mechanisms are unstudied.   Most observers interpret the self-pruning as an adaptation to keep the upper canopy safely above ground fires.   Whether fire induces branch loss directly is unclear. Pines have unusual growth responses to stresses, making stress a suspect in forcing branches to fall.   As another possibility, aging pine needles lose function, so that old ones may fail to keep their branches alive.

pines and sun - Copy - Copy - Copy

Slash pines have additional fire adaptations, such as young variety densa with grassy needles wrapped protectively around the bud, and when older by having fire-resistant bark. Back in the Cretaceous Period when dinosaurs ruled, conifers helped rule, and forest fires became common. Botanist Tianhua He and collaborators have shown fire adaptations in pines to date back into dinosaur days eons before Florida was here to have pine woods.

Pines helped the dinosaurs rule.

Pines helped the dinosaurs rule.

 
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Posted by on September 18, 2015 in Uncategorized

 

Hog Plum

Hog Plum

Ximenia americana

Olacaceae

Trudging across the burning scrub sands and down into the deep dank swamp yesterday, orange was the new black: day-glo orange fungi in the swampy shadows, pale orange saw palmetto fruits full of prostate pseudo-therapy, orange tail-end on the garden spiders, and orange Hog Plum “plums,” many on the ground.

Garden spider spinning (by John Bradford)

Garden spider spinning (by John Bradford)

Here’s a poorly chosen name, because  “Hog Plum” to other folks refers to edible species of Spondias (and even to additional “plum”-making plants).   Another reference-book name for today’s species is Tallow Wood, but in my narrow world nobody actually seems to call it that.

The oil is abundant in seeds from today’s species and in its cousin the Old World Ximenia caffra, with a history (and future?) of all things oily, such as medicines, lamps, leather treatment, and most prominently cosmetics. Here is a quote from modern promotional blurb, “it contains unsaturated fatty acids and has an exceptional nutritional value to nourish the skin while moisturizing, softening and revitalizing the skin.” The paleo-cosmetic diet! Being as fashion-forward as can be, John and I mashed some and nourished and revitalized our facials.

And if we suffered any discomforts or snake mishaps, we’d have been in a good way. The reported doctor uses would fill a page. Name an ailment: somebody somewhere used Ximenia oil to fix it, from STDs to Cobra bites, hopefully not in the same patient.

The orange ripe fruits, in season now (by John Bradford).

The orange ripe fruits, in season now (by John Bradford).

Even beyond medicine, Hog Plums have more historical uses than you can shake a thorny branch at. Useful parts include the stems, roots, and fruits. The strong wood serves for handles, spears, and assorted kitchen implements. And of course firewood. (I’ll bet that oily wood burns dandy.)

The fruits are food, although mostly pit, not tempting, and impossible to store. Come on now, don’t go eat them. There is a reported laxative consequence.   Gopher Tortoises eat the plums*, with there being at least anecdotal geographic association between Hog Plums and Tortoise nests.   That would be a fun geo-statistical study for a class with apps.   I wonder if hogs like Hog Plums. Monkeys do.

So obviously the fruits are animal-dispersed. But that’s not all.  The fruit pits have spongy flotation material. Their ability to bob safely for months is demonstrated.  Mother Nature conducted the best experiment, floating Ximenia americana all around the tropical world.   Its ethnobotany is richer in Ethiopia than in the Americas.

Hog Plums prefer hot dry habitats, mostly scrub locally, although they also occupy wet mangrovey places, which are “physiologically dry” thanks to salt.  Ximenia is one of many species divided between dry habitats and wet-yet-dry situations.

Hog Plum flowers are white, fuzzy, and fragrant (by John Bradford). This photo not taken yesterday.

Hog Plum flowers are white, fuzzy, and fragrant (by John Bradford). This photo not taken yesterday.

Hog Plums are “facultative” root parasites. Facultative means they can take it or leave it. In a greenhouse they do not need to take it. Hog Plum may have the plant world’s largest known haustoria (suckers) which attach indiscriminately to the roots of neighbors, or to their own roots, or to rocks, or to plastic scraps.   The suckers can be over an inch in diameter.

One final odd feature, apparently a protective adaptation for surviving youth in nasty sands.   As germination proceeds, the first two foliage leaves, instead of unfurling optimistically  to greet the sun, bend straight down.  They tuck snugly into the nook between the cotyledons and stem, terrified like a kid frozen in the car on the first day of school. Perhaps the leaves fear a Gopher Tortoise lumbering out for an oily snack.

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*Ever seen Gopher Tortoise scat? They may appreciate a little regularity from that Hog Plum oil.

 
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Posted by on August 29, 2015 in Uncategorized

 

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