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Water Hyssops

Bacopa monnieri and Bacopa caroliniana

Hyssop is an ancient name, including in the Bible, applied to any of many fragrant herbs.   Bacopa comes from an indigenous South American name. Louis-Guillaume Le Monnier (1717-1799) was a French scientist whose interests extended to botany.)

Plantaginaceae

Members of the genus Bacopa are easy to overlook, and in wet muddy habitats. Most passers by probably step on them.  The flowers are pretty although not eye-popping.   Despite their unassuming modesty, bacopas are botanical wack-a-moles popping up in disparate connections. Four species live in Florida, two native (including B. caroliniana with blue flowers), one (B. monnieri ) debatably indigenous, and one introduced.

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B. caroliniana by John Bradford.

Aquanauts

Bacopas are among an intriguing clique of species able to grow underwater like seaweeds yet also happy high and dry.  Pretty handy for Florida habitats submerged part of the year and sun-baked mud the rest of the year.  The underwater ability is why you can buy them as aquarium plants, and that in turn is in part probably why today’s species are invasive exotics in other lands. A second probable contributing factor to their global spread is via cultivation as ancient medicines.  Bacopa monnieri is so widespread  worldwide it is hard to know its original “nativity.”  It is an invasive problem species in Hawaii, the Cayman Islands, and in eastern Asia.  Bacopa caroliniana has made it to South Korea.

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Bacopa monnieri by John Bradford.

Green Lanterns

Taiwanese researchers infused gold nanoparticles into Bacopa caroliniana, and it glowed like a botanical LED.  That ability could be harnessed.   Big thinkers thought, well, it that works in a sprawling water weed, onward to  living street lights?   You saw it here first.

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Friend of the White Peacock

My wife Donna and I have spent Corona-time over-tending our backyard butterfly garden and its little villagers. Among the gorgeous visitors  have suddenly appeared a profusion of White Peacock butterflies.   They are broad in their floral tastes, yet picky about their larval host plants, in fact, limited mostly to species of Bacopa and Phyla (Fogfruit, aka Frogfruit).   Behind our house is a broad canal, at this moment almost dry, the exposed mud with big patches of Bacopa.   I’d go out now and try to photo a Peacock caterpillar but it is raining.

Lemony Fresh Nerve Poison

The name Lemon Bacopa fits Bacopa caroliniana.  Empowered with that knowledge, you will never struggle to identify it…just scratch and sniff.  Ahhhh, a cleansing whiff of lemon.  No trip to the mudflats is complete without it.  As with most plant stinkiness, we’re talking herbivore deterrence. A 2019 study showed it to have a similar mode of nerve-poison action against insects as commercial organophosphate insecticides, such as Malathion. Knowing that, no thanks on Bacopa medications.  (Please don’t eat the wildflowers.)  Fact is, Bacopas are green chemical factories and not everything in them is harmless.

Don’t Forget This

Want a medicinal plant?   Go outside and pick a specimen, bring it in and Google it.  Somebody somewhere has applied it for something.   That goes double for fragrant species.   So why delve into the usually boring realm of old plant uses here and now?  Because Bacopas, especially B. monnieri, are monsters of medicinal applications worldwide.  Always interesting when multiple separate human cultures find similar uses for a given plant.  Here is just one example of B. monnieri’s fan mail from hundreds:

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Most of the historical uses center on the nervous system.   Neurological (and additional) effects have brought B. monnieri into the fold of modern medicinal interest. Many parties feel the herb and its extracts enhance cognition, and may even help in Alzheimers, which could be true with the caveat that the world of plant-derived medicines tends to be  very very optimistic.  Really, it had me with host plant for White Peacocks.

white peacock on samolus ebracteatus

 
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Posted by on May 15, 2020 in bacopa, Uncategorized

 

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Wakodahatchee and Green Cay Recycle Sewer Water, Entertain Bird-Watchers, and Spawn Super-Herbs

Great Blue Heron (JB)

Great Blue Heron (JB)

Green Kay Nature Center CLICK

Boynton Beach

Has restrooms, gift shop, visitor center, ample parking

100 acres with 1.5-mile boardwalk

Wakodahatchee Wetlands  CLICK

Delray Beach

Has coarse restrooms but no visitor center, parking jammed on busy days

50 acres with ¾-mile boardwalk

 

“Palm Beach County Water Utilities Department’s Southern Region Water Reclamation Facility pumps approximately two million gallons of highly treated water into the Wakodahatchee Wetlands. By acting as a natural filter for the nutrients that remain, the wetlands work to further cleanse the water.” (From the Wakodahatchee web site)

John was away having fun Friday, so today’s topic is more southern than usual.  My wife Donna and I skipped around the Wakodahatchee Wetlands boardwalk in Delray Beach, then a second loop to prolong the joy.  Near each other geographically, Wakodahatchee and Green Cay are wastewater reclamation sites with benefits. Sewage treatment generates leftover water after subtracting solids and organic matter, and pathogen suppression.  The most salient problem with the the effluent is its heavy nutrient load, a special curse here in nutrient-overloaded Florida and its beleaguered aquifers.

Wood Stork (by JB)

Wood Stork (by JB)

There are varied ways to dispose of the juice, and they all stink.  One approach is to spread it over an area inhabited by marshy plants to extract the unwanted nutrients.   It is not my intent to evaluate the environmental pros and cons of such treatment as opposed to alternatives.  You have to do something with stinkjuice, so we might as well enjoy it.   Wakodahatchee Wetlands and Green Cay service millions of reclaimed gallons daily over a collective 150 acres.  (The water smells only a teensie weensie.  Not a problem to most noses.)

Roseate Spoonbills (JB)

Roseate Spoonbills (JB)

Now to the good stuff.  Both wetlands are famous for is birds and critters:  anhingas, bobcats, coots, cormorants, ducks, ducks and more ducks, egrets, gators, glossy ibis, grebes, herons of all stripes, marsh hares, marsh wrens, moorhens, people in funny hats, purple galinules, spoonbills, warblers, wood storks, and more.   What a joy to see so many people drawn to the birds and bees, and as a byproduct of sewage no less.

Now what about the botany?  The fauna upstages the flora, but still the plants give a glimpse of life in a super-nutrient-enriched soup.  Is it fair to state that native Florida marsh plants tend to be nutrient-limited under pristine natural circumstances?    The designers of Green Cay say they modeled the “ecosystem” on the Everglades.  But what could be farther apart environmentally:  at one extreme, the Everglades where we worry about 10 parts per billion phosphorus, and at the other pole, sewage broth with a smorgasboard of nutrients.  Reclaimed water in Naples has phosphorus at 370 parts per billion.  Or to put it differently, the Everglades model leaves me behind as soon as I don’t see Sawgrass!

It is not only Sawgrass that is missing or scarce.  We think of Cattails invading the Everglades thanks to nutrient pollution, yet cattails are not an important presence at today’s venues.  The  dominant plants are:  Alligator Flag (Thalia geniculata),   Arrowhead (Sagittaria lancifolia),  Bulrushes (Schoenoplectus species),  Knotted Spikerush (Eleocharis interstincta),  Pickerelweed (Pontederia cordata),  Pondapples (Annona glabra) with cormorant nests and guano, Spadderdock (Nuphar luteum) with floating tubers as big as alligators,  and Water Lettuce (Pistia stratiotes).  There are others, of course, but the lush vista is species-poor missing the fine-tuned diversity of grasses, sedges, rushes, xyris, wetland shrubs, and wildflowers typically encountered in natural wetland ecosystems.

The created wetlands are a study of plant life in unlimited water, unlimited sunshine, and an overdose of nutrients. So then, with all that abundance, what does limit plant growth there in marsh heaven?  Perhaps space to grow.  Wakodahatchee and Green Cay are wall-to-wall with a comparatively small number of planted species and uninvited others in massive often monospecific stands.  Acre-sized drifts of single species.

In a nutshell, to a visitor with a camera interested in birds the sites are a delight, and that is genuinely a wonderful thing.  I am enthusiastically one of the delighted, funny hat an all.  I go there frequently and love it for all the favorable features, even if botanically the “ecosystem” is more of heavily fertilized garden than a Florida wetland.  Hey, I like gardens too.

Hydrocotyle spreading at Wakodahatchee

Hydrocotyle spreading at Wakodahatchee

Some of the spontaneous species are abundant and eye-catching.  In the Carrot Family, Water-Pennyworts, Hydrocotyle umbellata (I think it is umbellata from above on the boardwalk), form sprawling rhizomatous mats.  Hydrocotyles are the dreaded Dollarweeds in suburban lawns.  You’d never see the relationship to carrots without a close look at the flowers, or maybe a sniff of bruised leaves.  University of Michigan ethnobotancial files  record Seminoles applying the herbs against “turtle sickness,” i.e. “tembling,  short breath, and cough.”  I think I might suffer T.S. just before public presentations, but I’ll just imagine the crowd in their skivvies, because, as with many members of the Carrott Family, ingesting the plant is a toxic gamble.  My neurotic anxieties aside, Hydrocotyles are prominent in herbology.  CLICK

Water-Hyssop island carpet at Wakodahatchee

Water-Hyssop island carpet at Wakodahatchee

Another modest mud-dweller, Water-Hyssop, Bacopa monnieri, is again an herbal superstar.  This little member of the erstwhile Scropulariaceae has a medicinal reputation out of proportion for a nutrient-greedy mat-forming weed.  Regarded debatably as a Florida native, this small creeper is all around the warm-climate world, and has has ancient names in both hemispheres.  In both the Eastern and Western hemispheres old medicinal uses abound, too many to list, although recurrent applications are against rheumatism and to counter neurologic disorders.   To skip ahead a few centuries, the species has popped into modern medical research of interest against Alzheimer’s Disease, perhaps a contemporary echo of ancient uses against dementia.

Take two Bacopas and call me in the morning.

Take two Bacopas and call me in the morning.

 
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Posted by on January 28, 2014 in Green Cay, Wakodahatchee Wetlands

 

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