The Marvelous in Nature

A capital offence

My camera card reader didn’t arrive yesterday, so that means because of the long weekend it will be Tuesday at the earliest before it shows up. I’ve got a collection of photos building up on the card, so I’m looking forward to it finally arriving! Over the last little while I’ve encountered a few times a particular pet peeve of mine. I thought perhaps since I was still waiting on the photos from my camera, it would be an opportunity to mention it here.

The pet peeve involves the capitalization (or lack of it) of common names of species. Frequently I see instances where the author has used all small letters when writing out the common name of a bird. And it’s a pet peeve of mine for this reason: adjectives within the species name can also be used to describe animals (or plants), and so how are we to tell the difference between a description of an organism and the specific organism in question?

yellow warblers: Hooded, Blue-winged, Mourning, Kentucky, Nashville, Wilson's

Here’s an example. These are all indisputably yellow warblers. Yellow happens to be one of the most common colours in warblers, in fact, and many species sport quite a lot of it.

Yellow Warbler

But none of them are Yellow Warblers, Dendroica petechia, the species in this photo. So when someone is talking about having seen a yellow warbler in the shrubs along the trail, are they talking about Dendroica petechia or one of the others, such as Wilsonia pusilla (Wilson’s Warbler, bottom right in previoius photo)?

yellow-bellied flycatcher: Great Crested

Or how about this one. No one would argue that this is a yellow-bellied flycatcher.

Yellow-bellied Flycatcher

But it’s a Great Crested Flycatcher, Myiarchus crinitus, not a Yellow-bellied Flycatcher, Empidonax flaviventris, which is the identity of the above. In fact, the yellow-bellied flycatcher previously has a much nicer yellow belly than the actual Yellow-bellied Flycatcher. Think also of the Red-bellied Woodpecker and the Lewis’s Woodpecker, another red-bellied woodpecker with a much brighter and more noticably red belly.

Field Sparrow

A third example. This bird is a Field Sparrow, Spizella pusilla.

field sparrows: Savannah, Song, Chipping, Eastern Towhee

But one could make the argument that all of these are also field sparrows, depending on your definition of field, a rather generic term. When someone talks about the field sparrow, are they referring to the sparrow that lives in fields, rather than those that prefer forests, or are they specifically referring to Spizella pusilla?

Green and Leopard Frogs
A green frog and a green frog.

The official convention adopted for standardized bird names in North America (and elsewhere) is to capitalize the whole species name (with the exception of portions following a hyphen, such as in Yellow-bellied). Interestingly, however, the same convention isn’t in place for other types of animals or plants, and the generally accepted practices for trees and mammals and everything else is to use small letters for the names. So the names would be written as silver maple and black bear.

This really bugs me – how does one then differentiate between the green frog (Rana clamitans) and the other green frog (leopard frog, Rana pipiens) above? Without using scientific names, that is, which I would say the average person probably doesn’t know (for example, I had to look up every single scientific name in this post because I know practically none, even for the species I’m most familiar with). So I buck the “system”, and I capitalize all common species names anyway (I had to fight with myself not to capitalize the frog names there, by habit). And I try not to twitch too much when I find someone talking about long-eared owls and black ducks.

Today at Kingsford – Crummy bird photos

Red-shouldered Hawk flyover

My photos are still trapped on my camera, so I turn again to some recent ones I’ve taken the last few weeks. I’ve ordered a card reader off of that incredibly handy site, eBay, but don’t expect it to arrive until after the long weekend, unfortunately. However, the poor weather has been helpful in limiting the number of photos I’ve taken in the meantime. Today’s archive special is crummy bird photos. I certainly have lots of them.

We’ve had lots of birds arriving the last few weeks. My BIGBY list is now up to 50 species, with the most recent addition being a House Sparrow, of all species, showing up at our feeders. It’s pretty unusual to see House Sparrows outside of urban or agricultural habitats, and I’m not sure what it was doing out in the boonies here. Species number 49 was a Northern Cardinal, also a rarity around here, I can count on one hand the number that we’ve seen since we moved in. It was also at the feeders, foraging alongside the House Sparrow.

Most of the species have been ones we’ve been expecting, though. The Red-shouldered Hawks returned a couple of weeks ago, two of them together. Red-shoulders pair up prior to arriving on their breeding territories, and usually hold the same territory from one year to the next, so I think the two that have been hanging out around our house are the same individuals as we saw cruising the area last summer. We think they have a nest in the forest across the road.

Red-shouldered Hawk flyover

They soar directly over our house fairly frequently, but naturally I rarely have my camera at the ready when they do. The one time I happened to have the camera out, with the long lens on it, the bird came upon me too quickly for me to get the lens focused, though I fired off half a dozen shots anyway hoping one might be okay (none were). I was very excited about the hawks’ return, and was hoping to post something on them, but it might have to wait for later in the summer.

Eastern Phoebe

Another instance where I was unprepared. I had my 100mm lens on the camera, and didn’t have the 300mm with me. The 100mm is my macro/portrait lens, and I’d been out looking for bugs. I’d decided to leave the extra weight of the 300mm at home. Of course, that happened to be the day that I came across my spring-first Eastern Phoebe, foraging just close enough to be tempting, and just far enough to be out of reach of the shorter lens. I haven’t had a good photo op of a phoebe since that afternoon. Phoebes are one of my favourite birds, so I’ve been pleased at their return. When we moved in, we noticed an old nest on our security light, and we hoped maybe to see them there again this year since they do sometimes reuse nests, but I think they’ve probably been put off by the dog.

Red-breasted Nuthatch at nest cavity

Finally, a Red-breasted Nuthatch, excavating a nesting cavity. This one I actually had my 300mm for, I just happened to be too far away for a good photo, which was a bit disappointing since how often do you stumble across nuthatches building nests? He was working away up high in a tall dead snag. It looked like it was maybe an inch or two deep, just in the early stages, based on how far he was sticking his head in. This one will be a tougher one to monitor than the Pileated nest, mostly because it’s quite high relative to the size of the bird, but since it’s right along the road I’ll be by it often and can check in now and then.

Red-breasted Nuthatch at nest cavity

Today at Kingsford – Warm weather catch-up

Garter snake

On the same lovely warm day a week ago that I spotted the various butterflies and day-flying moths, I also encountered a number of spring vertebrates. The first was this garter snake. It was just lying in the road, not moving, soaking up the same beautiful sunshine that I was. It seemed somewhat chubby, and I wondered if it might be a pregnant female. It seems rather unlikely, though, since snakes would only just be starting to mate now, and garter snakes gestate for 2-3 months before giving birth to live young (which are independent from birth). On the other hand, females can store viable sperm for multiple years, so would some perhaps make use of that to get a head start on gestation before emerging from the hibernaculum in the spring?

Turtle

Out on Eel Lake I spotted a turtle basking on a log. The water was open, but the ice wasn’t long gone, so I was a bit surprised to see the turtle out and active (if you can call sunbathing active) already. I couldn’t tell what species of turtle it was, and even after coming home and blowing up the photos I still couldn’t discern enough detail to give it an ID (I only had my 100mm lens on the camera, having decided to leave the 300mm at home, and couldn’t get close enough with the shorter lens). However, I did notice when I blew the photo up that there wasn’t just one turtle in the photo, but actually four. Click here for a larger version of the next photo.

Four turtles

There are five species of turtle in Frontenac Provincial Park and area: Blanding’s, Map, Painted, and Snapping Turtles, as well as Stinkpots. Blanding’s have yellow bellies and throats, which seem bright enough to be noticeable even at a distance, so I don’t think they’re those. Snappers are much more craggy. The ones in the photo don’t seem to have a dorsal ridge that Map turtles can show. Stinkpots have a very stumpy appearance with domed shells and thick necks. So I think that leaves Painted. But if I’m honest, I really don’t know for certain.

Fish (Northern Pike?)

And finally, not far from the log with the first turtle, I watched a fish splashing around in the shallows. I think there may actually have been two, but I couldn’t really tell for sure, since there was a fair bit of glare on the water from where I was standing. At one point one of them swam close enough that the fish’s shape could be seen in the shadowy patches, and I think it was a Northern Pike, a relatively common fish in our lakes. In the early spring pike will move into the weedy shallows around lake edges in order to spawn, and I have a feeling that’s what was going on in all the splashing in the shallows here. Wish I’d had my canoe and could’ve floated closer for a better look.

Fish (Northern Pike?)

Today at Kingsford – Technical difficulties

Raven and beagle friend

I apologize for my longer-than-usual absence. This weekend I was away at my parents’, for an early Easter dinner timed to coincide with my sister’s birthday. I had hoped to get another post up on Friday before heading out, but ran out of time, as it usually goes. And now, I return home and sit down to put something together this evening from photos I’ve taken in the last few days, and it appears the socket on my camera where the data transfer cable plugs into is broken. The computer recognizes there’s something at the end of the cable, but can’t identify what it is (both my PC and Dan’s Mac do this, so it’s not just Windows being stupid). Soooo… I suppose I’ll need to get myself a card reader or otherwise figure out an alternative means of getting the photos off of the card. In the meantime, I will probably see what I’ve got kicking around in the archives of my computer, and perhaps share some photos of subjects I took mid-winter and stored away for lean times that fortunately never came.

Raven and beagle friend

Here is one such set. Last week when I took Raven out for her daily walk we were joined by a neighbour’s beagle. He hooked up with us about 500 meters into the walk, and came with us for the next kilometer out, and then the 1.5 kilometers all the way back to our house. The three of us all traipsed down to the dock, where the water was melted enough I could put the canoe in (for the first time this spring!) and invite the dogs in to join me for a short paddle. Amusingly, the beagle jumped right in with little need for encouragement, while Raven required quite a bit of coaxing.

Raven and beagle friend

The poor little guy was game but really needed longer legs to keep up with Raven the Rocket Dog. And Raven wasn’t about to wait up for any short guys. However, they still seemed to have a good time together. I felt bad sending him away when it was time for Raven and I to go inside (so I could give her a much-needed bath). Raven doesn’t often get an opportunity to interact with other dogs (or people) out here, so it’s nice when she gets to play with one of the neighbours.

Raven and beagle friend

Raven and beagle friend

Raven and beagle friend

Festival of the Trees #34

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We tend to take trees for granted. They’re part of the landscape, but because they don’t move, they don’t often catch our eyes. There usually needs to be something unusual going on for us to pause and take a closer look: the tree is an unusual shape, or is sporting bright fall foliage or spring blossoms, or is diseased or infected, or is exceptionally large. How often do we pause to look at the healthy trees that are part of our local landscape? Or consider their roles in their local ecosystems?

I started this blog with the intention of highlighting the marvelous in nature, all those amazing things that we so often just walk right by without noticing. There are amazing things about every single species that many of us don’t know. So for this issue of Festival of the Trees, I thought I would try to find an interesting fact relating to each of the posts. And then for even more interesting facts (and, in some cases, fiction), follow the links to learn more!

bigmama

The Backyard Grower – Virginia establishing nature preserve for ancient trees
“Big Mama,” a bald cypress tree standing along the banks of the Nottoway River in Virginia, may have died, but the ancient tree will remain part of the area’s ecology and history for some time.
Fact: Bald Cypress wood is extremely water resistant, and sometimes trees that have been submerged in swamps since prehistoric times are dredged up and are still useable as wood, giving the tree the nickname “wood eternal”.

treehouseLocal Ecologist – Tree Walk: Three types of tree houses
On the origin and history of treehouses and our relationship with trees.
Fact: In My Side of the Mountain by Jean Craighead George the protagonist boy makes his tree house in the hollowed out trunk of an ancient hemlock. The most roomy hollow-trunk home would be in the trunk of a Montezuma Cypress (once it died), which measures 11.62 meters (38 feet) in diameter. My living room only measures 25 feet across!

ottertreeCatapult to Mars
A poem about a unique tree.
Fact: According to Norse mythology, the first humans, Ask and Embla, were formed out of two pieces of driftwood, an ash and an elm, by the god Odin and his brothers, Ve and Vili. (taken from Wikipedia)


treehouse2The Question of the Day – Question of the Day #92
Suzanne asks, what’s your favourite tree? You may find some of the answers quite interesting.
Fact: My favourite tree is the Eastern White Pine. My favourite name for it comes from the Iroquois: the Tree of Great Peace. According to their legends, the cluster of five needles, bound together, represented the five nations that made up the Iroquois, and the spreading roots that reached in all four compass directions were the roots of peace, extending to all peoples.

finlandLiving the Scientific Life (Scientist, Interrupted) – Talvimaa
A photo-of-the-day of GrrlScientist’s favourite place to visit in Helsinki, Finland.
Fact:There are an estimated 20,000 urban trees in Helsinki, which have an estimated value of 30 million Euros (nearly 40 million US dollars).


teasWild About Nature Blog – Taste-testing the Evergreen Teas
A different take on enjoying evergreens.
Fact: Not just a pleasant drink, pine tea has also long been used by Native Americans as a prevention and cure for scurvy, as the needles contain 5 times the amount of vitamin C that lemons do.



palmsCreature of the Shade – confronting vegetation: Archontophoenix cunninghamiana
Time spent in the Tambourine National Park just south of Brisbane, in Australia. These rainforests have a simple structure: Bangalow palms everywhere.
Fact: Like all palms (and unlike other trees) they don’t get wider with age. The juveniles look just like adults but shorter, so that in addition to the solid ceiling of fronds above, complete sets of fronds also appear at various heights, slowly rising into the canopy as if on hydraulic lifts. (from Creature of the Shade)


toiletpaperThe Guardian – American taste for soft toilet roll ‘worse than driving Hummers
Although not a blog, an interesting note on how current bathroom preferences are affecting forests.
Fact: One ton of wood pulp will produce about 15,000 rolls of toilet paper. Using mechanical pulping techniques, it would take about 12 average-sized trees to make one ton of pulp.


andrewjacksonStan LeMaster and the Living Legacy Historical Tree Project – Andrew Jackson magnolia – Daviess County courthouse, Owensboro, KY
A descendant of a magnolia brought to Washington, DC, by President Andrew Jackson.
Fact: Magnolia has attracted the interest of the dental research community because magnolia bark extract inhibits many of the bacteria responsible for caries and periodontal disease. In addition, the constituent magnolol interferes with the action of glucosyltransferase, an enzyme needed for the formation of bacterial plaque. (from Wikipedia)

bigoakOpen Space Restoration – Largest Live Oak…Reaching for the Sky
About a massive oak tree, whose canopy is approximately 120 feet across.
Fact: The oak is commonly used as a symbol of strength and endurance. Oak leaves are used to symbolize rank in the US Armed Forces; different colours represent different ranks. In the US Navy, different arrangements of sprigs of leaves and acorns represent different sections of the corps.

poem1Mutating the Signature – Collaborative poetry: arboretum
A “remix” of a poem about trees. A remix is, not unlike in music, where the original poem is reworked while retaining some or all of the original work’s content or flavour.
Fact: Trees have long been a source of inspiration in poetry, appearing in the works of a wide array of writers including Robert Frost, William Shakespeare, JRR Tolkien, Robert Louis Stevenson, William Blake, Emily Dickinson, Samuel Coleridge, e.e. cummings, Walt Whitman, and many others.

trailhikeDown the Trail – Day 23 – Glastenbury Mountain
Beautiful photos highlighting a hike along a portion of the Appalachian Trail.
Fact: In the southern sections of the Appalachian trail, lowland forests consist mainly of second-growth; nearly the entire trail has been logged at one time or another. There are, however, a few old growth locations along the trail, such as Sages Ravine in Massachusetts and The Hermitage, near Gulf Hagas in Maine. (from Wikipedia)

quiltKitty’s Heart of Nature – Closely Knit and Talented Family
A lovely knit wall hanging of a “tree of love”, a wedding present.
Fact: Trees are often used as symbols of growing and blossoming love. Perhaps the best tree to be used as such a symbol is the catalpa, whose large leaves are almost perfectly heart-shaped.


birchesWillow House Chronicles – Birches
Reflections on Robert Frost’s poem Birches.
Fact: Birches are among the most flexible of trees. Because of their characteristics as being tall, slender, flexible, and I would add aesthetically appealing, birch trees are often associated with the feminine in many cultures.


peartreesA Tidewater Gardener – Good intentions – bad tree
The ornamental pear trees put on a lovely show while blossoming but hide an ugly truth.
Fact: The Callery Pear mentioned in this post is originally native to China. The fruits are small, less than half an inch in diameter, and woody until softened by frost. They are eaten in the winter by birds, who disperse the seeds in their droppings, helping the tree to colonize areas where it wasn’t intentionally planted.

catkinsTreeblog – Summer’s outrider: flowers & buds & catkins & trees
Signs of spring: larch flowers, alder and hazel catkins, willow buds, rowan leaves.
Fact: Although we typically think of the fruit trees when we think flowering trees, in fact most species of trees flower – we just usually overlook the flowers as being something else. Catkins and pussy willow buds are forms of flowers, for instance. On maples, the buds that we see forming during winter are actually flower buds, not leaves.

osageorangeOsage+Orange – A Hedge in Winter
A row of osage-orange trees, the blog’s namesakes.
Fact: Osage-orange trees are native to south-central US but are now naturalized in many parts of the continent. They produce large, bumpy, spherical fruit that are up to 6 inches (15 cm) in diameter and smell similar to oranges.


pines1Beetles in the Bush – Trees of Lake Tahoe – The pines
Profiles the many species of pine tree in the Lake Tahoe basin.
Fact: As a northeasterner, upon my first visit to the west coast (incidentally to the Tahoe basin), I was astounded by the size of the pine cones. I actually mailed a couple home to my family. The sugar pines produce the most outrageous cones, up to a foot or more in length, looking a bit like spruce cones on steroids. However, even the “smaller” cones of the ponderosa pine were bulking up on something, as they could reach six inches, compared to the usual two inches of northeastern red pines.

otherworldlyDark Roasted Blend – The Most Alien-looking Place on Earth
As the subtitle says: Socotra Island, you have to see it to believe it.
Fact: More than a third of the plants on Socotra Island are endemic and unique, due to its long geographic isolation from the continents. One of the most striking of Socotra’s plants is the dragon’s blood tree (Dracaena cinnabari), which is a strange-looking, umbrella-shaped tree. Its red sap was the dragon’s blood of the ancients, sought after as a medicine and a dye. (from Wikipedia)

marchflowersThe South Florida Watershed Journal – Showing of Green
Warming temperatures and increased sunlight are bringing out the green in South Florida.
Fact: We all know the phrase “April showers bring May flowers” (or in the case of South Florida, March showers bring April flowers), and probably think of it as simple folk wisdom – it’s the rain that helps the flowers grow – but the phrase was actually originally used in the context of unpleasant events often bring better things.

legacyoflunaVia Negativa – The Tree-sitter
A poetic tribute to the book The Legacy of Luna, by Julia Butterfly Hill
Fact: The book is about the author’s experience sitting 18 stories high in a giant redwood for nearly two years. The tree, named Luna by the group who built by moonlight the wooden platform the author sits on, is between 600 and 1000 years old. Although referred to as a she, redwoods are monoecious, neither male nor female.

redmapleNeighbourhood Nature – Good news and bad news: tree flowers
A closer look at the beautiful tree flowers (the good news) that unfortunately inevitably result in tree pollen (the bad news) in early spring.
Fact: Many maples, such as the red maple, are considered polygamodioecious – a big word to say that some trees may be entirely male, some entirely female, and some trees may bear flowers of both sexes (monoecious – from the Greek for “one household”).

lightningtreeOpen Space Restoration – Lightning Strike
A tree that was struck by lightning not once, but twice, now bears a bat box.
Fact: Oak and elm are the types of trees most commonly hit by lightning, but pine ranks third. They have deep tap roots that reach the water table, and typically stand higher than other trees in a forest. In most trees the lightning takes the path of least resistance, which is generally the wettest part of the tree, often outer layers where the sapwood is. This results in a burning of the bark, and possibly the stripping off of a small section of the trunk, but is generally easy for the tree to heal over from. Deeper wounds are more difficult to heal and usually result in the decay and death of the tree.

chestnutTGAW – Legacy and Inheritance on National Land
Reestablishing the American Chestnut on national park lands.
Fact: The American Chestnut is a prolific bearer of nuts, usually with three nuts enclosed in each spiny green burr, and lined in tan velvet. The nuts develop through late summer, the burrs opening and falling to the ground near the first fall frost. Prior to the chestnut blight that wiped out much of the population, the American Chestnut was a very important tree for wildlife, providing much of the fall mast for species such as White-tailed Deer and Wild Turkey and, formerly, the Passenger Pigeon. Black Bears were also known to eat the nuts to fatten up for the winter. (from Wikipedia)

whyWindy Willow – Why?
A photo-of-the-day of a tree caught up with some unfortunate garlands.
Fact: No one seems to know the history behind toilet-papering trees as a homecoming or Hallowe’en prank, when or why it started. Toilet paper is fortunately designed to biodegrade easily in septic systems (and elsewhere), so if any of that paper flung around outside gets missed in the cleanup it should break down naturally. Now just make sure you’re buying recycled stuff when you go to do your toilet-papering.

mothsThe Marvelous in Nature – Feeling birchy
About birch trees, and a couple of diurnal spring moths associated with them.
Fact: The twigs of Yellow Birch, as well as a number of other species such as Black Birch, will, when scraped, produce a mild scent of wintergreen because of the methyl salicylate oil the tree produces.


The next edition of Festival of the Trees will be hosted by Orchards Forever. Make sure you get your submissions in to Peg at amberapple [at] msn [dot] com on or before April 27. The theme of the May edition (at least for us northerners entering spring) will be trees in bloom!