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Monday, December 28, 2020

Christmas Cactus

The bright red fruits of Tasajillo are present at holiday time, giving 
it an alternate common name of Christmas Cactus.

While many people are familiar with the tropical, non-native species of Christmas Cactus (Schlumbergera sp.) often sold as houseplants, not all are aware that we have a native Christmas Cactus (Cylindropuntia leptocaulis) here in Texas.   Our Christmas Cactus, also called Tasajillo, Pencil Cactus, Christmas Cholla, and Desert Christmas Cactus, is a true cactus much more adapted to our types of soils and climate. Common in the central and western parts of Texas, this plant’s species name, leptocaulis, means ‘slender-stemmed’, and it is a very good descriptor of its form.

Unlike many other cactus species, the flower of our native Christmas
Cactus is small, at only one half-inch across.

Upright, shrub-like, with many branches made up of slender, cylindrical jointed segments, this 2 to 5 foot tall plant is most often found growing in sandy or bottomland soils, having a trunk or main stem up to 4 inches in diameter with thicket-forming stems that exhibit various shades of green and feature a solid, woody internal core.  While occasionally spineless, it typically has very slender, 1-inch grayish-white spines grouped with much tinier spines, along each stem.  Botanists now think that two forms grow in Texas, a ‘long-spine’ form and a ‘short-spine’ form. Its leaves are very small, often not even noticed before they fall early in the growing season.  Small, pale, yellow-green flowers appear at irregular intervals in April/May and July/August, opening in late afternoon or evening.  But the true color display occurs in December, when its fruits turn conspicuously bright red and seemingly cover the plant like it has been festooned for the holiday season.

Christmas Cactus, short-spined growth form.

Christmas Cactus can grow from seed, but it is much more likely to spread by cloning.  The jointed stems can easily detach without harming the rest of the plant, and they are dotted with areoles, a structural feature of cacti that contain buds. All a stem needs to do is come in contact with the right soil, and it can take root and grow a whole new plant.

Christmas Cactus, long-spined growth form.

While the Christmas Cactus can be a nuisance if it develops in the wrong areas, it can also provide desirable value to wildlife and to humans.  Growing best under the protection of other vegetation, it offers dense cover for a variety of nesting birds and provides a good food source for white-tailed deer, bobwhite, wild turkey, most bird species, and many small mammals.  In West Texas, this plant is a larval host plant for the beautiful Staghorn Cholla Moth. From a human perspective, Christmas Cactus has a good ornamental value in a mostly xeric landscape, as it stands out in the bleak winter landscape, adorned with red fruit when most other vegetation is bare.

Staghorn Cholla Moth

Several sources describe the fruits of the Christmas Cactus as edible, even intoxicating.  But they are so small, and the spines so troublesome, that the plant usually yields only a sporadic nibble to the curious human. Nevertheless, native tribes made it part of their traditional diet, noting that the fruits, also called tunas, are vaguely sweet with a taste similar to the fruit of a prickly pear cactus.

Take the time to get to know our native Christmas Cactus and consider adding it to your wildscape.  You will easily learn to fall in love with its prickly nature, especially at Christmas time!


Tuesday, December 1, 2020

Frost Flowers


Blooming from August to November, Frostweed provides late season nectar
and a unique surprise at the first frost.

Accompanying the crunching of fallen leaves and the rattling of seed pods drying in the breeze is the arrival of the first frost.  This marks the seasonal change from our relatively warm autumn to the cooler days of a mild central Texas winter.  How does frost, this sparkling layer that sometimes covers the fall landscape, form? 

When the temperature of the air reaches a point where the water vapor in it can condense out into water, it is called the dew point.  The frost point is when the dew point falls below freezing, and rather than producing dew, it creates frost.  Consisting of tiny, spike-like crystal structures called spicules that grow out from a solid surface, frost generally forms on surfaces that are colder than the surrounding air.  Even the size of the crystals can vary, depending upon the amount of time they took to grow, the relative changes in temperature, and the amount of water vapor available. 

A frost flower.

Cold air is denser than warm air, so quite often lower areas become colder on calm nights due to differences in elevation.  Known as surface temperature inversion, this phenomenon forms ‘frost pockets’ or areas where frost forms first, due to cold air trapped against the ground.  It is here, in these areas, that you can find a rare and wonderful spectacle of nature called ‘frost flowers.’

While many plants can be damaged or killed by freezing temperatures or frost, this varies by the type of plant and tissue exposed to these conditions.  In central Texas, there is a common plant called Frostweed (Verbesina virginica), which is found in low-lying areas near streams, creeks, canyon bottoms, and in dappled shade at woodland edges. 

Bordered Patch

Silvery Checkerspot

Much of the year, Frostweed goes unnoticed while it grows 5 to 8 feet tall and leafy, the top of each stalk crowned by a cluster of small white flowers.  Its stalks are oddly square-like, with fleshy green flanges. Frostweed begins to bloom in the August heat, and continues until first frost, well into the fall.  These flowers provide late-season nectar for many insects, including bees, beetles, flies, wasps, and even migrating hummingbirds and Monarch butterflies.  It is also a host plant for Silvery Checkerspot and Bordered Patch butterflies.

A patch of frost flowers.

With the first frost, however, the water contained in each Frostweed plant stem expands, causing the stems to crack.  Via capillary action, more water is drawn through the cracks, freezes when it hits the cold air, and forms long curls of ice like petals of a flower, ribbons, or other delicate, abstract sculptures.  Most often, they consist of longitudinal bands of fine ice threads at right angles to the stem.  These delicate flowers of the frost are fleeting in nature, and can only be found in early morning, as the rising temperature quickly melts them away. 

A prime example of crystallofolia.

Only a few species of plants exhibit this unique phenomenon, which has been called ‘crystallofolia’ by Bob Harmes at the University of Texas, from the Latin crystallus or ‘ice’ and folium or ‘leaf’.  Much is left to be discovered reading the purpose of this process, but further research by Dr. James Carter at Illinois State University has concluded that the ice formation often far exceeds the amount of moisture locally available within the plant’s stem, so it must be augmented by water drawn up from the roots.

Delicate curls can form when more plant moisture is available.

On the surface, fall may seem as if nature is shutting down for the winter, but take the time for a second look and you just might be surprised.  The first frost of the season is another intriguing part of the ongoing cycle of life and renewal for our native plants and animals.

Friday, November 13, 2020

A Parade of Pollinators


Fall-blooming plants like Goldenrod attract a variety of insect pollinators.

Much has been written lately on the importance of pollinators, as they are vital to creating and maintaining the habitats and ecosystems that many animals (and humans!) rely on for food and shelter.  In fact, more than one in three bites of food we eat or beverages we drink are directly dependent on the success of pollinators. While most people think of bees as the primary pollinators, or even charismatic groups such as butterflies and hummingbirds, pollinators also come in the form of wasps and flies.

This time of year, you can find many of these bees, wasps, and flies nectaring on and pollinating our fall-blooming plants.  Aside from the well-known but non-native European Honey Bee, other native bee species that are still around this time of year include the Metallic Epauletted-Sweat Bee (Augochloropsis metallica), American Bumblebee (Bombus pensylvanicus), Southern Carpenter Bee (Xylocopa micans), Parkinsonia Carpenter Bee (Xylocopa tabaniformis parkinsoniae), and Texas Carpenter Bee (Xylocopa virginica texana).

Metallic Epauletted-Sweat Bee

The uncommon Metallic Epauletted-Sweat Bee is a small bee, to 0.5 inches, overall metallic green with distinctive scale-like coverings at the base of each amber-colored veined wing.  It nests in soft ground, and is especially attracted to asters, grapes, and legumes.  

American Bumblebee

The American Bumblebee is common and robust, to 1 inch, with a thorax yellow in front and black in back, an abdomen with the first three segments yellow and the rest black, and mostly black veined wings. Once abundant, populations have declined significantly in recent years, and it is listed in Texas as a species of ‘greatest conservation need.’

Carpenter bees are typically separated from bumble bees by their big, shiny abdomens.  They bore into the surface of wood to build their nests, often leaving a small pile of sawdust underneath. Due to their large size and heaviness, carpenter bee species often perform what is called ‘nectar robbing’, using their mouthparts to bite through the base of tubular flowers to access nectar rather than entering the flower directly.

Southern Carpenter Bee

The uncommon Southern Carpenter Bee is large, to 1 inch, with the female being shiny blackish overall and the male more of a glossy dark greenish-blue, both with smoky veined wings.  

Parkinsonia Carpenter Bee, nectar robbing

The more common and endemic Parkinsonia Carpenter Bee is a bit smaller at 0.8 inches, overall blackish, with males having gray-blue eyes and females with dark blue eyes, both with a black abdomen with four distinct yellow bands on each side that do not meet in the middle, and smoky veined wings. 

Texas Carpenter Bee, nectar robbing

Also common is the Texas Carpenter Bee, to 1 inch, with a thorax covered in yellow hairs except for a round black spot on top, a shiny black abdomen, and smoky veined wings. 

Blue-winged Scoliid Wasp

Wasps differ from bees in that they are smooth, shiny, and often slender or narrow-waisted. The Blue-winged Scoliid Wasp (Scolia dubia) is an uncommon native wasp, to 1 inch, overall black with a mostly reddish abdomen (sometimes with a large yellow spot on each side), and dark blue veined wings. Adults provision their nests with beetle larvae, commonly of Green June Beetles. 

Fraternal Potter Wasp

The Fraternal Potter Wasp (Eumenes fraternus) is an uncommon native, to 0.8 inches, overall black with an elongated but swollen waist, a bulbous tapering abdomen, with an ivory stripe behind the head and some before the waist, two ivory side spots and a stripe near the abdomen’s tip, and dark amber-brown veined wings. Females fashion unique, marble-sized urns of mud as nests, one for each egg, and provisions them with small caterpillars.

Potter wasp nest

While many view flies as pests, flies are actually second in importance to bees as pollinating insects.  Flies pollinate more than 100 cultivated crops such as cocoa, strawberries, apples, blackberries, peaches, onions, parsley, and carrots.  A large number of wild native plant species, including many medicinal plants, are aided from fly pollination as well.  In our area, two interesting fly species are the Oblique Stripetail Fly (Allograpta obliqua) and the Four-speckled Hover Fly (Dioprosopa). Both are native but uncommon, most often seen through November on a wide variety of flowering plants with or near aphid colonies.

Oblique Stripetail Fly

The Oblique Stripetail is a small fly, to 0.3 inches, with reddish-brown compound eyes, transverse bands on a dark abdomen with four longitudinal yellow stripes near the tip, and clear veined wings. It is a member of the hover fly family, having the rare ability to hover or fly backward.  

Four-speckled Hover Fly

The Four-speckled Hover Fly is a bit larger, to 0.5 inches, with dark brown compound eyes, a black abdomen with two pairs of whitish speckles or dashes, and a pair of clear veined wings with a brown leading edge.  Its larvae eat aphids, and this fly is considered to be a wasp mimic, due to its thin, ‘wasp-waisted’ abdomen.

The species shown above are only some of the many distinctive species of bees, wasps, and flies that are important pollinators. This fall, take a closer look at the insects that are busy nectaring on your plants, and pollinating them in the process. Make a difference to their populations by adding a wide variety of native plant species in your yard that bloom from spring to fall, and be sure that you avoid using pesticides.  Your actions alone can help promote a healthy parade of pollinators for many months of the year, that in the end benefit us all!

Friday, October 2, 2020

False Foxgloves

 

Plateau Agalinis, endemic to the Edward's Plateau.

Not much is known about the genus Agalinis, a group of about 70 plant species found in North, Central, and South America. They are partially parasitic or hemiparasitic plants that can make food through photosynthesis, but only after siphoning water and mineral nutrients from a host plant, in this case a variety of different hosts but most typically grasses. They do this by growing haustoria, or a root-like structure that connects their roots to the roots of their host.

Detailed studies of this perplexing genus are few and far between, and little else is known about each species, including who are their pollinators and what are their accurate historical and current geographic distributions.  In fact, many species are rare or endemic to a particular area or even federally protected.  Of the 34 species in the US, two are found in central Texas, and they are both some of our showiest fall bloomers.

Prairie Agalinis has a very short stalk attaching it to the stem.

Prairie Agalinis (Agalinis heterophylla), also called Prairie False-Foxglove, is an erect, airy herb, to 2.5 feet tall, with opposite, simple, narrowly linear leaves to 1.25 inches long. Its 5-lobed, bell-shaped flowers, pink to lavender-tinted white with purple-red spots in the throat, are 0.75 inches long and arise from the stem on 0.1-inch long stalks.  It is common in the eastern half of Texas, blooms from September to October, and is found in open floodplains, prairies, stream edges, and creekbanks.

Plateau Agalinis has a much longer stalk attaching it to the stem.

Easily confused with Prairie Agalinis is Plateau Agalinis (Agalinis edwardsiana), also called Plateau False-Foxglove and Plateau Gerardia, an uncommon and endemic species found in the grasslands and open woodlands on rocky limestone slopes in about 12 counties on the Edwards Plateau. It can grow to 3 feet tall, with very similar narrow leaves and pink to rose-colored flowers as A. heterophylla, but its flowers arise from the stem on much longer, 1.25-inch stalks. It blooms from September to November, and is a host plant and nectar plant for the Common Buckeye butterfly.

Common Buckeye

Left alone, both of these species will develop small, spherical capsules that burst open when dry, releasing several tiny seeds that will develop into next year’s plants. These native fall-bloomers are airy, delicate-looking plants that can easily survive dry soils, and bring much needed color to rocky, limestone areas or the edges of our ephemeral creeks and streams. In fact, their genus name comes from the Greek aga- an intensifying prefix meaning ‘large or great’ and New Latin   -linis meaning ‘flax’, referring to their superficial, flax-like resemblance. Look for them when the weather begins to cool, and enjoy their attractive, abundant blooms from late summer into fall!

Tuesday, July 28, 2020

A Killer of a Wasp




In late June and July, cicadas begin emerging from the ground,
breaking  through their shells or exuviae,
leaving the empty husks behind.

What are those large, solitary wasps we see flying around our yards from late June to September?  Often referred to as the Cicada Killer or Cicada Wasp (Sphecius speciosus), this native species occurs in the eastern and midwestern U.S. regions, southwards through Texas into Mexico and Central America. Cicada killers are so named since they prey on cicadas and provision their nests with them.  While large and intimidating, they offer a measure of natural control on cicada populations.  They benefit our native plants by pollinating flowers and protecting trees from the numerous cicadas that feed on their roots and foliage.

Cicada Killer or Cicada Wasp nectaring at a flower.

Cicada killers are robust wasps up to 2 inches long, with amber wings and black to reddish-brown abdomens with yellow stripes.  The females are somewhat larger than the males, and both are among the largest wasps in the U.S. These solitary wasps have a very unusual and interesting lifecycle.  Females are commonly seen skimming around areas with sparse vegetation for nesting sites, burrowing a tunnel, 10 to 20 inches deep, in dry or bare soil.  In digging a burrow, she will dislodge the soil with her jaws, and using her hind legs that are equipped with special spines, push the loose soil behind her as she backs out of the burrow. 

Cicadas, like this Megatibicen resh,
are hunted by the female Cicada Killers.

The female cicada killer proceeds to capture cicadas, sometimes even in flight, paralyzing them with her venomous sting.  She places the cicadas beneath her, grasping them with her legs, and either flies or drags her prey, which is twice her weight, into her burrow.  After placing a few cicadas in her nest, she begins to lay her eggs.  Females can predetermine the sex of the egg, and she lays multiple male eggs on a single cicada.  But each female egg is given 2 or 3 cicadas, as females are larger, require more food, and more females are needed to create new generations.  Eggs are always laid under the left or right second leg of the cicada. The female then closes the burrow with dirt, as the eggs hatch in a few days, but the larvae take some time to mature, feeding on cicadas as they overwinter in their burrow, not emerging as adults until the following spring.

Adult male cicada killers emerge in spring before the females, defending the territory around their emergence hole and searching for females.  They typically perch on the ground, flying up to attack any rival males. Once females emerge, mating occurs, and the males die shortly after.  Females live long enough to dig and provision their nests, and die after laying all of their eggs.

Cicada killer wasps are not aggressive toward humans and rarely sting unless provoked by grasping them roughly, accidentally stepping on them, or if caught in clothing.  Only the females have stingers, and while males will actively defend their perching areas against other males near nesting sites, they have no stingers. Both males and females have large jaws, but they are not known to grasp human skin and bite.  If swatted at, they will just fly away rather than attack. They are simply focused on cicadas or other cicada killers!

Tuesday, June 16, 2020

Evening Chorus

Green Tree Frog
From late winter into early summer, many of the night sounds you hear are not insects at all, but members of a wide-ranging group of cricket, tree, chorus, and chirping  frogs.  This group of frogs and their allies have adaptations that reveal their mostly arboreal lifestyle, such as forward-facing eyes for binocular-like vision, adhesive pads on their fingers and toes, and a fondness for eating insects.  Often not seen due to their diminutive size, these frogs are commonly mistaken for insects, due to their ability to produce loud and varied mating calls.  Known as ‘advertisement calls’, these calls are produced by the males to attract females and warn other rival males during the breeding season.

Blanchard's Cricket Frog
At ½ to 1 ½ inches, Blanchard’s Cricket Frog (Acris crepitans blanchardi) is found throughout most of the state, except for the Panhandle and West Texas.  Gray to green-brown, this frog has a long rounded snout, dark bands behind its limbs, and a distinguishing triangular patch behind the eyes that points down its back. Diurnal and active all year, these frogs prefer shallow but permanent ponds with vegetation and full sun.  Often seen basking during the daytime, they will jump quickly into the water or away when disturbed, and are capable of covering 6 feet in one leap!  Although they are part of the tree frog family, they are much more terrestrial and are excellent swimmers.  When chorusing, especially at night, the male’s call sounds like clicking small rocks or pebbles together.  Mating occurs in late spring, with the female laying one egg at a time on submerged vegetation.

Green Tree Frog
The Green Tree Frog (Hyla cinerea) is a common, 1 to 2 inch frog with a slender, bright green body, cream-colored belly, and white lips that extend into lateral stripes along the sides of its body.  Found in the eastern third of our state, this frog walks rather than jumps when on the ground.  It is nocturnal, and prefers wet areas such as swamps, edges of lakes, and stream sides.  During its breeding season from March to October, the males start calling just before dark, and sound like groups of tiny ducks quacking.   Females, which are slightly larger than the males and lack the wrinkled vocal pouch, lay their fertilized eggs enclosed in a jelly envelope attached to floating vegetation.   Influenced by the weather, breeding often takes place during or after a rain.

Cliff Chirping Frog
At ¾ to 1 ½ inches, the nocturnal Cliff Chirping Frog (Syrrhophus marnockii) is found in the cracks and crevices of limestone cliffs.  Mostly green with brown mottling and dark crossbars on its hind limbs, this frog also has a proportionately large head and big eyes.  It can run, leap, and hop, and its flattened body allows it to slip into cracks in the rocks to avoid predators.  Sounding a bit like a shy cricket, the call of the Cliff Chirping Frog is a series of short, clear chirps and trills.  While calls are made throughout the year, they are sharper and clearer when females are present.  From February to December females may lay eggs as many as three times in moist leaf litter or soil, although peak breeding occurs in April and May.  

When you’re out at night from winter to late spring or early summer and near one of our natural areas, sit quietly and in no time you should be able to identify the unmistakable sounds that make up the evening chorus!



Friday, May 15, 2020

Quercus with a Purpose

All oaks, like this Post Oak, are members of the genus Quercus.
Texas is home to dozens of native species of oaks, all of which are in the genus Quercus.  These trees provide humans with ample shade in the summer and beautiful color in the fall, and they sustain many mammals and birds with their acorn fruit.  But did you know that they are native host plants for dozens of butterflies and moth species, or the plants the female adults lay their eggs on for their caterpillars to eat?  In turn, the caterpillars of these butterfly and moth species provide a critical food source for almost all of the songbirds raising broods in the spring. Three of the most productive native oak species in central Texas are the Texas Live Oak (Quercus fusiformis), Post Oak (Quercus stellata), and Bur Oak (Quercus macrocarpa).

Texas Live Oak
The Texas Live Oak is also known as Escarpment Live Oak, Hill Country, and Plateau Live Oak.  Considered a semi-evergreen tree, the previous year’s leaves fall from the tree only when pushed out by newly emerging ones in early spring.  It has a stately mature form and unparalleled longevity, reaching to 40 feet in height with large limbs that over time spread an appreciable distance from the main trunk.  Firm textured leaves are oval to elliptical, 1 to 3 inches long, with young leaves having pointed lobes.  Its acorns are spindle-shaped or fusiform, narrowed at the base and ¾ to 1 inch long.  

Juvenal's Duskywing
Grote's Buckmoth
The Texas Live Oak is a host plant for Oak Hairstreak (Northern form), Juvenal’s Duskywing, and Meridian Duskywing butterflies, as well as Grote’s Buckmoth, Eastern Buckmoth, and Delilah Underwing moths.

Post Oak
Also known Iron Oak and Cross Oak, Post Oak is a deciduous oak to 50 feet, coarsely-branched with a dense, oval crown.  Its leaves are typically 3 to 5 inches long, with 4 pairs of lobes on each side, and the upper pair are often larger than the others, resembling a cross.  Acorns are ¾ to 1.25 inches long.  Post Oak is the most common oak throughout Texas, and its hard or iron wood is used for railroad ties as well as construction posts and timbers.  

'Northern' Oak Hairstreak
Polyphemus Moth
It is a host plant for the Oak Hairstreak (Northern form) and White M Hairstreak butterflies, and the Polyphemus, Eastern Buckmoth, Scarlet Underwing, and Little Nymph Underwing moths.

Bur Oak Acorn
Bur Oak is one of our largest oaks, also known as Savanna Oak, Overcup Oak, Prairie Oak, and Mossy-cup Oak.  A deciduous tree that can exceed 100 feet in height, its massive trunk supports heavy, horizontal limbs and lobed leaves up to 9 inches long.  Its acorns are the largest of all native oaks, up to 1.5 inches wide, with much of the acorn enclosed in a coarsely scaled cup with a heavily fringed margin. Sometimes spelled Burr Oak, it is the northern most oak in the New World, extending farther north than any other oak species.  

Banded Hairstreak 
Imperial Moth
Bur Oak is the host plant for the Banded Hairstreak and Juvenal’s Duskywing butterflies, in addition to the Ilia Underwing, Imperial, and Greater Oak Dagger moths.

While Texas is known for its oaks, care must be taken in identifying and maintaining oak trees.  Most all of the species can hybridize, occasionally making exact identification difficult,  and several of them are susceptible to oak wilt disease. However, they are worth the effort from a human and wildlife standpoint, as they are Quercus with a purpose!


Sunday, April 5, 2020

Blue Beauties

Blue Curls, Phacelia congesta
Spring brings a festival of color to our landscape in the form of wildflowers, mostly in shades of red, yellow, orange, purple, pink, and white.  But the most infrequent color of them all is blue.  There is no true blue pigment in plants, so they don’t have a direct way to produce blue color.  Plants have to perform a sort of trickery to produce blue blooms, using a common plant pigment called anthocyanin.  Plants have evolved to tweak their normally red to purple anthocyanin pigments by naturally modifying pH and then mixing those pigments, and combined with the way natural light reflects, these factors result in the creation of blue flowers.

Dayflower, Commelina erecta
Aside from the well-known bluebonnet, there are other blue beauties in bloom this time of year, including Dayflower (Commelina erecta), Blue Curls (Phacelia congesta), and Texas Bluestar (Amsonia ciliata).  Dayflower is a 3-foot high perennial with soft jointed stems that grow upright only if supported by other plants.  It blooms from May to October, but most frequently in spring or fall. The flowers are about 1 inch across, with two larger showy blue petals and one much smaller white petal.  Lasting only a day, several of these ephemeral blooms occur on one plant, generally one at a time, each opening 3 to 4 days apart.  Often found growing in dry scrub and partly shaded woods, its other common names include Widow’s Tears and White-mouth Dayflower.

Blue Curls, also known as Caterpillars, Fiddleneck, or Spike Phacelia, is a leafy annual or biennial that grows 1 to 3 feet tall in sandy or rocky soil.  Its periwinkle blue, bell-shaped flowers are ¼ inch long and occur in numerous slender, coiled clusters that uncurl as the buds develop, resembling the suckered underside of an octopus tentacle.  Its leaves are soft and deeply cut, often appearing ragged, borne on a brittle stem.  Blooming from March to May, Blue Curls is often found in large colonies in meadows and woodland edges.

Texas Bluestar, Amsonia ciliata
Growing up to 2 feet tall, Texas Bluestar blooms from March to June in dry open woods and on chalky hills.  Its narrow almost needle-like leaves occur singly but close together all long the stem up to the flower cluster.  Every cluster is made up of few to numerous pale blue flowers, each ½ inch long and wide, with a narrow tube opening into 5 petal-like lobes shaped like a star, with a ring of white at the center.  It is also known as Fringed Bluestar, referring to the fringe of small hairs found on the new leaves and plant stems. 

Less than 10 percent of the more than 280,000 species of flowering plants on Earth produce blue flowers.  Interestingly, while blue did not develop as a common color during the process of natural selection, plants that have blue blooms don’t seem to deter beneficial pollinators.  Both birds and insects can widely detect blue wavelengths, and blue flowers are just as capable of producing food as flowers of other colors. 


Friday, March 20, 2020

Risky Lilies


Death Camas amid the grasses
Primarily due to their inability to move around to escape danger, plants have developed an array of weapons to defend themselves against predators.  Some defenses are physical, such as thorns or stinging hairs, and others are chemical, mostly in the form of poisons or toxins.  After these harmful chemicals are produced by the plants, they are locked away in parts of the its cells called vacuoles, spaces within the cell that are enclosed by a membrane, protecting the plant from contamination.

The most common way that people or animals come in contact with poisonous plants is to accidentally eat them.  While we don’t normally eat the plants in our landscapes, widely planted ornamentals that are non-native and toxic include oleander, daffodil, elephant ear, iris, wisteria, and azalea.  Native plants can be toxic too, and there are two species in the Lily Family blooming this time of year that are fairly common but known to be toxic. They are Death Camas (Zigadenus nuttallii) and Crow Poison (Nothoscordum bivalve), and just their common names give them away!

The clustered flower head of Death Camas
Death Camas, also known as Nuttall’s Death Camas, Poison Camas, Poison-onion, and Poison Sego, is a perennial flower growing 1 to 2 feet tall, with narrow basal leaves up to 15 inches long.  A stout stem arises from a large, black-coated bulb, with a round-topped cluster of up to 60 cream-colored, 0.5 inch blooms growing around the top.  It blooms from February to April and is found in open prairies, woodland edges, and rocky hillsides in central and northeast Texas.  

Death Camas is a good early nectar source for butterflies
All parts of this plant are poisonous, even when dry.  While unpalatable, livestock has been known to eat it, but typically only in early spring when not much else is available.  While not in the same genus as edible Camas (Camassia sp.), humans have been poisoned, mistaking the bulbs for wild onion. 

Crow Poison is often mistaken for wild onion

Crow Poison, also known as Crowpoison and False Garlic, is one of the first flowers to appear in early spring throughout most of Texas.  Looking much like wild onion, it grows from a bulb but has fewer, larger white flowers about 0.5 inch across in loose clusters atop 8 to 16 inch stalks, and lacks the characteristic onion odor when crushed. Its basal leaves are narrow and 4 to 15 inches long, and it is found in lawns, open slopes, prairies, disturbed sites, open woodlands, and roadsides, where it often forms large colonies.  

Crow Poison blooms in loose clusters
When dug up, it will have a cluster of attached bulbs underground.  While this plant is minimally toxic to humans, it gets its common name from grain farmers’ past practice of crushing its bulbs and mixing them with a handful of grain to be left out for crows to eat.  In turn, the crows would get sick, with some dying, signaling the surviving crows to move on to other sources of grain. 

Now those are some pretty risky lilies!