Monday, July 7, 2014

Fern Learning Pt. 2 (Wildflower Certification Class #2)

Ferns are nonflowering vascular plants that reproduce by spores. As a group, ferns date back to the Carboniferous period, 359 million years ago.

The spore-producing structures on a fern are called sporangia. Clusters of sporangia on the underside of fern fronds are called fruit dots or sori.
Fruit dots



More fruit dots
Very few herbivorous mammals eat ferns. A cover of ferns can actually be a sign of ecological imbalance, indicating that too-numerous deer have eaten all the rest of the plants. Some insects, however, make use of ferns for shelter, as in the picture below.



Some ferns also have a mutually beneficial relationship with insects--the Bracken Fern, for instance, is protected by ants that eat a liquid it produces.

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On June 28th, the Wildflower Certification class took a walk at Flint Woods preserve in Hockessin to look for ferns. These are some of what the group found:

Silvery spleenwort (Deparia acrostichoides) is a twice-cut fern with blocky pinnules.
Silvery spleenwort


Hay-scented fern (Dennstaedtia punctilobula) is a thrice-cut fern that can grow to two feet.
Hay-scented fern
Interrupted fern  (Osmundia Claytoniana) gets its name because the fronds in the middle are missing.
Interrupted fern
Lady Fern (Athyrium filix-femina) is a thrice-cut fern. It can grow between two and three feet tall.
Lady fern
Marginal wood fern (dryopteris marginalis) gets its name because the sori are on the margins of the underside of the pinnules.
Marginal Wood Fern
The fronds of the New York Fern (Thelypteris noveboracensis) taper to its base. This is a twice-cut fern that grows to between one and two feet.
New York fern--tapers to base
The Cinnamon fern (Osmunda cinnnamomea) has woolly tufts at the bade of the fronds. It grows to between two and three feet.
Woolly tufts on the back of a cinnamon fern (where the  leaf meets the stalk).  


Witch hazel (not a fern)--in the family Hamamelidaceae; usually a shrub but sometimes the size of a tree
The Christmas Fern (Polystichium acrostichoides) is recognizable by the bootlike shape of its fronds. It is an evergreen fern that grows between one and two feet tall. It has sori only on its upper leaflets.

Two ferns that I did not get a picture of were

 -the Maidenhair Fern (Adiantum pedatum), a twice-cut fern that grows between one and two feet tall. It is recognizable by its curved stalks

-the Sensitive Fern (Onoclea sensibilis), a once-cut fern that can grow up to four feet in height. 

Another fern that we found a few days before at Ashland Nature Center was the Purple-Stemmed Cliffbrake (Pellaea atropurpurea).

Lunch on the Christina



This osprey was hunting over the river when I left DEEC on Sunday. I saw it dive several times, but it wasn't coming up with fish. You can see the "M" shape the osprey makes in this picture.

Sunday, July 6, 2014

Summer plants and flowers at DEEC

Ferns?
Flowering grasses
Touch-me-not
Grass pod things
More flowering grasses
Buttonbush

Saturday, June 14, 2014

Pelicans flying at Nags Head

Cloudy morning, cool
These are Brown Pelicans (Pelicanus occidentalis). Most pelicans sit on the water and scoop fish with their bills, but these pelicans plunge dive from great heights--as high as 60 feet. They open their pouches and scoop up everything, then drain the water and keep the fish. Seagulls often steal fish right from a pelican's mouth while the pelican is decanting.

Friday, June 13, 2014

Nature Conservancy Preserve

This morning, we went for a walk at the Nags Head Woods Ecological Preserve, operated by the Nature Conservancy.
You can see a little how the preserve contains different ecosystems...you start out in the swamp, then climb into the forest, then come out onto a sandy hillside with pines...then back into the woods.
Lots of algae and many biting insects, plus frogs hiding under the green
I don't yet know what this is.
An interesting bright yellow fungus with tiny, shiny black bugs (beetles) on it
Sandy hillside with pines
I thought maybe this was a salt-loving fern, but Wikipedia says the word "bracken" just comes from an
Old Norse word for fern.
Sassafras tree
A mushroom with a red top--not sure what kind
Growths I saw last year at Lums Pond
Blueberries
Myrtle

Thursday, June 12, 2014

Osprey family at Lone Cedar

This is one of the osprey parents on the nest outside Basnight's Lone Cedar Cafe in Nags Head, North
Carolina. We have been to this restaurant each summer over the last few years and seen ospreys with their chicks.

This parent sat on the nest the whole time we were eating, with the three chicks popping up from time to time. The other parent finally came back; then both parents left the nest for a time.

You can see a rainstorm in the background.

Tuesday, June 3, 2014

Wasp

Sitting on the steps at DEEC,  Friday, May 30, 2014.