Botany Blog Plants of the Northeastern U.S.

June 3, 2014

Swamp Fly Honeysuckle

Filed under: North American Native Plants — admin @ 20:59

Swamp fly honeysuckle (Lonicera oblongifolia) is blooming now in Central New York. This is a native species typically found in peatlands such as fens or conifer swamps. It can be distinguished from other honeysuckles by the following combination of traits: 1) style hirsute; 2) upper 4 petals fused; 3) peduncles over 5 mm; 4) leaves obtuse; 5) ovary glabrous; 6) pith of branchlets solid and white.

Lonicera_oblongifolia1

Lonicera oblongifolia flowers

Lonicera_oblongifolia2

Recognition of habitat, entire leaf margin, and the downy pubescence on the undersides of leaves can help when searching for this plant. The leaves are typically more symmetrical than those of Lonicera canadensis.

Lonicera_oblongifolia5

 Upper surface of leaves

Lonicera_oblongifolia4

Lower surface of leaves

Lonicera_oblongifolia6

Fruits ripen in July and can range from orange to red or red-purple

May 1, 2014

What’s Blooming

Filed under: North American Native Plants — admin @ 19:19

Here are some of the plants that are blooming now in Central NY.

Leatherwood (Dirca palustris)

Leatherwood (Dirca palustris)

 

Round-leaved Yellow Violet and Spring Beauty

Round-leaved Yellow Violet and Spring Beauty

 

Hepatica

Hepatica

August 13, 2012

Buffalobur Nightshade

Filed under: Naturalized Plants,North American Native Plants — admin @ 19:44

Buffalobur Nightshade (Solanum rostratum) is a member of the nightshade family (Solanaceae) that is native to the Great Plains. It has been introduced, presumably accidentally, well outside its native range. The plants shown here were recently found in Onondaga County, NY. It is a somewhat attractive plant in flower but the stems and calyces are covered in stiff spines. Plants have a spreading habit.

Buffalobur Nighshade habit

Flowers have yellow petals and 5 stamens; 4 stamens are of equal length and the fifth elongate and curved

Solanum rostratum flowers

The fruit is a berry that remains enclosed in the calyx which is beset with vicious spines

Solanum rostratum fruit

The leaves are deeply pinnately lobed. This species is in the same genus as potato and is vulnerable to damage from the same insects.

Solanum rostratum leaf

 

July 20, 2012

New York Orchids

Filed under: North American Native Plants — admin @ 23:10

I have been visiting some really nice natural areas this summer. The following are some orchids that were photographed in flower in June and July of this year. The first few were taken at a bog in Chenango County. Grass pink differs from our other orchids in that the flowers are not resupinate, that is they are not inverted from twisting of the pedicel. Therefore the lip is on the top rather than on the bottom as in most other orchids.

Grass Pink

Grass pink

(Calopogon tuberosus)

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White fringed orchid

(Platantheria blephariglottis)

Rose Pogonia

Rose pogonia

(Pogonia ophioglossioides)

These showy lady’s slippers were found blooming in a rich fen in Onondaga County in mid June.

Showy Lady’s Slipper

Showy lady’s slipper

(Cypripedium reginae)

These hooded lady’s tresses have just started flowering at another rich fen in Onondaga County. It differs from other members of the genus in that the lateral petals are fused with the sepals into a hood.

Hooded lady’s tresses

Hooded lady’s tresses

(Spiranthes romanzoffiana)

The last plant is not an orchid but was growing with the plant above. Kalm’s lobelia is characteristic of rich fens and is named in honor of Pehr Kalm, a 17th century botanist who cataloged New World plants on behalf of Linnaeus.

Kalm’s lobelia

Kalm’s lobelia

(Bromus kalmii)

March 22, 2012

Monarch Butterfly Populations Declining

The larvae of Monarch Butterflies (Danaus plexippus) feed exclusively on plants in the genus Asclepias (Milkweeds) and a few other related genera.

Monarch caterpillar on butterfly weed

Monarch larva on Butterfly Weed (Asclepias tuberosa)

According to a new study published in the journal Insect Conservation and Diversity (Pleasants & Oberhauser, 2012), overwintering monarch butterfly populations in Mexico have declined by about half since 1999. This is correlated with an estimated 58% decline in milkweed populations in the Midwest and a corresponding decline of 81% in monarch breeding success. These effects are most likely due to the widespread use of Glyphosate on genetically modified crops immune to the herbicide (i.e. Roundup Ready crops).

March 17, 2012

Plants blooming now

Filed under: Naturalized Plants,North American Native Plants — admin @ 14:57

With the exceptionally warm weather we are experiencing now in the northeast, I decided to take a trip to Little York to see if any plants were blooming. While the spring ephemerals are still at least a few weeks from flowering I did find Daphne and Speckled Alder in full bloom.

Speckled Alder

Speckled Alder

The male flowers are in the larger catkins, while the female flowers are in the short reddish ones. Daphne has more showy blooms, with 4 magenta petal-like sepals and a light fragrance. While the speckled alder is a native wetland shrub, Daphne mezereum is native to Europe and parts of Asia. It can be found in some of our rich woodlands, often along trails. The flowers are followed by bright red fruit in May or June.

February Daphne

Not much else was flowering, however the maples and aspens appear to be flowering on the hillsides a few weeks earlier than I’ve seen in previous years.

January 5, 2012

Parasitic Plants of Central New York

Filed under: North American Native Plants — admin @ 21:17

While most plants are autotrophic (capturing energy directly from sunlight through photosynthesis), a few obtain energy by parasitizing fungi or other plants. Some are both autotrophic and parasitic and these are called hemiparasites. The following species are holoparasites that are completely dependent on their hosts. Those that parasitize fungi are called mycoheterotrophs.

The traditional circumscription of the family Orobanchaceae included only holoparasites. It now includes hemiparasites formerly treated as part of the Scrophulariaceae. The following three species are the former.

Squawroot (Conophilis americana) is a parasite of oaks.

Squawroot

Beechdrops (Epifagus virginiana) is a parasite of American Beech (Fagus grandifolia)

Beech Drops

One-flowered Broomrape (Orobanche uniflora) is an annual that can parasitize a number of different herbaceous plant species

One-flowered Broomrape

One genus in the family Orchidaceae is parasitic in Central NY. There are three species of Corallorhiza found here and the most common is Early Coralroot (Corallorhiza trifida)

Early Coralroot

The genus Monotropa in the family Ericaceae includes two mycoheterotrophic species that occur in CNY. Pinesap (M. hypopithys) is found in acid woodlands under pines.

Pinesap

Indian Pipe (Monotropa uniflora) is more common and occurs in a variety of forested habitats. It differs from Pinesap in producing one flower per flowering stalk.

Indian Pipe

One species in the family Santalaceae is found in CNY. Eastern Dwarf Mistletoe (Arceuthobium pusillum) differs from the other species covered here in that the seeds germinate directly on the host. It is found almost exclusively on Black Spruce (Picea marina) in acid swamps and bogs.

Dwarf Mistletoe

The last group of plants are vines in the Morning Glory Family (Convolvulaceae). Dodders are annual vines that begin life underground but soon lose contact with the soil. The thin twining stems wrap around the stems of other plants, appearing like tangles of orange threads. There are a few species, the most common being Cuscuta gronovii

Dodder

Flowers are produced beginning in July

Dodder flowers

October 9, 2011

Chestnut blight: historical perspective

Filed under: North American Native Plants — admin @ 22:34

In researching the flora of New York State I came across some interesting information regarding the early establishment of Chestnut Blight (Cryphonectria parasitica). In the report of the state botanist of 1908, it was reported that the blight had not yet become established in the Catskill Mountain region. The northernmost extent of its range in NY at that time was thought to be Dutchess County, although it was not clearly established there.

The thing that really caught my eye was the thinking at the time regarding the threat this fungal disease posed to our native Chestnut. According to Peck, “It is more likely that the pessimistic views concerning its rapid spread and destructive consequences, entertained by some writers, will scarcely be realized. Unusually destructive outbreaks of parasitic fungi are apt to be dependent on unusual climatic conditions and therefore to be of short duration”. Clearly this was not the case, and it is hard to find a chestnut tree today of any appreciable size if one can find one at all. The species is essentially now ecologically extinct.

July 22, 2011

Cardinal Flower

Filed under: North American Native Plants — admin @ 22:15

Cardinal flowers are now blooming along the Tioughnioga River. I normally find this plant growing among other plants and as a result the inflorescence  tends to bend toward the light. Today I got lucky and found a large colony growing by itself and they had racemes that were straight upright.

Cardinal Flower raceme

Cardinal Flower closeup

June 29, 2011

Lesser Purple Fringed Orchid

Filed under: North American Native Plants — admin @ 20:40

Lesser purple fringed orchids (Platanthera psychodes) are just beginning to bloom here in central NY. These were found today in a swamp under some poison sumac. Green fringed orchid (Platanthera lacera) was also blooming in the same area. There were many little club-spur orchids (Platanthera clavellata) in bud that should be opening in a few weeks.

Lesser purple fringed orchid

It was overcast so a flash was needed to get a closeup of the flowers, which is why the background is so dark.

 

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