Dandelion Flowers

L- Common Dandelion plant  R-Atypical Dandelion flower

L- Common Dandelion plant R-Atypical Dandelion flower lacking ligules

Common Dandelion (Taraxacum officinale) is a European species that is naturalized in Michigan. First recorded in the wild in 1837 when it was already well established. Brought here by the earliest settlers as a winter source of greens high in vitamin C they were eaten in the winter and early spring to prevent scurvy. The specific name officinale means “of the shops” and alludes to this useful plants value as a cash crop.

L- Dandelion flower head R- Dandelion seed head

L- Dandelion flower head R- Dandelion seed head

Dandelions are distinctive when in flower or seed. Be careful if you gather plants for greens. They are best when just coming up before they flower. Their deeply toothed leaves and milky juice help to distinguish them but there are look-a-likes. And of course never gather greens from lawns that have had chemicals sprayed on them.

L-Sectioned Dandelion seed head  R- Ray floret with parts labeled

L-Sectioned Dandelion seed head R- Ray floret with parts labeled

What most people call a Dandelion flower is actually a many flowered head. This is true of all members of the large Aster (Asteraceae) family. At the base of a Dandelion head is a group of green bracts called the involucre. Dandelions have only one type of flowers, ray florets. Some members of the Aster family, for example daisies, have ray and disk florets. Ligules are the “petals” of the dandelion flower. Rarely you will find Dandelions where they are absent. The fuzzy ring at the base of an individual flower is the pappus. This develops into the feather-like structure of the seed. Pappus characteristics are needed to separate some species in this family. The involucre is composed of the phyllaries which are the green bracts under the flowers. The florets are held in the receptacle. See Brian Johnston’s post on Microscopy-UK for more photos including some great microscopic images.

Go outside, pick a dandelion flower head, and take it apart. Look at the tiny flowers under a magnifying glass. Try to find the pappus. Understand the structure of this flower head as a first step to learning about the fascinating Aster Family.
Copyright 2015 by Donald Drife

Webpage Michigan Nature Guy
Follow MichiganNatureGuy on Facebook

Maple Spinners

Maple Seeds

Maple Seeds Photo by Robert Muller

Recently a friend remarked, “There are not many spinners this year.” I was puzzled until I realized my friend was talking about maple seeds. When I was a kid we called them propellers or helicopters. I took an informal Facebook poll asking what people called them and they added “Whirligigs” or “Whirligiggers” and appropriately “pain in the butt”.  Technically, it is a samara that is defined as “a winged fruit that does not split open.” Elms, Maples, and Ashes have samaras.

Michigan has six native species of Maples (seven if you recognize Black Maple as distinct from Sugar Maple). The non-native Norway Maple (Acer platanoides) is a too common escaped species.

Silver Maple

Silver Maple

Silver Maples (A.sarrharinum) and Red Maples (A. rubrum) have the best spinners. Silver Maple samaras are 3-6cm (1 ¼ to 2 ½ inch) long and the pair forms a widely diverging angle although often only one seed fully develops.

Red Maple

Red Maple

Red Maple samaras are smaller 1-2.5cm (1/2 to 1 inch) long and the pair is more V-shaped. Often they are reddish. Sugar Maple (A. saccharum) pairs are U-shaped with the samara almost parallel to each other.

Boxelder

Boxelder L- dried seeds in winter R-fresh seeds

Boxelder (A. negundo) has V-shaped pairs and will sometimes hang on the tree all winter. Norway Maples have samara pairs widely spaced so the pairs are almost straight across.

Striped Maple

Striped Maple or Moosewood

Mountain Maple (A. spicatum) and Striped Maple also called Moosewood (A. pensylvanicum) have seeds in branched clusters called racemes. Mountain Maple has seeds approximately 1cm (3/8 inch) long. In Striped Maple the seeds are 2cm (3/4 inch) long. I seldom need to identify maples solely from their seeds. All of these species have other useful characteristics to help determine their identity.

Thanks to Robert Muller for the use of his photo showing the seed of the four species.
Copyright 2015 by Donald Drife

Webpage Michigan Nature Guy
Follow MichiganNatureGuy on Facebook

Spring Beauty in Michigan

Claytonia caroliniana Claytonia virginica

L – Carolina Spring Beauty R- Eastern Spring Beauty

Michigan has two species of Spring Beauty: Eastern Spring Beauty (Claytonia virginica) and Carolina Spring Beauty (Claytonia caroliniana). Spring Beauty is one of earliest spring wildflowers. It flowers before the trees leaf out. A month after flowering the plants have set seed and begin to yellow. Michigan Audubon’s Warner Sanctuary has acres covered with Eastern Spring Beauty. Six weeks after the plants were in full flower I could not find a sign of the plants above ground.

Claytonia virginica  Claytonia caroliniana

Spring Beauty Flowers showing range of color
L -aberrant 6 petaled flower with very dark color C- pale pink flowers R- nearly white flowers

Both of our Spring Beauties have white flowers that are streaked with pink veins. Some flowers lack these veins and are pure white. Other flowers are so heavily streaked as to appear pink. There is usually much variation in any population. They have pink pollen and normally 5 petals.

Claytonia virginica

Eastern Spring Beauty

Eastern Spring Beauty has narrow leaves without a distinct petiole (leaf stem). Where the two species occur together it starts flowering about a week later than Carolina Spring Beauty but their flowering times overlap.  In Michigan, Eastern Spring Beauty occurs mostly south of the Bay City to Muskegon Line but there are some records north of that line.

Claytonia caroliniana

Carolina Spring Beauty

Carolina Spring Beauty has broad leaves with distinct petioles. In Michigan, it occurs mostly north of the Bay City to Muskegon Line.

Most species of plants have a distinct chromosome number. Spring Beauties have a wide range of numbers and appear to breed successfully with plants of other numbers. Reported chromosome numbers for Carolina Spring Beauty are 2n=16, 24, 25, 26, 27, 36, 38. For Eastern Spring Beauty 50 cynotypes (chromosome numbers) have been recorded ranging between 2n = 12-190. Eastern Spring Beauty in the Great Lakes region has numbers below 2n=28 with the higher numbers coming from farther south.

There is still time to find Carolina Spring Beauty blooming in northern Michigan. Get out and look for this pretty plant if you can.

Copyright 2015 by Donald Drife

Webpage Michigan Nature Guy
Follow MichiganNatureGuy on Facebook

Michigan Morels

Morchella esculenta

Common Morel in natural habitat

First, do not identify morels solely from information on this blog. It is best to learn them from an experienced collector of mushrooms or by going to one of the Morel festivals. Two good guides are A Morel Hunter’s Companion: A Guide to True and False Morels,” by Nancy Smith Weber and James A. Weber. It is a Thunder Bay Press publication. Also, May is Morel Month in Michigan by Heather Hallen, Tom Volk, and Gerard Adams is a Michigan State Extension Publication available on line.

As with any wild food, the first time you eat it you should keep an uncooked sample. Some people are allergic to an otherwise non-poisonous plant. Peanuts are not poisonous but many people cannot eat them. Caution is always needed when eating wild foods. Never eat a raw wild mushroom.

True Morels have a hollow stem and cap. The cap is pitted and the lower edge is joined to the stem in most species. In Half-free Morels the stem attaches to the cap about a third of the way up the cap.

False Morels often have a stem that is filled with fine cotton-like structures. The stem and cap join at the top. False Morels have wrinkled caps. They are poisonous.

Michigan has three main true morel species. Common Morel, Yellow Morel and Gray Morel are all common names for Morchella esculenta. This might be a complex composed of several species.  M. crassipes is sometimes split from it. See the webpage Morels of the Upper Peninsula of Michigan. I do not have enough experience with this species to have an opinion as to its validity. I found Common Morel last weekend (May 9th) northeast of Grayling, Michigan. It was in an Aspen stand. This species appears when the White Trillium (Trillium grandiflora) is flowering.

Morchella esculenta

Common Morel in ground, and sectioned showing hollow interior

Common Morel varies in color from a pale, dirty yellow to gray. It is normally 5 to 15cm (2 to 6 inches) tall but much larger individuals are known. Its cap ridges are the same color as the bottom of its pits.

Morchella elata

Black morel

Black Morel (M. elata) normally has a narrow, more pointed cap. Its cap pits are lighter than their ridges, at least when they are mature. I often find Black Morels on higher ground in White Cedar (Thuja) swamps. It must be a location that dries out in the summer. Also I find them under Wild Black Cherries (Prunus serotina).

Morchella semilibera

Half-free Morel

Half-free Morel (M. semilbra) is our smallest true Morel. The other true Morel species have the cap fused with the stem for most of the caps length. Half-free Morels have their caps fused for only the top portion.

Now is the time of year to go looking for morels. Have fun, but be careful. Happy hunting.

Copyright 2015 by Donald Drife

Webpage Michigan Nature Guy
Follow MichiganNatureGuy on Facebook

Weeping Fungus

Fomitopsis pinicola

Red-banded Polypore weeping September 2014

After a rainy day last September, on a standing dead Jack Pine (Pinus banksiana) trunk, I notice a cream colored blob that looks as if someone has rolled a chunk of modeling clay and stuck it to the tree. Droplets of crystal clear, tasteless, non-sticky liquid are collected in slight recesses on the surface of the fruiting body. It looks as if the fungus is weeping but I observe no liquid falling. Ten blobs, probably connected by mycelium, grow on this tree but only the four largest weep. Maybe they are the most developed. They vary in color from cream to tan to a faint reddish-brown. A few hours later, the droplets are gone and I can see the surface covered with dry pits. On the following day they are weeping again.

Fomitopsis pinicola

Red-banded Polypore not weeping, showing pits in surface September 2014

I learned that some fungi regulate their moisture content by secreting liquid via a process called guttation. Several heavy rains had fallen resulting in puddles of water on the Grayling Sand (a rare occurrence). Ample water was in this ecosystem.

Fomitopsis pinicola

Red-banded Polypore developing red coloring October 2014

I could not identify the fungus until I saw it the following April after it had further developed during the winter. It proved to be a common northern fungi, the Red-banded Polypore (Fomitopsis pinicola).  Open pores for sporing on the underside of the fungus were visible.This is a perennial fungi and should continue developing. I hope to make further observations and will report if I do.

Fomitopsis pinicola

Red-banded Polypore April 2015

Note: These photographs are of the same fruiting body taken in September 2014, October 2014, and April 2015.
Copyright 2015 by Donald Drife

Webpage Michigan Nature Guy
Follow MichiganNatureGuy on Facebook

Glossy Buckthorn in Michigan

Frangula alnus

Glossy Buckthorn leaves & fruit

Glossy Buckthorn (Frangula alnus) is also called (Rhamnus frangula). It is a shrub or small tree and aggressively invades wetlands. Shiny, dark green, untoothed, alternate leaves with 7 to 9 pairs of inset veins are characteristics of this species. Its fruit is black when ripe.

Frangula alnus

L-Glossy Buckthorn bark R-Choke Cherry bark

Glossy buckthorn bark is similar to young cherry bark with white lenticels. Most of the time Glossy Buckthorn lenticels are almost round. Cherry lenticels are long lines parallel to the ground. The inner bark on Glossy Buckthorn is orange, on cherries it is reddish to dark brown. Glossy Buckthorn’s buds are rust-colored and naked. They are covered by leaf remnants. The slender twigs are tipped with velvet-like hairs. Twigs never have a thorn at their tips or toothed leaves which are characteristics of Common Buckthorn.

Frangula alnus

Glossy Buckthorn twig showing fine hairs

Glossy Buckthorn can rapidly invade a fen or wetlands. Seedlings often cover the ground. As with many invasive species Glossy Buckthorn leafs out early and stays green late in the fall. I have seen fruiting plants only .6m (2 feet) tall. It will fruit in its second year if conditions are good. The species is now found throughout Michigan and steps to eradicate it should be taken wherever it is found.

Frangula alnus

Glossy Buckthorn seedlings covering the ground

Copyright 2015 by Donald Drife

Webpage Michigan Nature Guy
Follow MichiganNatureGuy on Facebook

Wildflowers in Winter: Plants Having Elongated Seedheads

Here are some of the Michigan winter wildflowers with elongated seedheads.

Onoclea sensibilis

Sensitive Fern

Sensitive Fern (Onoclea sensibilis) does not have seedpods but sporophylls. They form a beadlike structure in parallel rows that persist throughout the winter. The spores are released in springtime. It occurs throughout the state.

Chelone glabra

White Turtlehead

White Turtlehead (Chelone glabra) seedpods do resemble a turtle’s head. Opposite leaves, a dense spike with the seedpods in rows distinguish this species. It is 1-2 feet (.3-.6m) tall. It occurs throughout the state.

Anemone

Thimbleweed

Thimbleweed has cottony seed heads at the end of the stems. There are two species in Michigan, one (Anemone cylindrica) with narrow seedheads and a second species (A. virginiana)with broader seedheads. It is often not possible to separate the two species in the winter. Both species occur throughout the state. A. virginiana is the species in the photographs.

Verbena hastata

Blue Vervain

Blue Vervain (Verbena hastata) has narrow terminal spikes, squarish stems, and opposite leaves. It is 2-4 (.6-1.2m) feet tall. It occurs throughout the state.

Agastache nepetoides

Yellow Giant Hyssop

Yellow Giant Hyssop (Agastache nepetoides) has broader terminal clusters than Blue Vervain. It has squarish stems and opposite leaves. It occurs in Michigan south of the Bay City to Muskegon line. It is now appearing in plantings of native plants.

Dipsacus

Teasel

Teasel has a spiny stem and a head surrounded by curved brackets. It is 3-10 feet (1-3m) tall. There are two species in Michigan: Wild Teasel (Dipsacus fullonum), and Cut-leaf Teasel (Dipsacus laciniatus). See my August 2014 blog for more info. They often cannot be distinguished in the winter. Both species occur throughout the state but are more common south of the Bay City to Muskegon line.

Copyright 2015 by Donald Drife

Webpage Michigan Nature Guy
Follow MichiganNatureGuy on Facebook

Wildflowers in Winter: More Plants Having Small Seedpods

Here are some of the other southeast Michigan winter wildflowers with small pods. By small I mean shorter then 13mm [1/2 inch] and a diameter less than 6mm (1/4 inch).

Hypopitys monotropa

Pinesaps

Pinesaps (Hypopitys monotropa) is also called (Monotropa hypopithys). Upward pointing styles and a loose spike are the characters of this species. Pinesaps are leafless plants that live off of tree roots that they attach to via a fungus. The fancy term is myco-heterotrophic  plants. The flowers hang down but as the seedpods develop they turn upward.

Gentiana andrewsii

Closed or Bottled Gentian

Closed or Bottled Gentian (Gentiana andrewsii) in the winter is just like the flowers but without the color. It is difficult to identify the Closed Gentian group to species when they are flowering. The seedpod shown here was from a colony that I identified when it flowered in the fall so I know which species it is. Opposite leaves and the distinct seedpod shape identify this as part of the Closed Gentian group.

Gentiana andrewsii

Closed or Bottled Gentian

Orchids have distinctive 6 parted seedpods. Hanging from the end of the capsule are the dried up petals and sepals. Broad-leaved Helleborine (Epipactis helleborine) is commonly encountered even in the city. See blog posting from August 2013. Its leafy spike with many seedpods is distinctive.

Cypripedium acaule Epipactis helleborine

L-Pink Lady-slipper R-Broad-leaved Helleborine

Lady-slippers have large capsules and when in seed the species are identified based size, habitat and leaf remnants or leaf scars. Pink Lady-slipper or Moccasin Flower (Cypripedium acaule) has a single seedpod on a stem without leaf scars.  I know of pinewoods where 1000’s of plants bloom and only a dozen plants set seed.

Verbascum blattaria

Moth Mullein

Moth Mullein (Verbascum blattaria) has 5mm (3/16 inch) diameter spherical seedpods on short, curved, upward pointing pedicels. Pedicels are the stalks that support individual flowers or seedpods on an inflorescence. Dried clasping leaves often remain along the main stem.
Copyright 2015 by Donald Drife

Webpage Michigan Nature Guy
Follow MichiganNatureGuy on Facebook

Wildflowers in Winter: Plants Having Small Seedpods

Here are some of the southeast Michigan winter wildflowers with small pods. By small I mean shorter then 13mm [1/2 inch] and a diameter less than 6mm (1/4 inch).

Berteroa incana

Hoary Alyssum

Hoary Alyssum (Berteroa incana) has a small, see-through, flat, pod with an elongate tip. Normally some of the hairs remain along the stem. It is seldom taller than 30cm (12 inches). The seeds are in a simple raceme. A raceme is a flowering spike where the individual flowers are on short, unbranched stems of equal lengths.

Lepidium virginicum

Peppergrass

Peppergrass (Lepidium virginicum) has flat, two seeded pods that are notched at the tip. Nine species in this genus occur in Michigan and can be identified  by the shape of the seedpod. Peterson’s A Field Guide to Wildflowers illustrates several species. The dense raceme is characteristic of this genus.

Hypericum perforatum

Common St. John’s-wort

Common St. John’s-wort (Hypericum perforatum) has  seedpods arranged in a cyme which is central flowering stalk that ends at a group of flowers and has branched side stalks from the central stalk. Seedpods are open at one end and have three elongated thread-like tips.

Penstemon digitalis

Foxglove Beard-tongue

Foxglove Beard-tongue (Penstemon digitalis) has seedpods that are narrower than Common St. John’s-wort and the tips on the seedpods are not as narrow. The number of tips varies from three to five. The seedpods are acute.

Oenothera spp

Evening Primrose

Evening Primrose (Oenothera spp.) has a narrow seedpod that splits into four sections. They are arranged in a simple raceme. The plants can be 2m (6 feet) tall.
Copyright 2015 by Donald Drife

Webpage Michigan Nature Guy
Follow MichiganNatureGuy on Facebook

Common Loon: Michigan’s Northern Icon

L-Adult Common Loon with young of year R-Young of year

L-Adult Common Loon with young of year R-Young of year

No other bird signifies the wilds of northern Michigan better than the Common Loon (Gavia immer). When I wake up while camping along the shore of a northern lake and feel its eerie cry, I am connected to a primitive time and the primitive land.

However, I did not encounter my first loon at a pristine lake as I imagined but rather in the Detroit River. My dad and I were birding from the shoreline of Belle Isle on a dreary November day when I spotted a dull, grey, Common Loon in its winter plumage. Floating low in the water, looking unducklike, I knew immediately it was a loon. I was twelve years old and I still recall my excitement. Detroit smokestacks formed the background. My next loon was seen and heard the following summer at Lake Michigamme in the Upper Peninsula. This was the first time I heard its haunting call.

Common Loons breed in Michigan north of Saginaw. Our current population is 500-775 nesting pairs. While this is up from the estimated 220 pairs in the early 1980s, there are still thousands of suitable lakes without a nesting pair. Loons are diving birds with their legs placed toward their tails. This gives them trouble walking on land. It is rare to see a loon on land except at its nest. Loons return in early spring and it is not uncommon to see them on a lake the day after its ice melts. How they know that the water is open remains a mystery. Nests are built near the waterline and often touch the water. Nests are little more than bare ground when the eggs are laid. Both parents incubate the eggs and add grass, sedges, reeds, and other vegetation to the nest. My photograph of the nesting loon was taken with a long lens and then cropped down. The resolution makes this image too coarse to print but acceptable for a blog post. This nest was on an island and had a safe zone marked around it.

L-Common Loon on nest R-Warning buoy for boaters

L-Common Loon on nest R-Warning buoy for boaters

L-Adult birds feeding chick R-Common Loon chick

L-Adult birds feeding chick R-Common Loon chick

Both parents feed and defend the young.  They flap their wings and call when a predator is nearby, finally diving if danger is too close. The pair that I photographed is on a lake with a nearby Bald Eagle nest. The loons’ behavior alerted me to the presence of the eagle several times. This pair nests on a lake with a lot of watercraft activity even though a suitable (at least suitable to my eyes) lake without boats or loons exists nearby. They will swim close to drifting boats seemingly unafraid, and merely dive to avoid jet skis.

L-Adult Common Loon with watercraft R-Sub-adult Common Loon in second year plumage

L-Adult Common Loon with watercraft R-Common Loon in second year plumage

Immature birds, once they are fledged, resemble winter plumage adults, and gain their adult plumage in their third year. Rarely seen in Michigan are the sub-adult (second year) plumage birds. One was on the lake where I photographed the nesting pair. Winter, immature, and sub-adult plumage Common Loons always have white  near their eyes. It might not surround it but they always have a partial eye-ring. This character distinguishes them from other loon species.

We need to set aside bogs along lake edges as well as islands for nesting habitat. Manmade platforms placed at the water’s edge are also effective. If watercraft operators respect the loons’ space they can co-exist. I hope that loons will continue their recovery.
Copyright 2015 by Donald Drife

Webpage Michigan Nature Guy
Follow MichiganNatureGuy on Facebook