Friday, December 4, 2015

Sparkly Sparrows, Bubbly Birds!



I can't get over our good fortune, here in the Flint Hills: Harris's Sparrows choose OUR AREA to be their winter home!

They do this every year.

This year they arrived  on October 16.  I heard their lovely whistles before I saw their actual selves.  


They perch in the deep grass and thickets of our Creek Field and cluster in the plums along the driveway.

Their cheeps & whistles & bubbly burbles keep me company every day at twilight as I walk the mile-long loop around the Creek Field.

I tried for weeks to get photos of these beautiful birds.

At first, they simply fled into the grass when they saw me coming.    Then they sat  up on branches but bolted the instant I raised my camera.   Next, they stayed still (if blurry) as I looked through the viewfinder--but flew if I sharpened the image.    I swear they could feel themselves coming into focus--& they didn't like it.

But today they let me get close.

They gathered in bushes & on small trees and conversed sweetly while I pressed the shutter.   Perhaps I blended in to the gathering darkness.  

Maybe I myself was comfortingly blurry.

The light wasn't the best for photography--but it was good for proximity.

Welcome, winter neighbors.   May you find shelter & delicious seeds in the Creek Field.

 I am so glad you're here!


Tuesday, November 24, 2015

Neighbors!

It  amazes me  how many non-human residents use the Oak Road!   

Always a dirt road, the Oak Road was a public road in the 19th century.   Now it's just an old ranch road through our property.

When Ron & I walk on it, we never see any of these guys.   But as soon as we're not there, there they are!

These are trail cam clips from late October, early November, 2015.   They are from a camera in a single location on the north end of the road. 

Monday, November 16, 2015

A Slow Changing of the Guard!

Harris Sparrows arrived in our Creek Field on October 16, 2015--one month ago today.

But the katydids are still trilling today, November 16, 2016.  

It's a slow changing of the guard this season!

The new guards are here; the old ones are here--all the guards, milling about!

Sunday, November 8, 2015

Restoring Bottomland Prairie: Crown Vetch Attacks!!

 Ironically, just after posting  about keeping Crown Vetch out of the Creek Field, I found an island of Crown Vetch in the Creek Field!  It didn't spread from the riparian buffer--it hop-scotched in!   Luckily, it was a warm day with no wind, so I was able to spot-spray it immediately.   But where there's one....
I photographed & magnified a leaflet to make sure
it was Crown Vetch, and not Canada Milkvetch.  No
hairs here!  Hopefully, no errors, either!
This tangled mat of green is Crown
Vetch, in the SE corner of the Creek
Field.
Normally, a sprawling, tangled mat means Crown Vetch, while erect,
individually distinguishable plants mean Canada Milkvetch.
But if individuals were invariable, there would be no
evolution!
Crown Vetch is supposed to sprawl, while Canada Milkvetch is supposed to stand up straight.  But on occasion, I have seen individuals in each species do the opposite.

For a beginner like me, whether it's birds, or insects, or plants, or mammals--the trick is learning how much variation is likely within a given species.   

Luckily, husband Ron & I balance each other out.   He's always thinking something different is something new--whereas I'm always trying to fit strange encounters into the existing categories of my known world.   

This photo (looking northwest) shows the patch of Crown Vetch (2nd green patch in;
1st is late-blooming Canada Goldenrod) in relation to the loop-path
that separates the Creek Field from the riparian buffer.    The bare, compacted soil of the path
 is visible in the lower right-hand corner.

Thursday, November 5, 2015

Restoring Bottomland Prairie: Controlling Crown Vetch, Promoting Canada Milkvetch

Agricultural "experts" imported Crown Vetch from the Mediterranean, other "experts" recommended it for erosion control, and it's been an invasive in North American landscapes ever since.
Once established, Crown Vetch
forms a tangled mat.   

One of those know-it-alls told Bird Runner's previous owner to plant it along McDowell Creek--so we've had to battle it ever since 1999, when we created a 4.7-acre native-plant riparian buffer between our Creek Field and the creek.

Therefore, for 16 years we've been locked in struggle with Crown Vetch (along with other exotic invasives, such as Poison Hemlock & Garlic Mustard).  
Golden Alexanders claim territory on the riparian buffer 
  from which Crown Vetch has been removed.   
That's  a Gorgone Checkerspot nectaring on the blossom.  
But look what's lurking in the background!  
The Crown Vetch has retreated into a thicket, just waiting to
expand again.   

Native plants are claiming more and more of the  riparian buffer, so every year there's less & less uprooting or spot-spraying of exotic invasives that needs to be done.

But the invasives are still there, and they're still ambitious!

Since we re-seeded the entire Creek Field back to native in 2013, we've been determined to keep the invasives on the riparian buffer from ever getting into the Creek Field!

In that effort, as always, our greatest allies have been the native plants themselves.

In particular, we've had help from a native vetch, Canada Milkvetch (Astragalus canadensis).  
Here are the lovely white blossoms of Canada Milkvetch, in
front of two blooming yellow Plains Coreopsis.
 Canada Milkvetch does not form a mat as does Crown Vetch.
With Canada Milkvetch, you can always distinguish one
individual plant from another.  Also, the leaves have a blue-
green cast (but not always) unlike the bright-green of Crown
Vetch.

Who can get rid of a bad guy with roots?   A good guy with roots!

Canada Milkvetch germinated the first year, multiplied the second year, and this year has even spread from the Creek Field into the riparian buffer!

But now we human helpers of native plants have a new problem:  how to tell the sprouts of Crown Vetch from those of Canada Milkvetch. We don't want to destroy the latter when we're after the former!
The seedpods of Canada Milkvetch
are unmistakeable.



In maturity, the species are easy to tell apart.

 But when they first come up, either species can be erect or sprawling, and both have similarly shaped leaves with odd-numbered leaflets.
Canada Milkvetch Leaf
Crown Vetch Leaves
(Plant Bug, Lygus sp., upper left)


To the rescue:  Mike Haddock's marvelous book, Kansas Wildflowers & Weeds.   From his book I learned that Canada Milkvetch, unlike Crown Vetch, has tiny hairs pressed into the surface of the leaflets.
Under magnification, the tiny hairs are visible on the leaflets of Canada Milkvetch.


At first I couldn't see this feature with the naked eye--but now that I have photographed the leaves of both species, and magnified the photos, I know what to look for.

Now that I have seen them in photos,  I can see those hairs in the field, even with eyes unaided.

Thank you, Mike!

Your book is helping the native plants re-take the field.







Friday, October 30, 2015

Missing, Savoring Blossom Time

Bee on Redbud April 2015
Creek Field Riparian Buffer
Here it is, almost the last day of October, and I am missing spring.  I am missing the blooms & pollinators.   I am wild to learn more, and the growing, buzzing time is the best school.   I learned to identify a few bumble bees and look-alike carpenter bees & false bumble bees this past spring & summer--but still I cannot say right off what genus & species the bee on the redbud on the left belongs to. I can hardly wait for Spring 2016.

Still, these long autumn nights allow me to do what I couldn't do during the outside-all-day-long spring & summer time, and that is linger over my photos from the past season, ponder the information, review, relearn, & doublecheck.
Grapevine Epimenis (Psychomorpha epimenis) on Redbud, April 2015
Creek Field Riparian Buffer
Bird Runner Wildlife Refuge

Psychomorpha epimenis on Redbud, April 2015
 For, example, when I came across the next three photos--they are of a Grapevine Epimenis, aka  Psychomorpha epimenis, nectaring on a redbud--my first thought was "I had forgotten about that butterfly!"  But upon review I remembered that the Grapevine Epimenis is a moth-- brightly colored & gorgeous but still a moth.   And I was able to go to bugguide.net & study photos of P. epimenis larvae:  they are ringed with black & white stripes with orange patches at both ends.  Their host plants are grapevines (surprise, surprise) of which we have many.  In fact, the redbud this moth is nectaring on is just a few feet away from the banks of McDowell Creek--home to large numbers of wild grapes.  Now I know what caterpillars to look for and where to look for them.   I will be ready for next spring!

Grapevine Epimenis on Redbud, April 2015
Creek Field Riparian Buffer
along McDowell Creek
Bird Runner Wildlife Refuge


     

Saturday, October 3, 2015

Creek Field: Frequent Companions in Late September, Early October, 2015

Green Lace Wing on Goldenrod
Creek Field, 9/29/15
Family Chrysopidae
Order Neuroptera
Walking through the Creek Field is never a lonely experience.

But these days I have clouds of companions, especially right around sunset--fluttery mists of insects rising up around me in response to the disturbance of my steps.       

Prominent among my fellow patrons of the Creek Field are Green Lace Wings.   They disappear into the darkness so quickly it took a flash to get this photo.  

As adults, Green Lace Wings are creatures of dawn, dusk, or nighttime, feeding on nectar, pollen, & occasional small insects.

As larvae, they are carnivorous.   They devour aphids!!!!

I hope they'll come around next year when hordes of aphids attack the beautiful blossoms of Swamp Milkweed!  
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Accompanying every step as well is an explosion of "black" 
Snout Moth
Family Crambidae
on truck window by pole barn
October 1, 2015
moths--at least they look black to me in the gathering dusk.  They zig-zag so rapidly & blend back in with the foliage so quickly that it's hard to get a good look.  It wasn't until one landed on my truck window that I was able to take a photo.   

The photo at left showed me that this moth is not black at all but a remarkable combination of brown & tan.   Magnifying the photo showed that, though its colors are subtle, its wings are decorated lavishly with ridges, bumps, & lacy trim.   

And check out that two-part "nose"!!  
Truly an amazing appendage that not every creature can boast!  

Thanks to Eva Zurek, K-State Insect Diagnostician extraordinaire, I learned that this is a Snout Moth of the family Crambidae.  That name should be easy to remember!  

Also thanks to Dr. Zurek for helping me learn about Lace Wings!