Sep
26
2011
3

Trip Report: Florida native Encyclias

Our Florida vacation started with a bang, when we spent two nights camped in a chickee hut in the northern part of the Florida Everglades.  Our little hut was on stilts in a swampy area on Seminole reservation land.  Directly next to our hut was the entrance to a boardwalk running about a half mile (by my estimation) through a cypress stand.  We went out on this boardwalk twice and really enjoyed it.  It easily landed in the top 3 activities on our trip.

Christie at the entrance to the boardwalk, sporting her very appropriate alligator shirt

Christie at the entrance to the boardwalk, sporting her very appropriate alligator shirt

Along the walk we encountered several alligators, some large and some mid-sized.  The largest one was camped just outside the back pier of our chickee hut.  Yes, our chickee hut had it’s own boardwalk leading back to a picnic table. That’s how cool this place was.

Our chickee hut from the front

Our chickee hut from the front

Our chickee hut

Our chickee hut along the back walkway

Anyway, the alligator behind our chickee hut was probably easily an 8-footer.  We were just about sure that he was fake since he wasn’t moving, but the next day we noticed he was in a slightly different position.  Christie has a theory that he had just eaten a large meal (the people who stayed in our chickee hut before us) and so he was just resting (and waiting for the next careless chickee renters to fall in).  We saw several alligators along the boardwalk, including the one pictured below.

One of the larger alligators watching us

One of the larger alligators watching us just a couple feet away.

Wandering the boardwalk

Wandering the boardwalk

From the boardwalk you could see trees covered in Tillandsias.  It was almost comical at some points to see how many Tillandsias were coating the trunks or hanging twigs of the trees around us.

Tillandsias

Tillandsias

Tillandsia madness

Tillandsia madness

Large Tillandsias

Large Tillandsias

Tillandsia

More Tillandsias

From what we learned, the area we were in would be on the northern part of what is considered the Everglades.  The Everglades is a large region of subtropical wetlands that gently slopes downwards as you go south.  So the entire area is slowly draining towards the sea.  It is not really a swamp, since the water is moving and not stagnant.  However, by observation, there are small pockets where water is motionless and I think the boardwalk here was built over one of those stagnant and swampy areas.  This may or may not have an impact on what plants grow in this area.  I imagine there were no fewer than 5 different species of Tillandsia.  I’m sure a Tillandsia nut would have been able to pick them out, but that is not me.  Also, we probably saw 4 or 5 different species of fern.

Interesting fern

Really nice fern

An interesting lanceolate fern

An interesting lanceolate fern near the water line

We did see some other animal life, besides gators.

Nice butterfly

Nice butterfly. Just when you think it's going to sit still, it starts to move again...

Unknown bird

White ibis (Eudocimus albus)

When we had just about reached the end of our trek the first time, I noticed the first orchid perched on the side of a tree – an Encyclia.  As we retraced our steps on the boardwalk back to our chickee hut, I began to see them all over the place.  My eyes just had to become attuned to look for them.  Without seeing any of these plants in bloom I can’t definitively identify the species, but as far as I understand, only Encyclia tampensis grows in this area, so it should be that species.   Encyclia tampensis is common enough in Florida to be known as the “Florida Butterfly” orchid.

Encyclia!

The first Encyclia sighting!

Encyclia!

Encyclia (upper) and Tillandsia (lower)

Encyclia

Encyclia!

Baby Encyclias

Baby Encyclias spotted along with resurrection fern

Encyclia size comparison

Encyclia size comparison

The next morning when we went on the same boardwalk through this stand, I started seeing even more.  I quickly noticed that one of the larger Encyclias had a seed pod perched on a thin bloom stalk above the plant.  Then I began to notice other Encyclias with this same seed pod.

Boardwalk in morning light

Boardwalk in morning light

Encyclia with seedpod

Encyclia with seedpod. Look closely in the upper left. It is green and shaped like a little football.

Encyclia with seedpod

Encyclia with more visible seedpod

It was great to see these plants growing in their natural habitat and in such prolific numbers.  I was actually able to cross an item off my bucket list by seeing these little orchids growing in nature.  Collecting these plants is illegal and I was happy to uphold the law, only photographing the plants and taking pleasure in the fact that they are doing so well in their natural habitat.

Photographing the Encyclias

Photographing the Encyclias

Yes, I could even touch them.

This is one happy guy!

Sep
16
2010
3

Native Orchid

I was walking around my front yard talking on the phone this week and I reached down and plucked a flower stem off of a “weed” growing in my yard.  As I was walking around I started looking at the flower spike a little more closely and noticed that the flowers were very intricate and attractive, although very tiny.  In fact, they looked a lot like an orchid.

Spiranthes cernua

Spiranthes lacera var. gracilis

The flowers spiral up the stem as they open and are all white, except for some yellow in the “throat.”  I emailed a picture to my orchid friend, Steve, who lives in Arkansas.  He knows a lot about miniature orchids and natives, so I thought he might be able to give me some guidance.  He was familiar with my plant and told me it is called “Nodding Ladies’ tresses” from the genus Spiranthes, possibly Spiranthes cernua.  There are a couple of other species that look very similar, as well.

[2010-09-24 Update:  I got a positive species identification on this plant.  It is Spiranthes lacera var. gracilis.  Thanks to the Native Orchid Conference mailing list for the ID help!]

Steve said that he has seen these in his yard before too and that he is amazed by their hardiness and survivability in mowed lawns.  Since I plucked mine before realizing what it was, I don’t really know where I grabbed it or what the rest of the plant looks like, but Steve tells me it is a very non-descript grass like plant.  I’ll keep my eyes peeled for more flower stems.

The USDA website shows that this plant is native to much of central and eastern North America.

Jul
22
2010
0

Trip Report: The Carnivores of Volunteer Park

A couple of weeks ago I mentioned the not-so-docile plants of the Volunteer Park Conservatory.  Many people are familiar with the Venus fly trap, but there are several other types of carnivorous plants – and the conservatory had several.  I know there were representatives from the popular Sarracenia, Dionaea (Venus fly trap), and Nepenthes genera, and some others that I didn’t know.

Nepenthes sp? in hanging basket

Nepenthes sp. in hanging basket

These plants are commonly called Pitcher plants.  Apparently some people call them Monkey Cups, because monkeys have been observed drinking out of them.  But I’ve never heard anyone call them that before.  Maybe that is more common in the areas where they grow in the wild – and where there are actually monkeys in the wild to drink from them.  These plants grow natively in tropical Asia and Australia.

The Nepenthes genus consists of plants that produce wide and deep pitchers for collecting bugs that are lured into the slick trap.  The lures come in the form of smell, taste and/or color.  The lure attracts the bugs, but the slick inner walls of the pitchers don’t allow the insects to escape.  Often the pitchers are filled with water and insects (or even small animals like rats and lizards) will drown in the pitcher.

Nepenthes climbing a totem

Nepenthes climbing a totem

Though carnivorous, Nepenthes are not all about killing.  The large pitchers actually support some insects in the rainforests where they grow.  Flying insects like mosquitos will lay their eggs in the filled pitchers where they are safe until hatching and eventually flying away.

Other Nepenthes have developed special relationships with specific animals in the rainforest.  One particular Nepenthes has a symbiotic relationship with termites which like to eat the “hair” on the lip of the pitcher.  The colony doesn’t mind too much when a couple of less careful termites fall into the pit.  And the pitcher plant definitely doesn’t mind.

Nepenthes lowii has a very interesting relationship with tree shrews.  The pitcher serves as a stool where the shrews sit and sip the sugary exudate (think “nectar”) that is excreted from the plant.  Meanwhile, the pitcher serves as a toilet for the shrew’s excrement.  Apparently the excrement provides a large portion of the diet for this particular species of Nepenthes.

Nepenthes truncata
Nepenthes truncata

The Nepenthes truncata plant had HUGE pitchers.  I could have easily put my fist into one of them.  And these pitchers were somewhat attractive, with lips that looked like wood.  I assume this is an adaptation to attract some specific insect, though I don’t know what.

You might assume that the pitchers themselves are the blooms of the plant.  Many other plants attract insects to their blooms for pollination.  However, Nepenthes produce blooms totally separate from their pitchers (as you can see below).  In fact, the carnivorous parts of all of these plants are independent of their blooms.  Strictly speaking, the carnivorous parts are actually just modified leaves.

Nepenthes truncata bloom stalkNepenthes truncata bloom stalk

Another popular genus of carnivorous plants is the Sarracenia.  The plants of this genus features a pitcher which grows upright from the base of the plant, unlike the hanging pitchers of Nepenthes.

As a side note, I watched a movie last week with a character who carried a “Saracen sword,” which made me wonder if there was anything to this name.  I wondered if maybe the Sarracenia genus – or even the larger family Sarraceniaceae – was named after the sword, due to the similar shape of the prominent upright pitchers, which are wider at the lip than at the base.  The other possibility is that the geographic locations of the Saracen people coincides with the habitat of these plants.  But that doesn’t work, because Romans coined the Saracen name in reference to the Muslims who lived near the Mediterranean and Arabia, while Sarracenia are from the New World (western hemisphere).  I haven’t found any reference connecting the names of the plant and the sword, but that remains my theory.

[Update 2010-09-01:  A friend informed me that the Sarracenia genus is named after Dr. Michel Sarrazin, a 18th century physician and botanist in Quebec, Canada.]

Sarracenia NOID
The pitchers of Sarracenia suffrutic…

Sarracenia are called The North American Pitcher Plants, to distinguish themselves from the the Nepenthes genus.  They are found in wetlands throughout the eastern US and Canada.  The conservatory had several different Sarracenia on display.  The plant above was particularly attractive, with a blotchy white lip and lid of the pitcher.  Also, I was able to see this plant in bloom, which was just bizarre.  I hadn’t ever seen a Sarracenia in bloom, and I was in for a treat.  I can only describe the bloom as looking like two flowers pressed together.  It’s really weird in that your eye is drawn to the center of most blooms, but the center of this bloom is covered.  See what I mean below.

Sarracenia NOID
The bloom of Sarracenia suffrutic…

I really like the red edges of the bloom above, which belongs to the same plant as the picture above that.  I took a picture of the id tag on this plant, but the picture doesn’t reveal the full name, and I couldn’t find any similar names on the internet when searching for the full name.  Does anyone know what Sarracenia suffrutic could refer to?  I think I’m just missing a couple of letters at the end of the species name.  However, most reliable sources I have found on the internet describe the Sarracenia genus as being fairly small, with just about 10 species, and none of the species have names like this one.  I’m thinking that it is probably a hybrid, but I still haven’t been able to find a hybrid with a name like this.

Sarracenia oreophila

Sarracenia oreophila

I did manage to get the name of the plant pictured above, which was also displaying a really nice bloom.  This one really looked like two blooms pushed into one another, hiding their centers.  Considering the flower is the reproductive organ of the plant, Sarracenias are one of the few modest plants out there in the world, covering up their parts like Adam and Eve.

There is one particularly bad Sarracenia (S. flava) which actually has a narcotic mixed in the nectar on the lip of its pitcher.  Insects that partake of the nectar find themselves passing out and falling into the pitcher.  Maybe it’s ruthless, or maybe it’s a more humane way of taking the insect’s life.  If only we could know what the plant was thinking…

© Copyright 2008-2012 Zach DuFran - all text and images unless otherwise noted.