This week for Flora and Fauna Friday we have lean, mean, green, tree climbing machine, the Rough Green Snake (Opheodrys aestivus).
The Rough Green Snake is found throughout the Southern United States and all of South Carolina. It’s an unmistakable snake here, being thin as a finger for two-feet or more in length and a uniform emerald-green above with straw-yellow below. In the Appalachians Mountains, the Smooth Green Snake exists instead, a species which looks nearly identical except, it’s smooth! The Rough Green Snake is conversely rough, having keeled scales with vertical ridges that run along their length.
The Rough Green Snake is an arboreal snake, living almost its entire life in the tree canopies of hardwood forests and the brushy thickets along rivers and forest margins. Here they feed on invertebrates including cicadas, katydids, and caterpillars, as well as anoles and tree-frogs. Strangely, they aren’t known to raid bird nests for eggs, despite having the climbing chops to reach any woodland bird’s nest. Given their slender build, this live-and-let-live relationship between Green Snakes and birds may be an adaptation by the snakes to avoid unceasing harassment from sharp-eyed birds with equally sharp bills. Rough Green Snakes are not venomous nor do they constrict, they simply grab and swallow their prey whole. Despite being very common, Green Snakes are hard to spot, on account of them being green and living at the tops of trees. Yet, they frequently visit bushes closer to eye level and slither down to the ground to cross roads, lay their eggs, and move from tree to tree. Rough Green Snakes are prey for most any predator that finds them, particularly birds. Notably, they are a favorite food of Mississippi and Swallow-tailed Kites and it’s not an uncommon site to see a Kite circling overhead with a limp lime-green line trailing behind it, snacking on a snake-flavored Slim-Jim one bite at a time. When confronted, Rough Green Snakes freeze in place, relying on their camouflage to hide them in plain sight. They’re very adept climbers but not very fast in a straight line race for cover.
This week for Flora and Fauna Friday we have the subtropical supplement to Lowcountry backroads, Snow Squarestem (Melanthera nivea).
Cruising through a secluded dirt road below an umbral tunnel of live oaks, the cascade of Spanish moss shadows even the midday sun as you drift upon the splendor of this idyllic Sea Island scene. Through this diurnal twilight a sparkle of starlight pierces its liminal veil. Snow Squarestem flowers shimmering in white above its margins, sun-flecks suspended in the air, drawing attention to them. These floral beacons sway with life, encircled by bees and butterflies, the sprites and faeries congregating about them in this interstitial world, where the domain of man has carved a course which ever slowly melds back into the maritime jungles of Mother Nature.
Snow Squarestem is one of those wildflowers that sings to me of sea island summers, sweating on a shaded stroll or soaking up the tattered scenery on the heel of a September gale. It’s found in only the deep Lowcountry of South Carolina, in a concave arc from McClellanville to Aiken, and thus so its gestalt is firmly planted on the Sea Islands in my mind’s eye. Snow Squarestem is a plant with distinct and narrow growing conditions. It prefers sandy and calcium-rich soils, ample moisture, heavy shade, and a subtropical climate. This makes the dirt road shoulders and ditches of Edisto Island one of its favorite places to be. Once established, it’s a hardy, carefree wildflower and a long-lived perennial, returning to bloom each year.
Snow Squarestem is a member of the sunflower family, Asteraceae, but shows characteristics more familiar to many of our mint family wildflowers, Lamiaceae. Snow Squarestem is a tall plant growing chest high in an open and airy growth form composed of narrow stems growing square in cross-section. Its leaves are a deep inky-green with a distinct “pike-like” shape, having an elongate center, angled point, and two angular lobes jutting perpendicular from the base. Above the leaves atop its square stems collects its snow-white flowers. Snow Squarestem blooms from August to September with a modest scattering of blooms at its stems’ ends. Each bloom is a composite composed of a hundred or more small tubular flowers, forming a flat-topped compound flower an inch in width. These flowers are a favorite of many of our pollinators, particularly the Zebra Longwing, an unmistakable tropical-migrant butterfly who typically arrives on Edisto Island in number every August.
This week for Flora and Fauna Friday, we have a tropical butterfly that’s making itself a home here on Edisto Island, the Great Southern White (Ascia monuste).
The Great Southern White is a medium-sized butterfly, triangular in profile and about an inch-and-a-half tall. It belongs to the Pieridae family, kin to the larger Sulphurs, smaller Yellows, and mid-sized Oranges and other Whites. The male Great Southern White’s wings and body are a clean cream-white with a smoky-gray leading edge. Females are often the same but may darken their wing veins with a graphite-gray haze. In flight, both sexes show a dark leading edge to their forewings. Yet, their most standout feature is the neon-turquoise clubs at the tips of their antennae, which distinguish this butterfly from the Cabbage White (Pieris rapae) and Checkered White (Pontia protodice). Great Southern White caterpillars feed on plants in the cabbage family, Brassicaceae, particularly Virginia Pepperweed (Lepidium virginicum) in our uplands and Saltwort (Batis maritima) in our high salt marshes.
The Great Southern White is both a tropical and a coastal species, ranging across the coasts of Central America, the Caribbean, all along the Gulf Coast, and throughout Florida, drifting north into coastal Georgia and South Carolina later in the year. Like many of the tropical butterfly species that call Florida home, to include Gulf Fritillaries, Long-tailed Skippers, and Zebra Longwings, the Great Southern White’s abundance here in South Carolina is dependent on how good of a spring and summer they had in Florida. If their populations there boom, we see a glut of tropical butterfly migrants on the Sea Islands in late summer. But even in a good year, they are a rare butterfly here in South Carolina and a species that is a special sight for us to see. However, I’ve noticed a strange abundance and prevalence of Great Southern White on Edisto Island in recent years. Since I started working for the Edisto Island Open Land Trust in 2017, there have always been Great Southern Whites fluttering about the meadows of the Hutchinson House and down the scenic corridor of Point of Pines Road. Every summer they appear, and not just single butterflies, but multiples, with males patrolling territories as they circle incessantly, rather than migrating north. The curious thing is that these butterflies are fresh as a daisy, richly colored and not one nick in their wings. That’s a bit odd for something the size of a Ritz cracker that just flew across dozens of rivers, down hundreds of roads, and through untold thunderstorms during its two-hundred mile trip up from Florida! Pretty quickly I realized that this was a resident population of Great Southern Whites, the first one known from the Carolinas. From there I pieced together that the adult butterflies relied on the wildflower meadows at the Hutchinson House for nectar and their caterpillars were being raised on the vast expanses of Saltwort growing in the hard marshes within the upper reaches of Ocella Creek, between Botany Bay and Point of Pines Road. I’ve seen this species seven years running now at the Hutchinson House and hope 2024 will be our eighth! Last year, I saw evidence that this species may also be established in Port Royal Sound. Who knows, in a decade they me be as common across the Sea Islands!
This week for Flora and Fauna Friday we’re dredging up an aquatic, carnivorous wildflower, Humped Bladderwort (Utricularia gibba).
Here is South Carolina we have about ten species of Bladderwort, with about six being somewhat common in the Lowcountry. One, the Humped Bladderwort, is especially common here around Edisto Island and can be found in most every one of our permanent wetlands. So I’ll be focusing mostly on that species today.
Humped Bladderwort spends its days floating about in the warm, stagnant waters of Lowcountry ponds and backwaters. In August and September it blooms, flying its delicate yellow flowers, about the size of a thumbnail, on wiry stems held only a few inches above the water’s surface. Its lemon-yellow flowers are conspicuously saddle-shaped, with a broad and entire, upturned lower petal. When flowering, Bladderworts are hard to miss. But, the rest of the year, they’re hard find! For example, the main body of a Humped Bladderwort plant is a feathery, filamentous mat floating just below the water’s surface, often nestled between sphagnum mounds or obscured by floating duckweeds.
Each Bladderwort species is slightly different than the next but similar in very many ways. Some float while some grow underground in wet soil. All produce miniscule leaves. Some have humped flowers, some have horned flowers. Most have yellow flowers but a few are pale-purple. Some flowers are free standing, while others emerge from a floating pontoon platform. However, Bladderworts all share one common feature, they’re carnivorous. Bladderworts get their name from their “bladders”, which they use to trap and digest small arthropods. These bladders are hollow, jug-shaped, and very small, often smaller than a mustard seed. As the bladders grow and begin to take shape, they expand while leaving a vacuum inside the bladder, containing no air nor water. At the mouth of the bladder is a watertight valve set on a literal hair trigger. When an arthropod bumps against one of these hairs, it triggers the valve to implode open, sucking in water along with the critter and forcing the valve back shut. All this happens in one-tenth the time it takes a human to blink! At this point the plant will digest its prey to extract its mineral nutrients. This gives the plants access to many elements they need to thrive, especially Nitrogen, which may not be freely available in the acidic, nutrient limited ecosystems where they grow.
This week for Flora and Fauna Friday, it’s the original beachcomber, the Sanderling (Calidris alba).
A trip to a Lowcountry beach isn’t complete unless you spy a Sanderling. They’re by far our most common beach-going shorebird and a regular sight on any barrier island. In fact, they’re a cosmopolitan species found on shorelines throughout the globe. Sanderlings belong to the diverse “Peep” genus, Calidris, whose members are all small, compact shorebirds. Peeps can be notoriously hard to distinguish from one another. Thankfully, Sanderlings are one of the easier species to identify. Overall, they’re middle of the road in size and shape, being most similar in form factor to a Dunlin. But, unlike a Dunlin, their bill is short and unmarked. Looking closer, they have black legs, a black bill, and, in winter, a pale plumage of snow-white below and aluminum gray above. In summer, their head and wings warm to a mottled rusty-orange and ebony-black as they prepare for a long flight north to breed in the Arctic Circle. Juvenile birds stick around in South Carolina over summer and carry their winter plumage, but with a back mottled with black blotches. Another unique feature of the Sanderling, which can help with picking them out of a crowd, is that they only have three toes, lacking the fourth “spur” toe on the rear of their foot. This allows for their unique running gait.
Sanderlings feed on invertebrates that get washed ashore by the tides or that wriggle out of the dampened sand. Sprinting and zig-zagging, they drift along the seashore; dodging wave breaks as they pluck morsels from the wet sand. Often times, darting towards the receding sea to snatch up zooplankton thrown ashore before hightailing it uphill to avoid getting swamped by the surf. This behavior of mad dashing down the beach, pencil thin legs ablur punctuated by whiplash inducing snack breaks, makes this little white shorebird one of our easiest to spot, and most endearing to watch, when our paths cross where land ends.
This week for Flora and Fauna Friday it’s the towering flower of the coastline, Seashore Mallow (Kosteletzkya pentacarpos).
Seashore Mallow (AKA Saltmarsh Mallow) is found throughout the coastal zone of South Carolina as well as all the East and Gulf Coast states. It grows in brackish marshes, ditches, and the upper reaches of other sunny and tidally influenced wetland systems. Seashore Mallow grows to head height as an herbaceous, perennial bush. These Mallows also clump together to create small thickets. They have large triangular-ish leaves and that “Christmas-Tree” growth form that most Mallows tend to have, with a tall and straight central stem and diagonal limbs branching off below it. And again, like most Mallows, it has large and beautiful flower. The flower of Seashore Mallow is two to three inches across with five pastel-pink petals arranged around a central golden style, like a miniature parasol. These flowers attract many bees and butterflies to pollinate them, and even a hummingbird or two. Seashore Mallow is one of very few showy native wildflowers that can tolerate regular saltwater intrusion, making it a great addition to waterfront yards and coastal ponds that see a bit of salt.
Seashore Mallow is typically found in the upper reaches of tidal rivers, creeks, marshes, and ditches. It’s usually growing right there in the brackish transition zone. This is a consequence of its adaptations for tidal dispersal. The large seeds of Seashore Mallow contain air pockets that make them buoyant. This permits them to float downstream after heavy rains and then ride high tides, particularly our king tides, inland to a new home. However, Seashore Mallow isn’t the most salt tolerant plant. So it can’t survive in the true salt marsh or areas with regular full-strength tidal influence. So it relies on exceptional tides to carry it far and deep upstream into the coves and crevices of the interstice we call the brackish zone.
This week for Flora and Fauna Friday, we have a beetle like none other, the Palmetto Weevil (Rhynchophorus cruentatus).
The Palmetto Weevil is a hard one to misidentify. Their inch-long, pill-shaped body is colored a base coat of asphalt-black and accented with variable blotches of cinnabar-red. Palmettos Weevils are our largest Weevil species in North America. Like most Weevils (family Curculionidae) Palmetto Weevils possess an elongated rostrum, or snout, with their antennae emerging from the side of it. At the end of this rostrum is their mouth. Males have a bumpy rostrum and females a smooth one. You might now be wondering, “Why the long face?” Well, it allows Weevils to bore down into vegetation more efficiently than other beetles. For example, this allows them to feed on the inside of a nut by just punching one little hole, rather than having to fit their whole head inside. More importantly, it allows female Weevils to turn around and easily lay their eggs deep in a fruit, nut, or the tissue of a plant, rather than in a shallow cut at the surface like most beetles must. This often circumvents some of the plant’s defenses and gives their offspring a head start.
The Palmetto Weevil is found throughout Florida with a range spanning up the East Coast to South Carolina. As their name implies, they host on palmettos. So their range is ultimately limited by the abundance of host palms. Their primary native host is the Cabbage Palmetto but they will use Saw Palmetto as well. Yet, they will also make use of many of the exotic and ornamental palms when available. Female Palmetto Weevils lay their eggs at the base of live palm fronds. Once hatched, their larvae burrow into the trunk of the Palmetto and feed around the bud at the crown of the palm, growing as they go. Once full grown, they build a cocoon to pupate. All told, it takes about three months for a Palmetto Weevil to go from egg to adult beetle. The adults can live for weeks or months after. The peak time to see Palmetto Weevils is late spring, in April or May, but they continue to fly well into summer.
Palmetto Weevils are not a threat to our palmettos in a natural setting, as a whole. However, they can be destructive of individual trees when conditions are right. Palmetto Weevils, like many beetles, have an incredibly sensitive sense of smell tuned to the specific chemicals emitted by their host plant when it’s in a certain condition. For Palmetto Weevils, they can smell a stressed out or dying palmetto. Male Palmetto Weevils often survey through stands of palmettos to detect a promising palm. If they like the scent, they perch and begin releasing pheromones. Other Palmetto Weevils detect these pheromones and follow them in to join the party. The Weevils will turn this into a colony tree. As their larvae feed, they stress the tree further and draw in even more Weevils. This creates a snowball effect, which is not good for the unlucky palmetto. A Palmetto Weevil infestation can weaken or even girdle a palmetto trunk and subsequently cause its trunk to snap below the crown, killing the tree. Despite the coordinated siege-like character of this “colony tree” behavior, it is better as a whole for the Weevils and the palmettos. The colony tree is sacrificed, concentrating the Weevils there. Yet, the other healthy palmettos are spared. This keeps the two species’ populations stable and healthy, avoiding large population swings and crashes. Thus the Palmetto Weevil plays a small but nuanced role in our Sea Island ecology.
This week for Flora and Fauna Friday it’s a smothering covering of parasitic vines, the Dodders of genus Cuscuta.
Here in South Carolina we have about seven species of Dodder. Of those, four are fairly common in the Lowcountry: Field Dodder (C. campestris), Compact Dodder (C. compacta), Scaldweed (C. gronovii), and Five-angled Dodder (C. pentagona). Each has its own preferred habitats, a typical size range, and can be distinguished from one another by their flower shape and bloom times.
Five-angled Dodder (C. pentagona) is likely the most generalist of our four species. It grows up to a moderate size with moderate aggression. Its white flowers have distinctly pointed petals with inflexed, S-hooked tips. Its peak bloom time is July but can start as early as May and run into September.
Field Dodder (C. campestris) is found in fields, lawns, and other regularly disturbed sites. It’s most similar to Five-angled Dodder but a bit more aggressive and lacking pointy flower petals. Its flowering peak is August, but may begin in May and carry into September.
Sessile Dodder (C. compacta) is a forest specialist, with a compact form adapted to shadier, low energy environs and a greater ability to tap into woody plant twigs. It has smaller, narrower, ivory-white flowers often packed together in dense clusters along a host’s stem. It blooms in late summer, peaking in September.
Scaldweed (C. gronovii) is the largest and most aggressive of our four species. It prefers riparian areas, ditches, and wetland margins. It has larger, pearl-white flowers with rounded petals that emerge at Autumn’s dawn in mid-September.
Apart from subtle differences in life history and flower shape, all our Dodders look remarkably similar. As members of the Morning-Glory family, Convolvulaceae, they grow as thread-like vines, twisting and twining between the stems and twigs of neighboring vegetation. Yet, unlike normal Morning-Glories, Dodders grow no leaves and set no roots, at least no roots in the traditional sense. Dodders are a parasitic plant and subsist wholly through leeching the lifeblood from their hosts. When a Dodder seed germinates, its lone goal is to find a suitable host to latch onto. Dodders typically parasitize herbaceous plants but can tap into the new growth of woody shrubs and saplings. Dodders target stems and twigs, twisting tightly around them. This coiled vine swells and produces adventitious roots that burrow into the vascular tissue of their host. This parasitic root structure is called a “haustorium”, the graft of an involuntary scion. The nutrition sapped from the host sustains and grows the Dodder into a straw-colored net that swallows hedges and thickets in a tan, tangled blanket; a golden fleece that withers and smothers life from the Earth, rather than nurturing and invigorating it like its mythical analog. The vines of Dodders are thin, wiry, and a rich golden-yellow color. They crisscross and climb, entwining everything in their reach to parasitize dozens of host plants at once.
Dodders are generally found in sunny open areas, as the more prolific and better off their host plants are, the better a Dodder can persist as a parasite. This can make Dodders into crop pests when they make their way into agricultural fields, swallowing and sucking dry crops as it spreads. Dodders primarily bloom in summer and into early fall, precise timing varying with the species. Flowers emerge in clusters from the Dodder’s stems, generally at the haustoria. These flowers are small, five-petalled, and white to cream-colored with an urn-like shape. These insect pollinated flowers mature into capsules packed full of tiny round seeds, like grains of sand. Dodders, having no roots and a parasite of forbs, are themselves annual plants. But, perplexingly, Dodders have no obvious means of dispersing their seeds. These seeds attract no birds, cling to no mammals, and catch no wind. They simply fall to the ground. In our modern day they primarily get spread around by tractor, plow, or mower, falling into a crevice only to be shook loose or washed out elsewhere. Yet, their natural vector of dispersal is still mainly a mystery.
This week for Flora and Fauna Friday, we have an odd duck making its way up from down south, the Black-bellied Whistling Duck (Dendrocygna autumnalis).
Black-bellied Whistling Ducks are peculiar creatures. Somewhere between a duck and a goose in appearance and similar in behavior in many respects to a Wood Duck, they’re just plumb an odd duck. As they say, if it looks like a duck, swims like a duck, and quacks like a duck, it’s probably a duck. Well this duck looks funny and can’t quack. So you be the judge. Long pink legs, a stout pink and orange bill, a beady black eye set in a heavy white eye-ring, khaki head, brown crown, chestnut-brown chest and back, white wing coverts, and a trademark black belly make them a unmistakable bird both on the wing, on the ground, or in the trees. Black-bellied whistling Ducks love to perch on trees or stumps. Their genus name “Dendrocygna” literally means “tree swan”. It’s not a bad name given they’re cavity nesters. Much like a Wood Duck, Black-bellied Whistling Ducks nest in old Pileated Woodpecker cavities carved in trees overhanging the water. They can lay up to twenty eggs. The day after their ducklings hatch, they leap straight out the nest and freefall to the water! Black-bellied Whistling Ducks are also at home on dry ground and can readily be seen perched along pond banks, standing tall with a straight posture on long legs, or foraging for grass and grains through lawns and fields like a goose. Even still, they spend a good deal of their time in the water, feeding on vegetation and avoiding predators. So these ducks are quite adaptable! The call of the Black-bellied Whistling Duck is a wheezing whistle, sounding somewhere between a Wood Duck’s cooing and a shorebird’s mutterings.
Here in the Lowcountry, Black-bellied Whistling Ducks can be found in shallow ponds or in freshwater and brackish impoundments along the coast, especially within the ACE Basin. However, it wasn’t always like this. Over much of the last century, the Fulvous Whistling Duck (D. bicolor) was an irregular visitor to the Lowcountry. Then, in the 1990s, the Fulvous Whistling Ducks stopped coming and, about the same time, the Black-bellied Whistling Ducks start appearing. In just the last decade, their numbers in South Carolina have increased by an order of magnitude. Historically, the Black-bellied Whistling Duck has been limited to the American tropics and South Texas. In about the 1970s, a critical mass of Black-bellied Whistling Ducks strayed into the Florida peninsula. At which point they established a permanent breeding population. From those few pioneers, they multiplied and spread outward and upward to occupy much of Florida. Some enterprising young ducks eventually made their way north along the Atlantic and found the well-kept duck fields of the sub-tropical ACE Basin festooned with vacant, low-rent Wood Duck boxes. You could liken it to the Promised Land for this peculiar duck. In just the last ten years they’ve established a breeding population in the ACE Basin, particularly on Edisto Island. I’ve seen more and more of their ducklings with each passing year and pairs appearing on the banks of most all our small ponds.
This week for Flora and Fauna Friday, we have a western wildflower with a love of wastelands, Bitter Sneezeweed (Helenium amarum).
Bitter Sneezeweed is a small wildflower, usually only reaching a foot or so in height with an upward, bouquet-like shape. Its leaves are thin, wiry, and numerous. They lend the plant a hazy, almost blurry look from a distance, where its leaves are too fine for the eye to individually resolve, like a mirage shimmering above a desert. Bitter Sneezeweed gets its common names from its foliage. Its leaves are chock full of bitter chemicals to discourage herbivores from chowing down. Yet, dairy cattle will eat it incidentally or when pickings are slim. Then those bitter compounds will transfer to that cow’s or goat’s milk, making it unpalatable for people. The generic Sneezeweed name comes from an old practice of drying and crushing the leaves of related Common Sneezeweed (H. autumnale) to make a powder that induced sneezing when inhaled. Above those leaves and atop this minute, multi-stemmed bush appears its handsome flowers, golden spheres served upon a dish of lemon-yellow rays. Bitter Sneezeweed begins to bloom about the summer solstice and carries forward through the end of summer. Its blooms are often the only flash of color, and one of a scant few sources of pollen and nectar, in many locales during the dog days of a Lowcountry summer.
Here in South Carolina, we have about a half dozen species of Sneezeweed, with Bitter Sneezeweed being the most widespread by far. However, Bitter Sneezeweed is a native to eastern Texas and its neighboring states but, thanks to us, has spread to new habitats throughout the South, to include all of South Carolina. Bitter Sneezeweed is adapted to the sedimentary soils of East Texas and is especially tolerant of the acidic, droughty, and calcium heavy soils found there. Across the South, it has settled into a second home on the disturbed and barren soils mankind leaves in the wake of our infrastructure. Bitter Sneezeweed is most often found along dirt roads, causeways, dirt pits, gravel parking lots, abandoned buildings, and others such sites on the fringes on man’s influence. These areas often have poor, compacted, weathered, droughty soils that are high in calcium from surrounding concrete, limestone, or oyster shells. Sprinkle on a little bit of shade from the midday sun, cast by a tree line or building, and this is the humble niche Bitter Sneezeweed has nestled into across the South.
Bitter Sneezeweed is a notable example of a plant where the line between native and non-native is blurred. It is native to the Southern United States, but certainly not to South Carolina. Here in the Lowcountry I could hardly call it an invasive species. (Although I’m sure there are some dairy farmers elsewhere in the Southeast who have a justifiably opposing perspective.) If anything, Bitter Sneezeweed in the SC Lowcountry is often a passive member of, or even a positive addition to, the barren, unnatural landscapes it inhabits, rather than an existential threat to their reclamation. It’s a secondary symptom manifest of a larger issue, rather than the source of poor health itself. I view Bitter Sneezeweed, and similar Gulf Coast advents, as honorary native plants here in South Carolina. These are beneficial plants that can augment and enhance our impaired landscapes by occupying the unfilled artificial niches we humans accidentally create. Thus they’re filling an open niche and simultaneously excluding exotic invasives species, who could have established there instead and threatened biodiversity in the surrounding landscape.