Photo of the Week – May 23, 2013

Many thanks for all the great feedback on my garlic mustard post earlier this week.  If there’s one big lesson from all the responses and suggestions I got via blog comments and emails, it’s that there is no standard effective treatment for garlic mustard right now.  In some places, one treatment works well, in others, the same treatment fails.  As seems to be the case with most invasive species issues, it’s important to use a variety of strategies and adapt over time as you figure out what works at a particular site.  That said, it was nice to hear that at least some people are seeing positive responses to treatments and improvements over time.

Now, for a more positive topic…

Yellow lady's slipper orchids blooming at The Nature Conservancy's Rulo Bluffs Preserve in southeastern Nebraska.

Yellow lady’s slipper orchids blooming at The Nature Conservancy’s Rulo Bluffs Preserve in southeastern Nebraska.

As I said in the last post, while we were at the Rulo Bluffs Preserve last week, we found several yellow lady’s slipper orchids (Cypripedium parviflorum) - one of Nebraska’s rarest plant species.  I’d love to say the orchids are responding positively to our management, but the truth is that all of the plants we found were in areas where we’ve done almost nothing!  They were on north or east-facing slopes where fire doesn’t carry well, and where we haven’t focused much of our thinning work.

I’m not saying our management isn’t working (we’re seeing many other species respond positively to our management) – I’m just saying that these individual orchid plants were not thriving as a direct response to our management.

They’re just thriving, and that’s good enough for me.

A close up of one orchid flower.

A close up of one orchid flower.

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Posted in Prairie Natural History, Prairie Photography, Prairie Plants | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , | 2 Comments

Blowing Against the Wind?

As I mentioned last week, I recently spent a couple days helping our land manager, Nelson Winkel, pull garlic mustard at our Rulo Bluffs Preserve in southeast Nebraska.  The invasive species has just started to invade our property within the last several years.  We’ve heard stories from colleagues in other places about beautiful woodland plant communities turning into monocultures of garlic mustard within a relatively short time period.  We’d sure like to keep that from happening at our Preserve.

So, we pulled garlic mustard plants.  A lot of them.  On the first day, I figured we pulled at least 25,000 plants.  That’s a very conservative estimate.  The second day was longer, but we did more searching and less pulling.  This wasn’t the first trip to pull either, so we were just trying to get what was leftover from the previous efforts.

Nelson Winkel, showing off one patch's worth of pulled garlic mustard plants.  The Nature Conservancy's Rulo Bluffs Preserve - Nebraska.

Nelson Winkel, showing off one patch’s worth of pulled garlic mustard plants. The Nature Conservancy’s Rulo Bluffs Preserve – Nebraska.

The Rulo Bluffs Preserve is 444 acres.  Hand-pulling weeds doesn’t seem like a very sustainable strategy for invasive species control at that scale.  In fact, it’s downright depressing because we pull more plants from more locations every year.  We’re clearly not winning.  So why bother?

It’s a good question, with several answers.  The first answer is that we’ve got some ideas for increasing our effectiveness.  Nelson and I talked as we worked about how we might put together a small army of volunteers to come help us pull each spring.  The big challenges are that the site is far from population centers (more than two hours from Lincoln and Omaha), has difficult terrain to hike in, and garlic mustard doesn’t bloom at exactly the same time each year, so we’d have to schedule work days on fairly short notice.  On the other hand, I think there are people who’d be glad to help, and it is a beautiful place to work in the spring time – lots of warblers and other birds above, and plenty of woodland wildflowers below.

In addition to finding more people to help hand pull, we hope to decrease the number of plants we need to pull in the bigger, more established, patches by doing some herbicide work in the late winter.  Garlic mustard is a winter annual or biennial which germinates in one season, overwinters as a rosette (a few leaves, low to the ground), and then flowers in the late spring of the next year.  Our colleagues in more eastern states have been dealing with garlic mustard longer than we have, and have had luck spraying the rosettes with Glyphosate herbicide on warm February days.  Spraying in the winter works well because there are very few other woodland plants that are green (and thus susceptible to Glyphosate) in February.  They don’t usually spray in the early winter because many rosettes die on their own over the winter, and by waiting until February, they can focus only on those most likely to bloom in the coming year.  Nelson was marking the bigger patches we found with a GPS unit so he can find them next winter and try the spraying technique.

Small patches of garlic mustard such as this one might eventually be eliminated by hand-pulling.

Small patches of garlic mustard such as this one might eventually be eliminated by hand-pulling – especially if we find and treat them every year.  Larger patches are much more problematic.

The second reason we’re still trying to suppress garlic mustard is that I hope we can buy some time until better control options become available.  There has been some work to develop a biocontrol technique (using insects from the native range of garlic mustard), for example, and if something like that turns out to be effective, I want to be sure we still have some woodland left to save.  Unfortunately, I’m hearing that biocontrol development has stalled at the moment.  Apparently, in at least some places, people are seeing garlic mustard populations decline steeply on their own – as if the plants are outcompeting themselves and self-thinning.  That could be great news, but only if the native plant community rebounds as the garlic mustard declines, and I haven’t been able to find anyone who can tell me whether or not that’s the case.  I sure hope it is, but I’d feel better if the biocontrol folks kept forging ahead on the development of that control option anyway.  Regardless, I’m holding out hope that either garlic mustard will turn out to be a temporary nuisance (seems unlikely?) or that biocontrol or better control options will be developed in the next several years.  I could be naive, but at least it gives us something positive to think about while we’re pulling up thousands of garlic mustard plants…

While we look for better control options, we’re also trying to change the playing field for plant competition at Rulo Bluffs and give garlic mustard less of an advantage.  With considerable help from Kent Pfeiffer of Northern Prairies Land Trust, and funding from the Nebraska Game and Parks Commission and others, we’ve been trying to ramp up our stewardship work during the last several years.  We’ve not done as much burning as we’d like to, but are earnestly trying to change that.  Last fall, a contractor did some “hack-and-squirt” herbicide treatment to kill many of the smaller understory trees that are shading out the herbaceous plants on the ground.  We’ve also been doing mechanical shredding of brush on ridgetops to help the grassland, savanna, and open woodland plants there.  All of this work is aimed at getting more light to the ground, which should stimulate increased oak regneration and a stronger, more diverse, herbaceous community on the woodland floor.  In addition, we hope that increased light will put shade-loving garlic mustard at a disadvantage, at least in some parts of the woodland.  From talking with others around the country, they’ve seen mixed results from similar work.  I guess since we want that light on the ground anyway, we’re going to forge ahead – and hope we don’t make things worse.

Jack-in-the-pulpit is one of many woodland flower species that help make the Rulo Bluffs Preserve unique and valuable.

Jack-in-the-pulpit is one of many woodland flower species that help make the Rulo Bluffs Preserve unique and valuable.

Finally, we’re pulling garlic mustard because the Rulo Bluffs Preserve is worth the effort.  It’s one of the few remaining high-quality oak woodlands in Nebraska, and hosts a wide diversity of plant and animal species – many living at the edge of their geographic range.  In addition to lots of mayapples, jack-in-the-pulpit plants, and woodland phlox, we also found two orchid species blooming last week – the showy orchid and the yellow lady’s slipper orchid.  We walked around beneath eastern deciduous tree species such as chinkapin oak, black oak, and Ohio buckeye.  Several animal species at the preserve, including zebra swallowtails, timber rattlesnakes, and southern flying squirrels, are only found on the very eastern edge of Nebraska.  While some of those species are common to the east of us, it is probably important to protect their genetic diversity by maintaining populations across their entire range.  That should allow the species to better adapt and survive in changing conditions over time.

Genetic and biological diversity aside, the Rulo Bluffs Preserve is also important because it’s a beautiful place.  We need to keep some aesthetically-pleasing natural areas around for people to enjoy.  Despite our aching backs, Nelson and I had a great time exploring the preserve last week, marveling at warblers, flowers, velvet mites, and other wonders.  It’s possible that we’ll invest a tremendous amount of time and money into stewardship and restoration at the Rulo Bluffs Preserve over the next several years and still lose out to garlic mustard.  There are plenty of examples of that happening elsewhere.  I guess we’re not ready to concede the battle, however - there’s too much at stake.

Posted in Prairie Animals, Prairie Insects, Prairie Management, Prairie Natural History, Prairie Photography, Prairie Plants | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 18 Comments

Photo of the Week – May 16, 2013

We spent two days in the southeast corner of Nebraska this week, pulling garlic mustard at our Rulo Bluffs Preserve.  It was the second trip in as many weeks, and there was still plenty to do the second time around.  The preserve is less than 450 acres in size, but feels much bigger when we’re hiking up and down the steep bluffs.

A may apple flower hides beneath the canopy of its own leaves.  The Nature Conservancy's Rulo Bluffs Preserve, Nebraska.

A may apple flower hides beneath the canopy of its own leaves. The Nature Conservancy’s Rulo Bluffs Preserve, Nebraska.

There were still some spring wildflowers in bloom at the Preserve, including the mayapples (Poldophyllum peltatum) shown above.  It was good to see them – they were motivation for slogging up the hill to the next patch of garlic mustard…

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Join Us For The Platte River Prairies Field Day: July 12, 2013

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Come spend a day on the Platte River Prairies!  Our annual open house/field day, just south of Wood River, Nebraska, will provide opportunities to hike the prairies with a variety of grassland experts.

- Learn about prairie reptiles and amphibians (and see live examples) with Dennis Ferraro of the University of Nebraska.

- Take a birding hike with Michelle Biodrowski (graduate student from the University of Nebraska-Omaha) and learn about her research on how grassland birds respond to the edges between patch-burn grazing habitat patches – spoiler alert: it’s good news.

- Find out how The Nature Conservancy is using high-diversity prairie restoration and fire/grazing management to create diverse and resilient grasslands.  See both the tools of the trade and the on-the-ground results.

- Learn to identify prairie and wetland plants with Gerry Steinauer, the state botanist for Nebraska Game and Parks Commission.

- See the results of more than a decade of experimentation with overseeding degraded prairies.  (Major lesson: use LOTS of seed)

Grasshopper sparrows and other prairie birds are abundant in the Platte River Prairies.  Lean about species and the way they respond to prairie management from Michelle Biodrowski (UNO).

Grasshopper sparrows and other prairie birds are abundant in the Platte River Prairies. Learn about all the species and the way they respond to prairie management from Michelle Biodrowski (UNO).

In addition, we’ll have speakers and/or displays on prairie invertebrates, small mammals, invasive species, and much more.  We’re still developing the agenda, and will get more information out when we have it.

The field day is free and open to the public.  Snacks and cold water/lemonade will be provided, but please bring your own lunch. Dress for hiking in grasslands, and bring your own water bottle, plenty of sunscreen, and insect repellant.

Events will run from approximately 9am to 4pm, so come and go as you please.  No registration is required, but we’d appreciate hearing from you if you plan to come.  Contact Mardell Jasnowski if you think you’ll be attending - and for more information. mjasnowski@tnc.org or 402-694-4191.

Click here for directions to the site.

Posted in General, Prairie Animals, Prairie Insects, Prairie Management, Prairie Natural History, Prairie Photography, Prairie Plants, Prairie Restoration/Reconstruction | Tagged , , , , , , | 1 Comment

Keeping a Low Profile in the Spring

At times, prairies in east-central Nebraska can have such an abundance of large wildflowers, they resemble flower gardens.  Early spring is not one of those times.  There are plenty of prairie flowers blooming this spring, but you wouldn’t know it from a distance.  In fact, it often seems as if you have to nearly step on a spring wildflower before you see it.

These ground plum flowers, while very pretty, look like they're alone in a vast barren landscape.

These blooming ground plum plant, while very pretty, looks like its alone in a vast barren landscape.  In reality, there are lots of other flowers on the prairie – they’re just hard to see.  This photo was taken last week at Prairie Plains Resource Institute’s Griffith Prairie.

In the coming weeks, things will change.  Late spring and early summer flowers such as ragwort (Senecio plattensis), shell-leaf penstemon (Penstemon grandiflorus) and spiderworts (Tradescantia spp) will be displayed at the top of stems that rise a foot or two from the ground.   Clusters of those flowers can easily be seen from hundreds of yards away.  For now, however, wildflowers are keeping a low profile.

Of course, short stature and small flowers make perfect sense in the early spring.  Flowers that bloom at the beginning of the growing season don’t have much time between winter’s thaw and blooming time (especially this year!)  The small plants are in a race to bloom before neighbors – especially grasses - overtop them, making it difficult for both pollinators and light to find them.   For the most part, spring-flowering plants grow just long enough stems to get their flowers off the ground and make those flowers just big enough to attract pollinating insects.

Wind flower (Anemone caroliniana) blooms at heights of about 3 or 4 inches.  Because both the flowers and stems are small, even a big patch of wind flowers can be difficult to see from 15-20 feet away.  Photo taken at Prairie Plains Resource Insitute's Griffith Prairie.

Wind flower (Anemone caroliniana) blooms at heights of about 3 or 4 inches. Because both the flowers and stems are small, even a big patch of wind flowers can be difficult to see from 15-20 feet away.

While not universally true, many early flowering plants seem to thrive best when a prairie isn’t loaded with thatch and tall dead vegetation from previous seasons.  Prairies burned during the dormant season or were grazed or hayed the previous summer/fall seem to have the greatest abundance of spring flowers.  Of course, there is some observer bias involved in measuring that since spring flowers are much easier to see in short vegetation…

Wild pansy, aka Johnny Jump-up (Viola rafinesquii), is an annual violet that is spreading (in a good way) across some of our restored Platte River Prairies.  It is flourishing this spring in sites that were grazed during last year's drought.

Wild pansy, aka Johnny Jump-up (Viola rafinesquii), is an annual violet that is spreading (in a good way) across some of our restored Platte River Prairies. It is flourishing this spring in sites that were grazed during last year’s drought.

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Many narrowleaf puccoon (Lithospermum incisum) plants are blooming at even shorter heights than usual this spring.  While never a tall plant, narrowleaf puccoon often reaches heights of 6-10 inches or so, but this year, many are blooming at 4-6 inches in height.

Many narrowleaf puccoon (Lithospermum incisum) plants are blooming at even shorter heights than usual this spring. While never a tall plant, narrowleaf puccoon often reaches heights of 6-10 inches or so, but this year, many are blooming at 4-6 inches in height.

This spring, I’ve been paying particular attention to prairies that we burned and grazed during drought of 2012.  Most were awfully short, brown, and barren-looking by late last summer and stayed that way through the winter.  It’s been nice to see them greening up this spring and supporting good numbers of wildflowers.  Interestingly, I’ve seen more wind flowers (Anemone caroliniana) this year than I can remember from previous springs.  The two sites in which I’ve seen big patches of wind flowers were both burned and grazed pretty hard last year, making the flowers easy to see, but probably also allowing the plants to grow with little competition for light or other resources.

While spring flowers are short in stature, they seem to be able to attract pollinators.  Of course, many of those pollinators are good at finding hidden plants by following their scent.  In addition, when the number of flowering species is limited, pollinators do what it takes to find whatever flowers are available!

What’s more interesting to me is that as I’ve been seeing and photographing wind flowers over the last week or so, I’ve seen a surprising number of tiny crab spiders on them.  I would guess that there’s a crab spider on one out of every 10-15 flowers, and they all appear (to me) to be of the same species.  I wish I knew how those crab spiders found the flowers.

A crab spider sits on a wind flower on an early morning at Griffith prairie, waiting for the flower to open and attract pollinators for it to catch.

A crab spider sits on a wind flower at Griffith prairie in the early morning, waiting for the flower to open and attract pollinators for it to catch.

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XX miles away from Griffith Prairie, this crab spider (of the same species?) was having a successful afternoon of hunting in our Platte River Prairies.

45 miles away from Griffith Prairie, this crab spider (of the same species?) was having a successful afternoon of hunting on a wind flower in our Platte River Prairies.

I’ve been seeing a lot of trailing silks in the air lately, so I know some spiders are on the move (by ballooning), and I assume young crab spiders disperse that way.  But if they do, landing on or near a flowering plant at this time of year seems awfully unlikely.  Are the crab spiders I’m seeing on wind flowers the lucky few that landed near a good hunting place?  Or are most crab spiders able to find a flower to hunt on, even in the spring when flowers are scattered around in low numbers?  If so, how?

Maybe one of you will be able to answer those questions for me.  For now, I’ll just add them to my long list of other questions – a list that will surely grow considerably during this coming field season.

Posted in Prairie Insects, Prairie Natural History, Prairie Photography, Prairie Plants | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 6 Comments

Photo of the Week – May 9, 2013

A red-sided garter snake (Thamnophis sirtalis).  The Nature Conservancy's Platte River Prairies, Nebraska

A red-sided garter snake (Thamnophis sirtalis). The Nature Conservancy’s Platte River Prairies, Nebraska.  Click on this or other photos for a larger, sharper image.

I ran across this beautiful garter snake in our Platte River Prairies yesterday.  Interestingly, it was almost exactly a year ago that I photographed a mating ball of red-sided garter snakes just a 1/2 mile from where I found this one.  This one may have been looking for love too, but I interrupted it just long enough to get a few photos.

I know snakes evoke strong emotions from many people – and not necessarily in a positive way.  It’s too bad, because if you can stand to look at them up close, they are really beautiful creatures.  I love to study the patterns of scales, especially on the head.  The scales look as if they might have been put together by a master stone mason.

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Posted in Prairie Animals, Prairie Natural History, Prairie Photography | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , | 14 Comments

A Prickly Confrontation

While we were setting up timelapse cameras at the Niobrara Valley Preserve a couple weeks ago, I had an encounter with a creature I’d never seen up close before.  It was evening, and Jeff Dale was driving us down toward the river.  Suddenly, he hit the brakes and backed up, saying he’d seen something up in a tree – maybe a raccoon.  All three of us grabbed cameras and walked up the hill toward a small oak tree with a furry creature up in the branches.

A furry animal in a small bur oak tree.  The light was beautiful - as was the moon.

A furry animal in a small bur oak tree. The light was beautiful – as was the moon.

When we got closer, we realized it wasn’t a raccoon – it was a porcupine!  In my whole life, I’d seen a couple dead porcupines along the road, and a couple trees that had been worked over by porcupines, but I don’t think I’d ever seen a live porcupine before - they’re just not very common in my part of the state.

Once we figured out what it was, Jeff and David graciously let me approach the porcupine first.  (Thinking back now, they may have just been waiting to see if I got a face full of quills…)  The sun was on its way down and the light was beautiful.  I snapped a couple photos as I approached in case it took off, but the porcupine didn’t seem inclined to run, and before long, I ended up right at the base of the tree.  Because the tree was short, I could stand uphill and be at the same elevation as the porcupine.  Face to face, you might say.

However, it’s not accurate to say I was face to face with the porcupine because the porcupine was steadfastly looking away from me.  I suppose that’s the right defensive strategy when your weapons are on your backside, but it made photography kind of a challenge…  If I walked to south side of the tree, the porcupine would look north.  If I walked to the north side, it would look south.  It wasn’t moving quickly, but even if I ran to the other side, it would be looking away by the time I got there.

This was the only view of the porcupine I could get - no matter which side of the tree I was on.  It looked like maybe the tips of many of his quills had been singed off in the wildfire. (?)

This was the only view of the porcupine I could get – no matter which side of the tree I was on. It looked like maybe the tips of many of his quills had been singed off in last year’s wildfire. (?)

As you might imagine, Jeff and David thought this was mighty entertaining.  By this time, they’d sidled close enough that I could hear their chuckling.  I told David to make himself useful and come help.  I figured the porcupine couldn’t look away from both of us if we were on opposite sides of the tree.  I was right about that – it just looked away from ME.  David was apparently non-threatening, or at least less threatening than I was.  Maybe  that’s because it’s hard to seem threatening when you’re laughing as hard as David was.  While David and porcupine shared their little joke, I was still left facing the backside of my intended photo subject.

Here's David Weber conspiring with the porcupine.  You can tell by the grin on his face how badly he feels for me.

Here’s David Weber conspiring with the porcupine. You can tell by the grin on his face how bad he felt about the whole situation.

After a few more minutes of jocularity, the porcupine did eventually turn my way.  I’m not sure why – I suppose it probably figured I wasn’t going to leave it alone otherwise.  Of course, when it DID look at me, its face was in the shadow of a tree branch.  After all that trouble getting the porcupine to look in me in the face, I wasn’t going home with photos of a porcupine that looked like it had stripes on its face, so I called David into action again.  Trying (unsuccessfully) to stifle his chortling, David grabbed the end of the branch and swung it around a little so the porcupine’s face came out of the shadows.  …At which point, the porcupine looked back over at David and away from me.

By this point in the story, some of you are probably feeling sorry for the porcupine.  The poor thing had been sitting in a tree, just calmly chewing on a branch, when it was rudely accosted by a frustrated photographer and his two snickering friends.  Now, one of the snickerers was swinging its branch around.  Well, let me just say this:  of the four of us, the porcupine wasn’t the one showing signs of stress.  It seemed competely calm - content to play the straight man in the comedic sketch my companions were enjoying so much.

Finally, between David’s branch maneuvering and my persistence (stubbornness?) I did end up with a couple halfway decent shots of the front side of the porcupine.

You have to look really closely to see its self-satisfied smile…

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One decent photo, even with the shadow arcoss its face.

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Can you see the smile?

See that smug look?

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Posted in Prairie Animals, Prairie Natural History, Prairie Photography | Tagged , , , , , , , , | 17 Comments

Photo of the Week – May 2, 2013

As I wrote in an earlier post, my boys and I were at our family prairie last weekend.  Only three flower species were blooming.  One of those was ground plum (Astragalus crassicarpus, aka buffalo pea), and I took several photos of the flowers as I walked around.  This one was taken as the boys were waiting impatiently for me to get in the truck so we could get home for lunch.  As it turned out, the photo turned out to be my favorite of the day, and the boys didn’t starve.

Ground plum flowers at the Helzer prairie near Stockham, Nebraska.

Ground plum flowers at the Helzer prairie near Stockham, Nebraska.

Besides being an attractive flower in the early spring, ground plum also produces large edible pods that taste like raw peas when they’re still green.  Those pods grow to about an inch in diameter, and resemble plums – especially when they turn red later in the year.

I haven’t yet figured out why ground plum plants that flower in the spring don’t always produce pods.  We had one seed harvest year (2001) in which we collected a 30 gallon barrel full of seed pods from one 60 acre prairie, but I have never seen that kind of production since.  Most years, we do a lot of searching but find little seed – even where we know plants were blooming prolifically in the spring.  I assume it’s a combination of weather, management, and herbivory pressure, but that doesn’t really narrow it down much!

Posted in Prairie Natural History, Prairie Photography, Prairie Plants | Tagged , , , , , , , , | 7 Comments

Capturing Post-Wildfire Recovery Through Timelapse Photography

Last week, I posted that I’d been up at our Niobrara Valley Preserve, helping to set up timelapse cameras to document the recovery of that site from the wildfire last July.  Back in February, photographer Michael Forsberg, Jeff Dale, Rich Walters, and I picked out preliminary locations for nine cameras.  Jeff then built the camera systems, and we got them installed and started up last Tuesday and Wednesday.

Mike and Jeff are part of Moonshell Media, the group we’re contracting with for this project.  You may have seen their work before – most of the Moonshell Media staff are also working on the Platte Basin Timelapse project, which includes video from one of our Platte River wetland restoration projects, along with numerous other stories of water and the Platte River from headwaters to mouth.

A timelapse camera, taking a photo every daylight hour, will record the change in this landscape view over the next several years.

This timelapse camera will be taking a photo every daylight hour for the next several years, recording the recovery of this landscape from the Fairfield Creek wildfire in July 2012.

The timelapse project at the Niobrara Valley Preserve is being funded by the Nebraska Environmental Trust, as part of a larger project to study the aftermath of the wildfire and generate information to help reduce negative impacts from similar events in the future.  Eacn of our nine cameras will be taking one photo every hour, during daylight hours, for at least several years.  An additional camera will be a mobile unit that we’ll move from location to location to document short-term changes or events.  The cameras will help us tell the overall story of wildfire recovery, but will also link with and help illustrate the results of several research projects happening in the same places.

Here are some photos of the installation last week, along with descriptions of what some of the cameras will be documenting.  I will, of course, let you know when/where videos from the project can be viewed when its time.

Jeff Dale fastens a camera mount near the top of a windmill tower.

Jeff Dale fastens a camera mount near the top of a windmill tower.

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The "windmill cam" will capture a wide view of bison-grazed sandhill prairie as it greens up this spring, but will also follow it over the next several years, as dynamic patterns of bison grazing, weather, and prescribed fires shape its habitat structure and species composition.

The “windmill cam” will capture a wide view of bison-grazed sandhill prairie as it greens up this spring, and then will follow it over the next several years, as dynamic patterns of bison grazing, weather, and prescribed fires shape its habitat structure and species composition.

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Jeff Dale and David Weber install a camera that will look straight down a steep slope in the burned pine woodland on the ridge north of the river.  Among other things, this camera will help capture evidence of any soil erosion that occurs over time.

Jeff Dale and David Weber install a camera that will look straight down a steep slope on the ridge north of the river. Among other things, this camera will help capture evidence of any soil erosion that occurs over time under the burned ponderosa pine woodland.

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This camera is set up to record any sediment that pools up at the base of the (formerly) pine-covered ridge north of the river.  In addition, it will record the resprouting of several oak trees growing within the frame.

This camera is set up to record any sediment that pools up at the base of the (formerly) pine-covered ridge. In addition, it will record the resprouting of several oak trees growing within the frame.

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This camera was installed on a new fenceline - moved after the initial fence was destroyed by fire.  The new fenceline moves the south end of the bison pasture into what was formerly cattle pasture.  This camera will record differences in the recovery of prairie grazed year-round by bison (left) vs. prairie grazed by cattle.  One of many differences we expect to see is that yucca will likely disappear on the left side of the fence due to year-round grazing by bison.  Winter grazing (by either cattle OR bison) suppresses yucca, which is rarely grazed at all during the summer.

This camera was installed on a new fenceline - rebuilt in a new location after the initial fence was destroyed by fire. The new fence location expands the south end of the bison pasture into what was formerly cattle pasture. The camera will record differences in the recovery of prairie grazed year-round by bison (left) vs. prairie grazed only periodically by cattle. One of many differences we expect to see is that yucca will largely disappear in the bison pasture. Winter grazing (by either cattle OR bison) suppresses yucca, which is rarely grazed at all during the summer.

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How fast will this sandhills blowout carve away recently-burned sand prairie?  Our camera will help us find out.  Based on previous experience with summer fires, we don't expect to see any significant increase in wind erosion, but this camera (combined with aerial photograph, and perhaps on-the-ground measurements) will allow us to test that assumption.

How fast will this sandhills blowout carve away recently-burned sand prairie? Our camera will help us find out. Based on previous experience with summer fires, we don’t expect to see any significant increase in wind erosion, but this camera (combined with aerial photographs, and perhaps on-the-ground measurements) will allow us to test that assumption.

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Jeff digs a hole for the camera I'm most excited about.  This camera will focus on a 8x10 foot rectangle of bison-grazed prairie, looking straight down on it from above.  Over the next several years, we should be able to watch the plant community recover from the fire, but we'll also see yearly differences in which species bloom, and when, in response to weather, grazing, future fires, etc.  We can also record any long-term changes in the plant composition within this area.

Jeff digs a post hole for the camera I’m most excited about. This camera will focus on a 8×10 foot rectangle of bison-grazed prairie, looking straight down on it from above. Over the next several years, we should be able to watch the plant community recover from the fire, but we’ll also see yearly differences in which species bloom, when they bloom, and how they respond to weather, grazing, future fires, etc. We can also record any long-term changes in the plant composition within this area.

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We want to see how the plant community will recover in areas formerly underneath dense cedar now that those cedars are dead.  We expect lots of weeds, but hope not to see many truly invasive plants.

We want to see how the plant community will recover underneath dense cedar trees now that those cedars are dead. We expect lots of weeds, but hope not to see many truly invasive plants.

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Jeff, the technical wizard who designed most of the equipment that makes the cameras work right, explains how they work.  I got some of it, I think...

Jeff, the technical wizard who designed most of the timelapse camera systems, explains how to adjust them and keep them working.  I followed some of it, I think…

Posted in Prairie Animals, Prairie Natural History, Prairie Photography, Prairie Plants | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , | 14 Comments

A Dandy Little Predator

I took my boys to our family’s prairie today.  I was only intending to stay for a little while, but they were having so much fun building forts in the trees and drawing pictures in the mud, we stayed for several hours.  Since they were entertaining themselves, I took a walk to see what was blooming.

Because of the late spring, I only found three wildflower species in bloom.  Ground plum (aka buffalo pea or Astragalus crassicarpus) was going strong, and there were a few pussy toes (Antennaria neglecta) getting started.  But the most abundant flower was the good ol’ dandelion.  While the non-native yard weed is disliked by many people, it was certainly popular with many bees and flies who didn’t have many other options for pollen and nectar sources today.

A sweat bee enjoying a pollen-loaded dandelion at the Helzer prairie south of Aurora, Nebraska.

A sweat bee enjoying a pollen-loaded dandelion at the Helzer prairie south of Aurora, Nebraska.  It’s ALMOST sharp enough to be  a good photo.

I tried a few times to photograph bees and flies visiting dandelions, but most were too wary to let me get very close.  The light was pretty harsh anyway, and the bees certainly weren’t going to let me pull out my diffuser (2 ft diameter thin-cloth-covered circle) before they zipped away.  I did finally manage to find one bee so focused on pollen that I got one nearly decent photo before it noticed me.  Most of the time, however, the pollinators left before I got anywhere close.

As I approached one flower, the small bee on it flew away, but I noticed something else still on the flower.  When I got close enough, I realized it was a spider – apparently hoping to make a meal of the bee I’d inadvertently chased away.  While I felt a little bad about that, I thought maybe the spider would make a more accomodating photo subject, so I got out my diffuser and tripod to see what I could do.  The spider scooted off the top of the dandelion flower when I got close, but it only retreated as far as the stem of the flower, so I did get a few shots of it there.

A spider on a dandelion flower stem.  Moments before it had been stalking a small bee on top of the flower, but a clumsy photographer scared the bee away.

A spider on a dandelion flower stem. Moments before it had been stalking a small bee on top of the flower, but a clumsy photographer scared the bee away.

The spider then (very quickly) scuttled a few inches away from the flower and stopped again.  If I hadn’t seen it move, it would have disappeared completely against the background of the identically-colored prairie thatch.  Beautiful camouflage!

The same spider as above, showing off it's perfect camouflaged coloring against the grass litter.

The same spider as above, showing off it’s perfect camouflage coloring against the grass litter.

I sure wish I’d gotten to see the spider try for that bee.  I’m not sure what kind of spider it was, but it certainly wasn’t a crab spider, which is what I typically see hunting on flowers.  This one looked more like an active hunting spider (similar to a wolf spider) than a nearly blind ambush spider  (such as a crab spider).  I’m guessing prey isn’t overly abundant at this time of year, and its probably hard to turn down an opportunity to hunt in one of the few places you’re pretty sure to find it.

Dandelions might not be everyone’s favorite flower, but I’m sure glad to have them in my prairie in the early spring.  Apparently, so are quite a few bees and flies - and at least one enterprising spider!

Posted in Prairie Animals, Prairie Insects, Prairie Natural History, Prairie Photography, Prairie Plants | Tagged , , , , , , , , , | 13 Comments