Photo of the Week – March 17, 2016

You’ve probably seen them – funny-looking brown balls stuck to eastern red cedar trees.  Sometimes, the  balls have long gooey orange tentacles hanging from them.  Do you know the story behind them?

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Cedar-apple rust is a fascinating organism that uses two different hosts to help it complete its life cycle.  Galls that form on eastern red cedar trees eventually release spores, some of which make their way to leaves of apple or crabapple trees.  On those leaves, they stimulate formation of yellow lesions that eventually mature and create more spores that then need to make their way back to another cedar tree to complete the cycle.  The lesions on the leaves can be harmful to the apple trees (including the one in my yard) but I’m not sure there’s any big impact on cedars.

You can read much more about this at the Missouri Botanical Garden’s website.

I found the above gall at our family prairie last month.  And yes, I did cut the cedar tree down after I photographed the gall (see photo evidence below).

Dead

Photo of the Week – March 11, 2016

In some ways, this is a great time of year in the Platte River Prairies – we’re gearing up for prescribed fire, and clouds of migratory sandhill cranes provide background music as we prepare our prairies for the coming field season.  At the same time, the beautiful weather over the last couple of weeks has me yearning for wildflowers, and I know it’s going to be a while before we start seeing them.  The daffodils in my yard help a little, as do the little tiny blue flowers on whatever weed it is that grows along the edge of my foundation and sidewalk.  But I miss prairie wildflowers, and we’re at least a month away from the first of those.  Temperatures in the 70’s make it feel like there should be wildflowers blooming, but no matter how long I walk through the brown grass, I still don’t see any.

Stiff sunflower (Helianthus pauciflorus) in The Nature Conservancy's Platte River Prairies back in August 2015.

Stiff sunflower (Helianthus pauciflorus) in The Nature Conservancy’s Platte River Prairies back in August 2015.

So, I found comfort and joy by flipping through photos from last summer and looking at all the bold vibrant colors.  Here’s one of the images that hit me hardest as I scanned through those summer images.  Happy Spring!  (And hurry up, wildflowers!)