Saving Pollinators One Thistle at a Time

Pollinator populations are in trouble for a lot of reasons.  Loss and degradation of habitat, pesticides, and diseases are all major contributors.  However, at least in the Central United States, much of the pollinator decline can be tied to spiny pink/purple-flowered plants and the way humans react to them.

Tall thistle, a native annual wildflower, is a big favorite among pollinator insects.

Tall thistle, a native annual wildflower, is a big favorite among pollinator insects.  However, it is seen by many people as a weed that needs to be eliminated from the earth.

On the face of it, thistles seem like they’d be pretty well-liked.  Thistle seeds are a major food source for birds and other wildlife, as well as for a variety of invertebrates. The abundant nectar and pollen found in thistle flowers make them one of the most popular plants among both pollinator and non-pollinator invertebrates.  As if that wasn’t enough, most thistles have large and/or abundant blossoms, which you’d think would make them very attractive to people.  Sure, they’ve got spines, but so do cacti, yucca, and many other plants gardeners love to landscape with.  So why do we hate thistles so much?

The cultural dislike of thistles is not at all a new phenomenon; references to the unpopularity of thistles can be found at least as far back as the Book of Genesis in the Bible.  There, thistles are mentioned when God curses Adam after he eats the forbidden fruit. Genesis 3:17-18 – “Cursed is the ground because of you… Both thorns and thistles it shall grow for you…”  Clearly, if God includes thistles as part of His curse on all humanity, they are not a crowd favorite.

Regardless of why thistles are so widely disliked, our contempt for them causes serious problems for pollinators.  This happens in two ways: 1) direct destruction of an important floral resource for pollinators, and 2) major side effects associated with #1.

Because thistles are so important to pollinators, our compulsion to destroy them is a major problem.  Sure, some thistle species are invasive and can cause enough ecological damage that their control is warranted.  Most thistle species, however, are targeted for destruction purely because they are thistles.  Many of those are native wildflower species and are not at all aggressive or problematic.  Regardless, there are few places where thistles are tolerated, let alone encouraged.  The result is the loss of a big source of food for many pollinators.

Musk thistles and regal fritillaries (before we chopped them because they are designated as noxious weeds and we are legally obligated to eradicate them.) The Nature Conservancy's Platte River Prairies, Nebraska.

Musk thistles and regal fritillaries.  Musk thistles are designated as noxious weeds and we are legally obligated to eradicate them.) The Nature Conservancy’s Platte River Prairies, Nebraska.

While the loss of thistles themselves is a big problem for pollinators, the methods we use to eliminate them can have much bigger impacts.  If we were content to dig thistles out of the ground one by one, things wouldn’t be so bad.  Of course, that’s not always feasible – some perennial species such as Canada thistle are rhizomatous and can’t be killed by digging.  Herbicide use is the other available option.  Spot spraying individual plants or clumps can be relatively innocuous, but only if the person spraying is judicious and selective about what they spray.

However, working thistles one by one takes a lot of time, and just because we hate thistles doesn’t mean we want to spend a lot of time getting rid of them.  Broadcast herbicide spraying, by airplane or boom sprayer, can kill lots of thistles in very short order.  It’s a great way to get rid of all those unsightly pink flowers in one fell swoop…at least for that season.  Unfortunately, broadcast spraying also kills a wide array of other wildflowers, and most of those never recover (the ones that do are the ones we tend to like least – like ragweeds).

The grand irony is that because broadcast spraying kills so many non-target plant species, the spaces left open by those dead wildflowers are usually colonized by thistles.  Thus, while broadcast spraying is quick, it tends to perpetuate thistle populations by destroying their competitors.  (Also, most large thistle populations are there because of chronic overgrazing or some other major disturbance that weakens perennial vegetation and creates space for thistles to grow.  Broadcast spraying doesn’t address those underlying issues.)  Oh, and by the way, killing off all the wildflowers in a pasture or roadside also wipes out the pollinators that depend upon them for food.

Our cultural dislike of thistles leads us to kill off as many as we can each year.  Since thistles are a major food source for pollinators, that’s grave news for pollinator conservation.  Our desire for more “efficient” ways to kill thistles has led to even worse news, however – the loss of plant diversity across millions of acres.  Since plant diversity sustains pollinators by providing varied and consistent food through the season, losing that diversity at a large scale is devastating.  We can rebuild some of what we’ve lost through restoration, and we can save what’s left, but only if we change the way we think about thistles.  We’d better hurry; pollinator declines are not slowing down.

I think we need a thistle fan club.  Who’s with me??  Let’s do this thing.  I’ve come up with a basic logo and tag line (below) to get us started.  Click here to get an easily printable version you can hang on your office door or tape to your car window.  It’ll be a great conversation starter!  In fact, let’s have fun with this.  If you feel like it, take a picture of how you displayed the logo and put it on your favorite social media with the hashtag #thistlehelp.  Not a social media person?  Feel free to email me a photo – maybe I’ll collect some of them and use them in a future post.  If you email me, please keep the file size below 1 mb…   Use this email address: chelzer(at)tnc.org.

The bees and butterflies of the world are depending on you.  This is going to sweep the nation, you’ll see!

ThistleFanClub

 

Killer Thistles

Two years ago, I posted some photos of ants and other insects that had died on the sticky lower portion of thistle flowers.  At the time, I speculated about whether or not the sticky bracts below the thistle blossoms were an adaptation to prevent ants from reaching the flowers and “stealing” nectar.  Since ants aren’t fuzzy and don’t dependably go from flower to flower like bees do, they probably don’t provide many (any?) benefits to the flower in return for the nectar they take.

Dead ant stuck to bottom of wavy-leaf thistle flower. Helzer family prairie near Stockham, Nebraska.

Dead ant stuck to bottom of wavy-leaf thistle flower. Helzer family prairie near Stockham, Nebraska.

After that post, a friend sent me a journal article detailing a study (see citation below) in the 1980’s that looked at this same phenomenon, trying to figure out what benefit the thistle might get from having sticky bracts.  They used Liquid Paper to coat the bracts and make them non-sticky and then measured seed predation between coated and non-coated plants.  Overall, their results were fairly inconclusive, though they did see higher seed predation by insects on non-coated flowers in one of their sites.  The mystery remains!

One interesting part of the study was that of the 331 insects they found trapped on the bracts of Flodman’s thistle at Frenchman’s Bluff in Minnesota, 96% were ants.  (Given that result, I’m not sure why they focused on seed predation – I don’t think ants feed much on thistle seeds?)  I have been trying to keep track of what insect species I see stuck to thistle bracts during the last few years, and while ants do make up the majority of dead insects found there, a number of other species show up as well.

Dead ant stuck to bottom of wavy-leaf thistle flower. Helzer family prairie near Stockham, Nebraska.

The ant on the left appears to have completely lost his head over sticky thistles.

All the photos on this page were taken on the same morning last month.  I was walking around our family prairie and looking at the wavy-leaf and Flodman’s thistles (Cirsium undulatum and C. flodmanii) to see what was feeding on them, as well as what insects had become fatally stuck.  As usual, the majority of dead insects were ants, but there were several bees and even a little cicada as well.  More interesting, I also tried to pay attention to insects that seemed to move across the sticky flower bracts without getting stuck.  Crab spiders and stink bugs were two that seemed to have no trouble.  Spiders, at least some of them, have a special coating on their fuzzy feet that help keep them from sticking to their own webs – does that help them not stick to thistle bracts?  Maybe?  What about stink bugs?

Dead bee on bottom of wavy-leaf thistle flower. Helzer family prairie near Stockham, Nebraska.

This bee probably chose a nice sheltered place to spend the night without knowing it’d be the last choice it ever made.

Dead bee on bottom of wavy-leaf thistle flower. Helzer family prairie near Stockham, Nebraska.

This bee had been stuck for a while.

Dead beetle on wavy-leaf thistle flower. Helzer family prairie near Stockham, Nebraska.

This tiny beetle was another victim of the killer thistles.

Sphinx moth on wavy-leaf thistle flower. Helzer family prairie near Stockham, Nebraska.

Sphinx moths and many other pollinators feed on the tops of on wavy-leaf thistle flower. It’s the underside that’s dangerous.  If you look closely at the bottom of the thistle flower, you can see a couple wings…

Dead cicada on bottom of wavy-leaf thistle flower. Helzer family prairie near Stockham, Nebraska.

…and those wings belong to this poor dead cicada.

Stink bug on wavy-leaf thistle flower. Helzer family prairie near Stockham, Nebraska.

Stink bugs and crab spiders are among the insects that are apparently unaffected by the sticky thistle bracts.  This stink bug was moving around the flower with no apparent problems.

These are the kinds of mysteries that make walking through prairies fun.  Maybe someday we’ll figure out the secret of thistles’ “bracteal exudate”, but in the meantime, it’s just one of many prairie interactions we can marvel at.

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Journal Citation:

Bracteal Exudates in Two Cirsium Species as Possible Deterrents to Insect Consumers of SeedsAuthor(s): Mary F. Willson, Pamela K. Anderson and P. A. ThomasSource: American Midland Naturalist, Vol. 110, No. 1 (Jul., 1983), pp. 212-214Published

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