Double flowered sunflowers

When you look at a sunflower, you’re really looking at a composite of tiny flowers, or florets.  The same is true for asters, daisies, and other members of the composite family of plants.  The colorful “petals” of a sunflower are actually a series of tiny florets, called ray flowers, and the seed-producing dark center is made up of lots of disk flowers.  Together, they join together and function as one large flower that attracts pollinators and produces seed.

Stiff sunflower.  The Nature Conservancy's Platte River Prairies, Nebraska.

This sunflower has two kinds of flowers – ray flowers that look like yellow petals, and small disk flowers in the center.

This is how sunflowers are “supposed” to look.  However, you will occasionally find a sunflower that looks more like a chysanthemum, with yellow ray flowers across most or all of the face of the flower head.  Botanically speaking, this is called “double flowering”.  Horticulturists find and breed double flowering varieties of sunflowers and other composites, and you can find them at many nurseries and other plant stores.

Maximilian sunflower.  TNC Bluestem Prairie, Minnesota.

A double flowered Maximilian sunflower (Helianthus maximiliani) at The Nature Conservancy’s Bluestem Prairie in Minnesota.  Most of the disk flowers have been replaced by ray flowers.

When we were in Minnesota a few weeks ago, we saw a fair number of double flowered Maximilian sunflowers at The Nature Conservancy’s Bluestem Prairie.  I don’t remember seeing so many examples in one prairie before, but maybe I just haven’t paid close attention.  The abundance of them made me curious to learn more, so I did a quick internet search when we got back to Nebraska, and emailed a few botanist friends for more information.  The best information I found was related to a 2012 PLos Genetics journal article in which scientists described their discovery of the particular mutation that causes double flowering to occur.  You can read descriptions of the research here and here.

Maximilian sunflower.  TNC Bluestem Prairie, Minnesota.

Extra “petals” can be awfully pretty.

You might think of genetic mutation as something bad, but mutations are actually very common and mostly benign (and don’t affect form or function).  Now and then, a mutation can cause serious problems for an organism, but other times it can generate variations in a DNA sequence that turn out to be advantageous.  Double flowering seems to be somewhere in the middle.  On one hand, producing fewer disk flowers means the plant has fewer opportunities for pollination and seed production.  On the other hand, extra ray flowers could make a plant more attractive to insect pollinators and increase visitation.  In the case of the Maximilian sunflowers at Bluestem Prairie, the mutation doesn’t seem too disastrous, at least based on the number of plants we saw that have the trait.

I’m glad – it sure is pretty.

Photo of the Week – July 23, 2015

As I mentioned in my last post, we spent much of this week up in beautiful northwestern Minnesota, at the annual Grassland Restoration Network workshop.  In fact, I’m writing this as we travel back home to Nebraska (no, I’m not driving as I write).

This morning, a small group of us got up early to take photographs at sunrise.  It was a beautiful morning, but there was enough breeze to make insect and flower photography pretty tricky.  Did we give up?  No!  We are Prairie Ecologists!  (Plus, we had dared each other to meet in the hotel lobby at 5:15 am and no one wanted to back down from that).

Despite the wind, we managed to enjoy the morning,  and even got a few nice photographs out of it.  Here are two of mine:

Spider on web before sunrise.  The Nature Conservancy's Bluestem Prairie - Minnesota.

I took approximately 500,0o0 shots of this spider as it and its web bounced around in the pre-sunrise breeze.  Two of them came out relatively sharp.  This is one of those two.  The Nature Conservancy’s Bluestem Prairie – Minnesota.

Stiff sunflower (Helanthus pauciflorus) at sunrise.  The Nature Conservancy's Bluestem Prairie - Minnesota.

The peaceful appearance of this stiff sunflower (Helianthus pauciflorus) silhouetted against the rising sun is merely an illusion.  In reality, the sunflower was waving back and forth like a maniacal metronome while I tried desperately to push the shutter release just at the moment it came into focus.  I actually managed to catch it several times, and this was my favorite of the batch.

P.S. For you kids out there, a metronome is an old fashioned device that had a kind of upside down clock pendulum that rocked back and forth while it ticked.  Music teachers used to use them in vain attempts to get their students to keep a steady rhythm while playing “The Entertainer” on the piano.  Now there are smartphone apps that do the same thing.  …I hope kids still have to learn that song – they deserve it.

P.P.S. A clock pendulum is what used to help clocks keep time before…oh, nevermind, go ask your grandmother.