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…

A Weekend Walk in the Woods

We visited family in eastern Nebraska this weekend.  My in-laws have an oak woodland that I’ve become familiar with over the years, and I was glad to have a little time to wander through it.  Because of the cool spring, I was curious to see if anything had started blooming.  Trout lilies, dutchman’s breeches, violets, and other wildflowers were up and growing, but the only flowers I found weren’t really flowers – they were moss sporophytes …and even they were few and far between.

The only blooms in the oak woodland weren't even real flowers.

This patch of moss was one of the few patches in “bloom” this weekend in an oak woodland south of Omaha, Nebraska.

By mid-April in most years, I would have expected to see violets in bloom, and would have had a decent shot at seeing flowers on trout lilies and woodland phlox as well.  Not this year.  Instead, I gave up on flowers and spent some fruitless time trying to find one of the chorus frogs that were calling down by the creek.  Having failed at that, I went back up the hill and looked more closely at the moss.  Why fight it?

A close-up of moss sporophytes.  Sarpy County, Nebraska.

A close-up of moss sporophytes. Sarpy County, Nebraska.

Ironically, the most colorful things I found in the woods weren’t plants, but invertebrates.  I saw several tiny red mites crawling around in the leaf litter – including the one below, which contrasted nicely with the lush green moss it was exploring.

A tiny red mite

A tiny red mite, about 2mm long.  Photographed with a Nikon 105mm lens and extension tubes on a Nikon D300s camera, assisted by two small flash units.

Spring flowers will come eventually.  In the meantime, the delayed growth does have its advantages.  In both woodlands and prairies, soil moisture is still low from last season’s drought.  The longer it takes for plants to start using water, the more moisture will be left for summer wildflowers.  Personally, I’m in no big rush.