SCV Newsletter/blog,11-28-2016
Coral Mushroom, (Ramaria aurea), seen along the trail |
President's
Message:
I has
been some time that we have communicated with our membership. The fault is
entirely mine. I won't bother you with my excuses. To our great surprise we are
still getting the occasional contribution and we are grateful for that. Much of
what you will read below is copied or adapted from other material.
Your
Shoal Creek Volunteers President by Default Henry Eilers
I have the
privilege of writing the occasional column for our Central Chapter of the
Illinois Native Plant Society. Many of these are based on local experiences and
so is this first item.
Jelly Babies Mushroom, (Leotia lubrica) |
Plant
Profiles; Connections:
Savanna Blazing-star and Book Report
In the natural world everything is
connected to everything else. I was reminded of
this often cited statement and its variations again as a news release
arrived. It announced the description of a fungus species new to science. It
has the specific epithet 'shoalensis' for it was discovered at the Shoal
Creek Conservation area. [See full article elsewhere].
That brought back a flood of
memories. It was in the mid 1970's, if my recollection is right, that I had
come across a Blazing-star species that was very different and distinctive and
new to me on a steep slope near the
recently constructed new city reservoir, Lake Yaeger. Some of the plants were
nearly 6' tall while in full flower with the uppermost heads nearly the size of
some thistles. Pretty impressive. With meager taxonomic resources available to
me at that time I turned to the state botanist John Schwegman for assistance.
After some research it was determined to be Liatris ligulistylis, a
species considered quite rare. That later became L. scariosa nieuwlandii and
of course still just as rare. It is insightful to read the extensive species
treatment in the new 'Steyermark's Flora of Missouri'. It makes one realize the
complexity that goes into species concepts across their often wide range. Years later, as I reviewed Liatris aspera
herbarium sheets at the Illinois State Museum I came across numerous specimens
that had been mislabeled for they were clearly the former. Some of us have been
fortunate to see this always impressive plant several times on recent field
trips at the Horn Prairie Grove Nature Preserve in adjacent Fayette County. It
remains uncommon both in Missouri and Illinois as its savanna habitat continues
to shrink.
And that brings me now to the main
subject for these PP notes, a book just recently published by the SIU Press, by
John E. Schwegman; The Natural Heritage of Illinois. Essays
on its Lands, Water, Flora and Fauna. 2016.
![]() |
Savanna Blazing-star [Liatris scariosa]. |
Speaking
again about connections, without John there would not have been a Shoal Creek
Conservation Area and most likely not the discovery of the new fungus species
mentioned above.
Back
to the book. It is not only by far the best publication on this subject that is
available here in Illinois. John had been the state's botanist until his
retirement and as such added greatly to the knowledge of our state's natural
communities. For 'just' being press
releases he communicated the wonders of our natural world in remarkably fine
prose and well crafted detail. Where else can one read about observing mussels
gone fishing or talking [communicating] with wolf spiders? Such a book deserves
wide distribution in our state, which is often considered a bit challenged on
the subject of nature appreciation and protection. It should be in every school
and public library. This year we are celebrating the 100 year anniversary of
our National Parks. What a great time to remind ourselves that even in this
land of corn and beans we have a lot of natural diversity and our lives can
still be enriched by wondrous new discoveries.
As an aside, I had borrowed the book, twice,
from our always very accommodating Carnegie Library. To my considerable
surprise a copy arrived in the mail. I eventually found out that it was a gift
from one of our board members. How gratifying. I believe this book is available
in Springfield book stores and of course from on-line purveyors. You will enjoy
it even without the local connection.
Last month's column also had a local
connection. I will retain the heading but shorten it. The full text can be
found on the website of the Illinois Native Plant Society.
Plant
Profiles; Monarda
bradburiana and Plant Preservation
![]() |
Monarda bradburiana; May |
Our esteemed INPS editor, Alana,
recently forwarded a request, seeking seed for Monarda bradburiana. Eastern
Bee-balm is not exactly an evocative common name and we will therefore stick
with the botanical one. Of course, as we all know too well that does not always
work as smoothly as we might like either.
![]() |
Monarda bradb; May bloom |
You will on occasion see it listed as M. russelliana. Not too bad really as the 'names confusion' is often far more extensive.
Jeff
Carstens, from the USDA-ARS Plant Introduction
Station at Ames, Iowa was looking for its seed for their seed germplasm banking
program. You can find out more at: http://www.ars-grin.gov/npgs/index.html. It was an easy request to fill as even at the late date a
lot of seed remained on the plants. This Bee-balm is still abundant in the
barrens and open woodland communities at the Shoal Creek Conservation Area. Its
numbers
![]() |
Monarda bradburiana fall color |
Ken Schaal and I
participated in 2013 in a similar program by the Chicago Botanic Garden. It is
affiliated with the BLM's SOS [Seeds of Success] seed banking program and Kew
Garden's Millennium Seed Banking Programme. We collected well over 100 species.
In addition to a 2 page data sheet it also involved a series of photographs and
herbarium sheets. As I recall it was
quite a challenging project. You can
find out more at this website: http://www.sciencecollections.org/content/dixon-national-tallgrass-prairie-seed-bank.We have used the stipends in managing the Route 66 Prairie
north of town.
Both Chicago
Botanic Garden and down our way Missouri Botanic Garden are involved with
another critical preservation program, the Center for Plant Conservation. In
addition to the ex situ programs above this one involves in situ work and
species restoration. The emphasis is on highly endangered species. For over 20
years we have been able to provide a home for the very rare Heart-leaf
Plantain from this program in one of our
valleys. Plantains tend to be major weeds, but certainly not this one. At over
2 feet across it would be a heck of a weed! Even at that impressive size it is
an unassuming plant, though not to deer and perhaps other herbivores. We
monitor it every year.
That brings us
full circle as in the end all preservation is local. This may have been
a bit of a boring presentation. Never mind as long as it encourages you the
dear reader, to do YOUR PART to preserve our natural heritage in your neck of
the woods.
Of course that
admonition in that last paragraph goes for all of us as well. Above all, we
urgently need to spread that message to a younger generation.
40 Oaks Project
Blackjack oak in flat-woods , 60-70 ft. exceptionally tall |
40 Oaks project Blackjack Oak |
The University of
Illinois Plant Clinic is celebrating 40 years of service. Earlier this year
they
had sent out sent out invitations for proposals featuring some special oak
tree and recording observations about it during this calendar year. They also
suggested community participation. We submitted a Blackjack Oak at the Shoal
Creek Nature Preserve and were accepted. Two high school students, Garrett
Werner and Julia Brandtner assisted in the monthly observations. We look
forward to the final report and will share the results with our readers.Henry and his group from the All class Reunion |
Litchfield High school All-Class Reunion
A small but
inquisitive group toured the nature trail and it was well reported by our
newspapers. One pair of sharp eyes spotted a mushroom that I had not seen
before. Turns out, Coral Mushroom, (Ramiria aurea) is not that
rare. It even occurs in Europe and listed in my German reference book as
edible. Nature is infinitely varied and fascinating. You can learn something
new all the time. Shown with Henry from left to right are Beth Christ, Terre Haute, IN; Edie Phillips, Cody, WY; Jane Hanafin, Memphis, TN; Candi Brown, Litchfield, IL; Sherry Boehme, New Bern, NC.
Several board
members worked on reducing the size of the sign planting and re-mulching it.
Its maintenance will need to continue and we are looking for some more
volunteers. Much of the lettering of the top board of the sign had flaked off
and was in need of repainting. It was taken down and Bill Borklund repainted
it. It really stands out now!
There is a new fungus among us!
![]() |
Mushroom details show X. shoalensis |
I have copied the item below from an e-mail that I received. Dr. Andrew N. Miller is Mycologist and Director of the Herbarium at the Illinois Natural History Survey, University of Illinois. See his brief bio below. We bask in the glow of his considerable fame. What little we still know of the natural world around us. This is so much more exciting than the 'virtual reality' of our technology that increasingly surrounds and envelops us.
New Species to Science Discovered at Shoal Creek Conservation Area (Yes, it’s a fungus!)
A new
species to science discovered at the Shoal Creek Conservation Area (SCCA) was
recently published in the international journal of fungal systematics,
Sydowia. The fungus, Xylomelasma shoalensis A.N. Mill., Y.
Marín & Stchigel (Figure 1), was named after the place where it was
collected and is the only known record of this species.
Xylomelasma
is a genus of decomposers introduced in 2006 to accommodate two new taxa
isolated from rotten wood, X.
novae-zelandiae and X. sordida. Recently, another new species isolated from
the same type of substrate, X. moderata,
has been described. Xylomelasma shoalensis can easily be distinguished from the other
species in the genus by the shape and size of its spores.
Andrew
Miller started his mycological career by conducting a mushroom inventory of the
Shoal Creek Conservation Area in the summer of 1992. He served as Treasurer for the Shoal Creek
Volunteers during the organization’s first three years. After completing his Ph.D. at The Field
Museum in December 2003 on the systematics of very tiny black fungi on wood
(pyrenomycetes), he wanted his first official herbarium specimens to be special
so he headed to SCCA in April 2004 to collect whatever he could find (three
specimens with collection numbers ANM 1, ANM 2 and ANM 3). These were tentatively identified, preserved
and accessioned into the Illinois Natural History Survey herbarium where they
remained unexamined for 10 years until a visiting doctoral student from Spain
was given them to study. Yasmina Marín
examined ANM 1 and determined that it was a new species so it was described,
illustrated and submitted for publication.
The full citation for this publication is:
Hernández-Restrepo, et al. 2016.
Fungal Systematics and Evolution: FUSE 2. Sydowia
68: 193–230. DOI
10.12905/0380.sydowia68-2016-0193 (http://www.sydowia.at/syd68/T22-Hernandez.htm)
Pounding leaf DNA into the test strip |
SCCA Steward Report
volunteer to man the fire lines, as so many of you have done in the past.
At the Route 66 Prairie we contracted for a spring burn and separately for the continued control of Teasel. With the great growing season there was also spectacular flowering. We are hopeful that we can some day have the necessary infrastructure of parking, paths and signage to make it accessible to the general public. We had one of our great supporters mow a loop through part of it this summer, but it was still
'Singing Insects'. In a rather short period we came up with over 10 species of grasshoppers and katydids. There are also crickets out there and even the rare Prairie Cicada; all of these being musical insects! We had quite an abundance of a few butterfly species late in the season. I saw a fair amount of Monarchs and took quite a few photos. On closer examination most of these turned out to Viceroys, a Monarch mimic.
The Board of Directors of Shoalcreekvolunteers wishes you a very happy new year. If you are a Sustaining Member please remember that we need your money but not that much of it. Please make an annual contribution of $10 by sending your check to our trasurer, Jim Stapleton at 364 Westlake Trail, Litchfield, IL 62056.
All photos without attribution were taken at the Rt. 66 Prairie.
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