Siskiyou iris and Striped coralroot, a good wildflower walk!

Change happens fast in the spring. We walked Saturday along a road we’d been on a week ago, and most of the flowers we saw had not been in bloom seven days earlier. The most abundant flowers were Siskiyou irisIris bracteata.

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They vary in color from white to light yellow, and sometimes the reddish-brown veins are so numerous that they seem to tint the petals.

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Delphiniums were few and tattered, but some were much deeper in color than we’ve seen before. This is Menzies’ larkspur, Delphinium menziesii, we think.

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A rare sighting was of this Striped coralroot, Corallorrhiza/Corallorhiza striata, in the orchid family. We looked hard for others but saw only the one. It is a plant, but it is incapable of photosynthesis, and has no chlorophyll.

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When I was taking biology these sorts of plants were called saprophytes and it was believed that they got their grits by digesting organic material, as some fungi can do. This outdated theory is still found online. Now it is known (until further notice) that no plant can digest organic material through its roots (1), and the former saprophytes have been found to be parasitic either upon other plants, or upon fungi. Corallorrhiza striata dines upon nutrients produced by fungi, plugging into their mycelium, the underground structures of branching threadlike hyphae—the “body” of the fungus that produces the aboveground mushrooms we see.

(1) Wikipedia says “It is now known that no plant is physiologically capable of direct breakdown of organic matter”; I added “through its roots” above, because there are carnivorous plants that do digest insects they catch, either through secreting digestive enzymes or through some other means. How this fits in to current theory about plants digesting organic material, I don’t know.

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Plants like the coralroot are called myco-heterotrophs (2); the fungi they parasitize are the hosts. As far as we know, this is a parasitic relationship, with no benefits to the fungi. Many orchids are such parasites, others are only partially dependent on parasitism (producing the rest of their nutrients by photosynthesis), and some are “ordinary” photosynthesizing plants. Some myco-heterotrophs parasitize only specific fungi; for instance, Corallorhiza maculata sips only from Russula mushrooms, or I should say from their mycelium. Quite likely many species of myco-heterotroph have specialized in this way, we just don’t know the associations yet. For those interested in growing such orchids the parasitism presents a huge difficulty, since the ordinary requirements of a green plant—sun, water, nutrients in soil—will not sustain life in these non-photosynthesizing plants. Yet another reason, if more were needed, to avoid digging up or buying such plants (unless you are absolutely certain they were not taken from the wild).

(2) myco = fungus, heter = other, troph = nourishment

In the background of the coralroot (first photo) can be seen another flower that we saw dozens of today, with the engaging common name Elegant cat’s-ear (Calochortus elegans).

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It repays closer examination.

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The pointed tips of the petals, or perhaps the fuzziness, give rise to the common name. This is the type species of the genus, discovered in 1806 by Meriweather Lewis on the Lewis and Clark expedition near what is today Kamiah, Idaho. Many are known by the common name of Mariposa lily; see one here.

The Calochortus genus contains a relatively large number of rare, localized, and endemic taxa, so don’t disturb any you find: they may be part of a very small population. One such is found only along the Umpqua River in SW Oregon. They seem to be more sensitive to soil type than to other aspects of habitat, with some preferring serpentine soils, which characteristically have high concentrations of toxic heavy metals. Although heavy metals like nickel, lead, and zinc are toxic to most plants, some can withstand them, perhaps taking them up to protect against pathogens and pests. Still, it’s an interesting puzzle why certain species would preferentially grow where toxic metals are found in abundance.

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Look into the center of this unassuming little flower:

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How wonderful the digital camera is, enabling us to take home such magnified images of small beauties, so we can look our fill at them.

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Above is a more assertive plant: native to much of western North America from California to British Columbia, it has spread as far as New England, thriving in the disturbed soils of many habitats. It’s a roadside hitchhiker, an “invasive non-native” as far away as Australia, and toxic to livestock; for its sins it carries the dismal name of Bugloss fiddleneck, Amsinckia lycopsoides. (3)

(3) Bugloss, from Ancient Greek βούγλωσσον (bouglōssos, name of a plant: Anchusa italica), βούς (bous, “ox”) + γλωσσον (glosson, “tongue”)

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Hooker’s Indian Pink, Saline hookeri, varies from nearly white to dark pink; the California species, Indian pink (Silene californica) is much darker, nearly a chinese red.

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Look at the symmetry in those petals.

The Hooker after whom it is named is the immensely influential British botanist William Jackson Hooker (1785-1865), first director of the Royal Botanic Gardens at Kew. His son Joseph Dalton Hooker, who grew up attending his father’s lectures, also became a renowned botanist and was the second director of Kew. He classified the plants that Darwin collected on the Beagle, and the two scientists became close friends. Many New World plants are named after one or the other of the Hookers, though only the son visited our hemisphere.

This post grows long, but we saw so many great flowers! Just one more: Phacelia heterophylla, or Variable-Leaf Scorpion-Weed, is as the botanists say an an erect, unbranched herb (herb, meaning neither a grass nor a woody plant).

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Naturally I was curious why the plant was called “scorpionweed”. Online explanations refer to “the way the stem curls like a scorpion’s tail”, as in the picture below of another species that’s found in Arizona.

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photo from www.micktravels.com.

That species has blooms only along one side of the stem, while the one we saw has blooms surrounding the stem in a way that would make such a curling habit unlikely. Maybe the dramatic name has just spread to various members of the Phacelia genus whether it applies or not. Or, another possibility is that “scorpion” might refer to the ability of some members of the family to cause a skin rash, like poison oak or ivy, in some people. All those tiny hairs do look itchy!

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No unusual wildlife sightings on this walk, not like the day we saw four osprey (one was doing an odd behavior, I do have to write about that soon). One caterpillar, unidentified:

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and our hiking buddy Jack, here near a giant tree marked with what we hope is the sign for “Seed tree, do not cut”.

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Yellow erythronium – wildflower or cultivar?

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Two or three years ago we bought this erythronium at a local nursery, Siskiyou Rare Plant Nursery, that specializes in alpine plants. For once I didn’t squirrel away the plant tags or even write things down. Their online catalog now lists no erythroniums, but maybe if I call them they’ll remember.

In the meantime, it has flourished in the shady dry place where we planted it, and is in full bloom.

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Next to it, below, is E. hendersonii, the species we see most often. There are many of them on our property which we’ve encouraged through benign neglect (and seen positive results, too, which isn’t always the case with that technique).

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Any suggestions as to what species this yellow beauty might be? As I mentioned in my previous post, the genus is noted for hybridization or intermediate forms, so it may be a challenge. It does not look like the yellow trout lilies of the eastern US. Erythronium americanum has orange-ish stamens and more mottled foliage (see flower picture and foliage photo, with description). Erythronium umbilicatum and Erythronium rostratum have differently shaped flowers (1, 2).

Sunny slope wildflowers, Southern Oregon

Despite an unseasonable snowfall last week, two days later we found some uncommon wildflowers blooming on a sunny slope bordering a forest road.

We’d noted the leaves of these delphiniums (larkspurs) the week before, and now they were in full bloom

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The majority were white, like these

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but according to the experts only two white species (Delphinium leucophaeum and D. pavonaceum ) occur west of the Cascade Mountains, and neither are found south of the Williamette Valley (in northern Oregon). Their range may be restricted to the area of a temporary lake formed after one or more of the catastrophic Missoula Floods which occurred around 15,000 years ago, when glacier dams broke releasing huge quantities of water and silt, over parts of what’s now Oregon and Washington.

Delphinium menziesii occurs in our county, but it’s dark purple with a more finely divided leaf. Maybe the ones we saw are Delphinium andersonii, which does seem to have light blue to very pale almost white flowers, and a three-lobed leaf like the ones we saw.

An exciting find was this fritillary, a member of the lily family.

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Wikipedia says that “fritillary” comes from the Latin term for a dice-box (fritillus), and probably refers to the checkered pattern, frequently of chocolate-brown and greenish yellow, that is common to many species’ flowers. (And there’s a group of butterflies so named for the same reason.) The checkered pattern is visible on both the bud and opened bloom above.

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At least 3 species are found around here; this one is Fritillaria recurva, the Scarlet Fritillary. The nearby town of Jacksonville has a festival every year in honor of the rare species found near there, Fritillaria gentneri, which has darker red flowers. And we have a few times seen, on our own property, Fritillaria affinis or Chocolate lily, which has bell-shaped greenish flowers with brown markings. We don’t have any photos of it, but here’s one from USDA

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Their account notes that the root bulbs are edible, though bitter, and were an item of trade for tribes in this area. F. affinis is quite variable in flower color, sometimes showing the reverse of the ones we’ve seen: purplish-brown flowers with green or yellow “dice”, as below.

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We also saw two other wildflowers more familiar to us: shooting stars,

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always one of the more abundant flowers this time of year,

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and our beloved Trout Lilies (Erythronium hendersonii), delicate and demure plants with a very brief duration of bloom.

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They range in color from nearly white to a darker violet-pink. Flowers are borne so close to the ground that it’s hard to get a look from underneath.

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The mottled leaves are the reason for some of the common names—Trout Lily, Fawn Lily—and I think they are as beautiful as the flowers, in their way.

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Ground Cones and Witches’ Butter

The forest road we’ve been walking on has not provided much in the way of wildlife sightings—two flickers, and various mammalian scat—but here are two odd “plants” seen this week. One’s a fungus, the other a plant with no chlorophyll. Let’s look at that one first:

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This is the ground cone (Boschniakia strobilacea), which we found pushed up through duff near maple and madrone trees.

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These belong to a group of organisms that are considered plants, although they have no chlorophyll and hence don’t make their living through photosynthesis. The larger group to which they belong is that of heterotrophic plants,

meaning “other-feeding”, since they must get their nutrition from other organisms.

Heterotrophic plants are divided into one of two groups, based upon how they obtain their food. The first of these two groups are parasitic plants. As parasites, they obtain their organic carbon from a host green plant directly through the use of structures called haustoria [rootlike outgrowths]. Wildflowers such as ground cone … are examples of root parasites. US Forest Service

Ground cones may not look like it but they are flowering plants; the ones we found today were from last spring, so they had flowered and gone to seed. Last spring they probably looked like this:

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Photo by Russell Towle, taken in the Sierra Nevada (N. fork of the American River).

Here is one of the seed pods and contents.

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The pod, though swollen with moisture, was still less than a quarter inch in diameter before I broke it open.

Our other find was a gelatinous fungus with the colorful and descriptive name of witches’ butter.

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I think this is Dacrymyces palmatus; similar-looking yellow-orange fungi, with the same common name, are found as parasites growing on other fungi, rather than directly on wood like this. And the witches have “butter” that is black in color too (Exidia recisa, see photo here).

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These are the fruiting bodies, like a conventional mushroom, though I could not find out in a brief search of the net exactly how the spores disperse.