Kentucky Botanists Big Year 2022's Journal

Journal archives for March 2022

March 16, 2022

KYBBY 2022 ID Tips: Know Your Woodland Stellaria!

(Cross-posted from the KNPS Wildflower Week BotanyBlitz journal)

In open calcareous woodlands of Kentucky, there are two relatively common native Chickweed (Stellaria) species you may encounter: Star Chickweed (Stellaria pubera) and Tennessee Starwort (Stellaria corei). They are very similar in overall appearance -- so similar that Tennessee Starwort was once considered just a variety of Star Chickweed, rather than its own species. But there is a fairly easy way to tell them apart when they're in bloom. Let's take a look!

Star Chickweed (Stellaria pubera)


(Left photo by @michaela_rogers, right close-up photo by @melanielinkperez)
Star Chickweed is a delightful spring wildflower with white, star-like flowers. In the close-up photo, check out the green calyx behind the petals. (Note: scroll down to the 4th photo here if you're not sure what the calyx is.) The sepals -- or individual leaf-like bracts that make up the calyx -- of Star Chickweed are always shorter than the petals. Now let's look at...

Tennessee Starwort (Stellaria corei)


(Left photo by @drdeforest, right close-up photo by @stephen_bucklin)
Pretty similar, huh? Once again, check out the close-up photo: look at those long, sharply pointed sepals! The sepals of Tennessee Starwort are as long as or longer than the petals. This is a diagnostic feature that you can use to distinguish between the two species.

Star Chickweed is somewhat more common throughout Kentucky than Tennessee Starwort (you can check out their county-level BONAP range maps here), but particularly for botanizers in the Bluegrass Region or Appalachian Plateau, either species could be seen on a woodland hike in spring. So if you see either and you're still not quite sure which it is, don't forget to include a good photo of the sepals in your iNat observation!

Posted on March 16, 2022 11:52 AM by vvoelker vvoelker | 0 comments | Leave a comment

March 21, 2022

KYBBY ID Tips: Common Small-flowered Buttercups

(Cross-posted from the KNPS Wildflower Week BotanyBlitz journal)

Today I thought we'd take a look at two common, native, small-flowered Buttercups, Ranunculus abortivus (Small-flowered or Kidney-leaf Buttercup) and Ranunculus micranthus (Rock Buttercup). In overall aspect, these two are strikingly similar:

  • basal leaves on long petioles that vary from basically round to kidney-shaped to tri-lobed
  • stem leaves that are deeply 3-lobed with lanceolate to oblong lobes
  • dinky flowers
  • not particularly restricted to any particular habitat, and can be found in a variety of dry to mesic wooded sites, fields, riparian areas, roadsides, etc.

Looking at them side by side, you can see how it's kind of a "Patty Duke Show" situation, but with buttercups:


(Left: R. abortivus by @easter22; right: R. micranthus by @sarcasticdungbeetle)


(Left: Basal rosette of R. abortivus by @sam727, right: Basal rosette of R. micranthus by @tanyuu)

Even so, you might be able to visually detect a key difference from the above photos: the foliage and stems of Ranunculus micranthus appears more grayish-green due to the presence of long, soft hairs on the stem and petioles, and the light pubescence on the leaves. Ranunculus abortivus tends to be darker or deeper green, because its stems, petioles, and foliage are all glabrous (hairless). This is probably the easiest ways to tell the two apart vegetatively; here are some closeups:


(Left: glabrous stem of R. abortivus by @emily7; right: softly hairy stem of R. micranthus by @vvoelker)

As you become more familiar with these two, you'll notice a few more differences:

  • The bases of basal leaves are more truncate to cuneate for R. micranthus, compared to kidney-shaped to cordate for R. abortivus
  • On average, R. abortivus tends to be a bit more robust in stature, often with with stouter stems
  • Although it is possible for them to co-occur in the same habitat, R. micranthus is slightly more conservative and skews toward somewhat drier habitats

For further reading and additional comparison notes, the website Missouri Plants has great photos and descriptions of both R. abortivus and R. micranthus!

Note: these are not the only small-flowered Buttercup species in Kentucky, but they are two of the most common and widespread lookalikes. A few other small-flowered Buttercups to be aware of include:

  • Ranunculus recurvatus - Also common and widespread, but with larger stem leaves and generally less likely to be mistaken for abortivus or micranthus (distribution in KY)
  • Ranunculus allegheniensis - Restricted to the southeastern Appalachian Plateau counties, this species may resemble R. abortivus in overall aspect and glabrous stems, but with hairy sepals instead of hairless (distribution in KY)
  • Ranunculus harveyi - Most similar to R. micranthus, but with noticeably slightly larger petals. This species is only known from Cumberland and Clinton Counties in Ky (distribution in KY)
  • Ranunculus sceleratus - tends to be a wetland or wetland-adjacent species (distribution in KY)
  • Uncommon to rare native wetland Buttercups - Ranunculus ambigens, Ranunculus laxicaulis, Ranunculus pusillus
  • Non-native and weedy - Ranunculus parviflorus
Posted on March 21, 2022 03:07 PM by vvoelker vvoelker | 0 comments | Leave a comment

March 24, 2022

BotanyBlitz ID Tips: Vegetative ID of Dutchman's Breeches & Squirrel Corn

(Cross-posted from the KNPS Wildflower Week BotanyBlitz journal)

We're fast approaching (or maybe already there in certain areas) that point in spring where there's no question which Dicentra species we're looking at, it's either tiny breeches or tiny hearts:


(Left: Dutchman's Breeches (Dicentra cucullaria) by @herbane; Right: Squirrel Corn (Dicentra canadensis) by @maryrebeccau)

But what about before the flowers have fully developed? We've all been there, in early to mid-March, impatiently staring at a clump of Dicentra leaves and wanting to know which species it is. Fortunately, there are a couple of clues that can reveal their identities from relatively early on. The following images are from this observation of Squirrel Corn, side by side with with Dutchman's Breeches.

Clue 1: Lower Leaf Surface


Turn over a leaf and examine the color of the underside. The difference can be subtle, but Dutchman's Breeches is pale green on the underside (on the left in both photos), whereas Squirrel Corn has a grayish cast (on the right in the photos), particularly on newer leaves, although the intensity of the grayish cast does seem to diminish somewhat as Squirrel Corn foliage matures.

Clue 2: Corm Shape


Dicentra corms often sit rather close to the soil surface, and may be partially visible if you pull back the leaf litter at the base of the plant. If you can see the tops of any corms, look for either pointed-tipped corms (like garlic cloves) for Dutchman's Breeches, or rounded potato-like corms for Squirrel Corn.

So next time you're out photographing either of these species, make sure to flip over a leaf and gently check for visible corms, they might help you recognize these wildflower friends earlier than you thought possible!

Posted on March 24, 2022 03:11 PM by vvoelker vvoelker | 0 comments | Leave a comment

March 29, 2022

KYBBY ID Tips: Jewelweed Seedlings

(Cross-posted from the KNPS Wildflower Week BotanyBlitz journal)

In March and early April, along wet roadside ditches, moist woodland openings, and shaded floodplains, you may find an abundance of a certain conspicuous seedling having large, rounded leaves that are shallowly notched at the tip:

(seedling pics by @terrikoontz)

These rubbery, bluish-green, and decidedly chonky cotyledons belong to Kentucky's two native Jewelweed species, the orange-flowered Impatiens capensis and the yellow-flowered Impatiens pallida. Both species have seed leaves that are distinctively oversized, with each leaf about the size of a quarter. As the stem begins to elongate, these seed leaves give way to the plant's true leaves, which are hairless, ovate, and broadly toothed along the edges:

(Jewelweed plants with stem leaves and cotyledons still attached by @mewells)

I'm not aware of a reliable way to identify Jewelweed seedlings to species, although later in the spring when the plants are larger, you can tell them apart before flowering time by examining the teeth along the leaf edges: the leaves of Impatiens capensis generally have 9 or fewer teeth on each side of the leaf, while those of Impatiens pallida usually have 10+ teeth per side.

A caveat!

There may be a few species with seedlings that are somewhat similar, but Jewelweed is unique in having the largest and broadest seed leaves you're likely to encounter in its preferred habitats.

Waterleaf (Hydrophyllum) species also have fairly prominent seed leaves (more or less the size of a nickel), but they're still mostly smaller than Jewelweed and are softly hairy, whereas Jewelweed is hairless, rubbery, and blue-green all over. Here's what Great Waterleaf looks like as a wee baby, if you zoom in you can see the soft fuzz on its leaves:

https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/72217256
https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/71846387

Posted on March 29, 2022 11:24 AM by vvoelker vvoelker | 0 comments | Leave a comment

March 30, 2022

March KYBBY Update

KYBBY in Numbers

Here's how the Kentucky Botanists Big Year project is shaping up so far in 2022:

- 32 dedicated plant nerds (project members)
- 1,105 Research Grade observations of plants
- 228 Research Grade species

The current leaderboard for most Research Grade Species is:

  1. @ruthsworld (64)
  2. @gage_barnes (56)
  3. @ktuttlewheeler (56)
  4. @terrikoontz (51)
  5. @john_abrams (47)
  6. @sbrockway (39)
  7. @hbraunreiter (37)
  8. @jklmiller (32)
  9. @berg000 (27)
  10. @sal77o (25)

Note: the KNPS BotanyBlitz is from April 2-9 and the City Nature Challenge is April 29-May 2, so I expect we'll see a significant increase in observations and species over the next month and a few days. Will there be a leaderboard shakeup?? Who will reveal themselves as the dark horse iNatters in Kentucky this year?? Only time will tell, and I'm certainly looking forward to finding out.

In March, the most frequently observed plants in Kentucky (all obs included, not limited to the KYBBY) were:

  1. Virginia spring beauty (Claytonia virginica)
  2. red deadnettle (Lamium purpureum)
  3. rue anemone (Thalictrum thalictroides)
  4. cutleaf toothwort (Cardamine concatenata)
  5. hairy bittercress (Cardamine hirsuta)

Rare species and interesting finds

Kentucky iNatters have wasted no time this year in observing rare species, here are just a few that have been seen recently:

Help Identify

The iNat community is 100% reliant on volunteer effort to QA/QC observations, and observations must reach Research Grade to qualify in the KYBBY. Wherever you’re able to confidently do so, please help out your fellow botanizers by identifying or confirming their observations. If you like, you can filter by taxa you’re most comfortable with, whether it’s a species like Virginia bluebells (Mertensia virginica), a genus like violets (Viola), or a family like Campanulaceae. You can also filter by your county if you’re interested in focusing on observations in your locality. All identification assistance is greatly appreciated, and whatever you can contribute-- from identifying to species to simply refining broad IDs -- helps to improve the accuracy and completeness of iNaturalist data from Kentucky. Many thanks to @john_abrams, @davidenrique, @abelkinser, @jrichardabbott, @mjpapay, @burls, @ktuttlewheeler, @moritz3, @smschnerremd, @albach, @trscavo, @choess who have all made more than 50 identifications on other folks' plant observations in Kentucky this year!

And remember -- do tag all houseplants, garden plants, and those that are part of a landscaping arrangement (presence of mulch is a good clue) as captive/cultivated. This helps keep species range maps representative of only wild and naturally-occurring organisms.

Here's a link to the Identify Mode page, I've filtered it for all plant observations in Kentucky that still need ID's to reach RG, you may want to bookmark it!

-->Identify plants in Kentucky

Upcoming Kentucky Native Plant Society events

To kickoff the week-long KNPS BotanyBlitz, a number of iNat tutorial hikes are being held across the Commonwealth on April 1 & 2. There’s still time to register if you’re interested in attending a hike, so check out the list of locations for a hike near you!

Will you be joining us at Natural Bridge State Park on April 8 & 9 for Wildflower Weekend 2022? There’s still time to register for this event as well, we hope to see you there!

And now for the pics!

Here are a few that caught my eye recently, make sure to "favorite" any pics that make you swoon to highlight lovely photos or interesting finds!

Dreamy red trillium by @dperkins

Pretty in pink rue anemone by @john_abrams

Leatherwood’s charming lemon-drop flowers by @kmvowels

White troutlily struggling to get out of its leaf sweater by @jklmiller

Wood betony in pink and red by @meleagle

If you're an active botanizer in Kentucky

You should be a part of this project! Visit the project page here: https://www.inaturalist.org/projects/kentucky-botanists-big-year-2022 and click "Join" in the top right corner. See you on the trails!

Vanessa

Posted on March 30, 2022 09:21 PM by vvoelker vvoelker | 8 comments | Leave a comment

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