Showing posts with label winter. Show all posts
Showing posts with label winter. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 16, 2013

Japanese Quince

Every year about now I put on a few extra sweaters, check the weather forecast for snow, and go outside to look for.....flowers??!  Yes, that's right: flowers!
Japanese quince flower and flower buds.
It's time for Japanese quince shrubs to flower, and they are a welcome sight on these gray winter days.  Our outdoor classroom's Japanese quince shrubs are by the sidewalk near the entrance to the parking lot.  You can't miss them right now, as they are covered in blooms.
One of our two Japanese quince shrubs.
Japanese quince shrubs have an extremely unusual strategy for finding pollinators.  Their flowers are bee-pollinated, but there are absolutely no bees out today!  However, if you've lived in Middle Tennessee long enough, you've learned that we tend to have the odd warm day here and there throughout the winter.  When the weather warms up, beehives send out scouts to see if anything is blooming.  And for warm January days, Japanese quince have a monopoly on the blooming business, so any bees that are out will pollinate the Japanese quince.
Flower buds on a Japanese quince.
You may have already figured this out, but Japanese quinces are from Japan.  They were brought to the United States as an ornamental and edible plant centuries ago.  In the US, they are a slightly old-fashioned but well-loved garden plant.  You've already discovered their ability to brighten a dark winter day, but they also produce useful fruit, called a quince.  Quinces are relatives of apples and pears, and some types of quinces are well-loved in Asian and European cooking.  The quinces of our Japanese quince shrubs are small, hard and bitter, but they can be used to make excellent jams and jellies.  If these flowers are pollinated, we'll have some quince fruits later in the spring or early summer.  Watch out - Japanese quince shrubs have a few thorns to protect their quinces.
A sedum blooming in January.
There is another strange bloomer at the outdoor classroom right now.  It's called sedum, and it's growing right in the middle of the waterfall above the pond.  Sedums don't usually bloom until later in February or March, so I'm not sure what this little plant is up to.  But plants have variations just like people do.  Where people might have different hair colors, plants might have different blooming times.  If January turns out to be a good time for this sedum to bloom,  it will make lots of seeds and pass the early-blooming trait on to the next generation of sedums.  Next year there will be more early-bloomers.

Friday, December 14, 2012

Cirque de Squirrel

It's a good thing you know what squirrels look like, because I don't have a picture of a squirrel for you!  I wanted to write about them this week, but when I went to take pictures, they were gone for the day.  That's OK, though, because there is plenty of squirrel evidence visible in our outdoor classroom.  If you visit and don't see actual squirrels, look for clues instead.

Squirrels are messy eaters.  They unwrap their food, eat what's inside, then drop their food wrappers all over the place.  If you walk around the outdoor classroom and look down at the ground, you can see their food wrappers (complete with squirrel teeth marks) all over the place!  (You may notice that humans are also sometimes messy eaters - I picked up several human food wrappers out there this week.  Somehow human food wrappers are less adorable than squirrel-chewed walnut shells.)
Evidence of squirrels.
Another visible sign of squirrel activity is squirrel nests.  If you look to the top of the magnolia tree in the front yard of the beautiful building next to our classroom, you can see a squirrel nest.  Do you see it in the picture below?
Can you see the squirrel nest in the top of this tree?
Here is the squirrel nest a little closer:
Squirrel nest in the top of a magnolia tree.
Squirrels are probably the easiest topic for me to make interesting, because just about everything squirrels do is either hilarious, cute or annoying.  Here are a few fun things you might notice about them this time of year if you stop to watch them for a while.

1. Acrobatics.  Squirrels climb up and down all sorts of surfaces.  They are the only mammals that can climb down trees face-first, which they do by turning their back feet around as they descend.  Squirrels chase each other on mad dashes through the tree tops, often making great leaps from one tree to another like circus performers on a trapeze.  They also have a great high-wire act - squirrels commonly run across electric and telephone wires as easily as we run on sidewalks. 

2. Nest design.  Squirrels make extremely well-insulated nests in crevices in buildings or trees or constructed in tree branches or on top of bird nests.  They layer their nests with feathers or thistle or dandelion down (those feathery parts of the seeds).  When their nests are made of leaves, they can add layer after layer of leaves to make a hollow ball for sleeping.  The layers of leaves keep the rain out and the heat in.  Since squirrels don't hibernate, they need to keep their body temperature warm all winter, so their nests are important for keeping them warm at night, just like your nest, er, I mean, bed.  Look for squirrels carrying leaves or other materials to build nests next time you see one.  (You can try out a leaf nest for yourself.  If you layer about 50 tightly-packed leaves carefully over a balled-up paper towel then sprinkle water over the top, the paper towel is unlikely to get wet.)

3. Variety of Behaviors.  Squirrels are generalist feeders.  We always think of them as eating only nuts, but they also eat tree bark, berries and seeds.  Generalist feeders tend to have a much wider variety of behaviors than animals that eat only one thing.  Generalists must be curious about new food sources and adapt their food searching to a variety of challenges, which means their brains must be flexible and able to improvise.  Nothing against cows, but compare the variety of behaviors of squirrels to cows, and you can see what I mean.  Try making a list of all the things a squirrel does next time you see one.  I'll start: chase, dig, search in the grass, make a loud alarm call, climb up bricks.....

4. Problem Solving.  If you've ever had a squirrel figure out how to access the seeds in your bird feeder at home, you have seen the evidence of squirrels' ability to solve problems.  Once they locate a food source or nest site, they will try many new strategies to succeed in their plans to eat or build a nest.  Notice how ingenious this squirrel is at getting to what he wants despite human attempts to keep him out of the bird feeder.  Squirrels are an inspiring reminder to try many different strategies to succeed at a task.

5. Memory.  Squirrels have an unusually good memory for where they leave food.  They store food for the winter in a method called scatter-hoarding.  It's the opposite of how humans store food - all in one place in the kitchen pantry.  Squirrels leave little patches of food buried or hidden in hundreds of places, and they remember where they leave the food (they don't find their stashed food by smell - they find it by memory).  Scatter-hoarding is risky because squirrels can't guard all their food at once.  However, if their food is discovered and stolen from one location, they still have hundreds of backup locations that are unlikely to be raided.  Look for squirrels burying their food - the squirrel is almost 100% likely to come back and dig up that food later in the season. 

6. Deception.  I'm not condoning lying, but it sure is amusing to watch squirrels lie!  If a squirrel knows it is being watched by another squirrel, it will not actually hide its food.  Instead, it will pretend to hide the food by digging a hole, pretending to drop in a nut, and covering up the hole.  The watching competitor squirrel will be fooled, then the squirrel will go and hide the food in private so as not to reveal the hiding place.  It is easy to verify if a squirrel has lied.  Next time you see one bury a nut, go check and see if the squirrel has actually done so or if it has fooled you too.

Thursday, November 29, 2012

Why Don't Fish Need Mittens?

Brrrr!  It's been cold the last few nights!  Air temperatures dropped into the mid 20's, which is way lower than freezing.  I bundled up in many layers to survive being outside for about an hour last evening.  I felt a little bad for the fish in our outdoor classroom - they are stuck in cold water without any hats or mittens or even hot cocoa to warm them up.
A mosquitofish alive and well after several nights of freezing temperatures.
Humans are like tropical animals in terms of their thermal comfort zone.  We are comfortable living in temperatures in the 60's to 90's on the Fahrenheit scale.  We have created many devices to keep ourselves at a comfortable temperature: clothes, buildings, heat, air conditioning, insulation and ice cubes all help us maintain comfortable body temperatures whether we are in the tropics or in the Arctic.  Animals can be classified as endotherms or ectotherms, and we are of the endotherm variety.  Endotherms use some of the energy in the food they eat to keep their bodies warm.  Even though the temperature of the air inside our buildings is usually around 72 degrees, our bodies stay at 98.6 degrees.  Mammals, birds and even some fish like tuna can keep their body temperature warm using energy from food.

Mosquitofish are happy as clams in a much broader range of temperatures than we can stand.  They can live in the very warm water of shallow sunny pools in the summer, and they can survive a fairly cold winter too.  Mosquitofish are ectotherms, like most fish, amphibians, reptiles, insects and mollusks.  They don't keep their body temperature warm - they let it cool off when the environment cools off.  And as the temperature drops, they simply slow down.  Their bodies move more slowly, they eat less food, and they stay more hidden.  Many ectotherms hibernate, essentially sleeping in a cold state until the weather becomes warm enough to move around again.  If you watch our mosquitofish, you will notice that they are much slower on cold days than warm days. 

Mosquitofish can't survive if the pond freezes all they way through.  Fortunately for them, water temperature usually doesn't get as low as air temperature, so the pond is going to be warmer than the air temperature, and it won't usually freeze.  Also, ponds freeze at their surface, then the ice acts as an insulator, keeping the lower layer of the pond from freezing.  So even if you see ice on our pond this winter, it is likely that the mosquitofish will be swimming slowly in the water under the surface. 

Do mosquitofish feel cold?  I don't know.  I suppose you would have to put a mosquitofish in a fish tank with a cold area and a warm area and see where it chooses to spend its time!

Here are some other ways you can see organisms responding to the temperature at the outdoor classroom this week:

It's easy to see which plants survive freezing right now.  I'll write about this more in the deep winter, but it's probably easier to see now before the dead plants blow away and decompose.  The dead leaves in the picture below didn't survive freezing.  Either their seeds will survive the winter or their roots will survive in the ground, but it will not grow again until the spring.  The plant on the left is just fine with freezing temperatures, and it will stay growing, though very slowly, through the winter.  there are lots of winter-growing plants in our classroom.
The fern on the left survived freezing, the plant on the right did not.
The honey bees are still drinking at our pond on warm days!  They must have a fairly warm location for their hive.  Bees do some temperature regulation of their hives by eating food then shaking their wings really hard inside the hive to generate heat.  Our bodies do a similar thing - they shiver to generate heat.  Bees also flap their wings to fan the hive if it gets too hot.  Even though insects are ectotherms, bees have some endotherm ability.  Neat!
Honey bees are still drinking from our pond on warmer days despite the freezing nights.