Showing posts with label early purple orchid. Show all posts
Showing posts with label early purple orchid. Show all posts
Tuesday, May 27, 2014
A Day on the Durham coast
Some plants and animals from a day walking on the cliffs between Seaham and Hawthorn Dene on the Durham coast last week
Dozens of fully grown drinker moth caterpillars on the steps leading down to Blast beach ...
..... some had even made it all the way down to the beach
Masses of bird'sfoot trefoil in full bloom on the edge of the limestone quarry
Bloody cranesbill coming into bloom on he magnesian limestone grassland
Wonderful display of buttercups in the meadows at Hawthorn Dene
Not many early purple orchids, but some nice specimens
Some glorious displays of hawthorn near Hawthorn Dene. Best year for hawthorn blossom that I can remember
Common milkwort around the quarry area
There's not a lot of sea pink along this coastline but in full bloom
A goldfinch that seemed to be ill and was reluctant to fly, but with no visible signs of injury
.... and finally, fulmars soaring along the cliffs
Wednesday, June 19, 2013
Bluebells and Globeflowers in Teesdale
Today's Guardian Country Diary is an account of a walk that follows the river Tees upstream, between Middleton-in-Teesdale and Bowlees.
Along the route the footpath passes through some beautiful old meadows, with shallow fast-flowing shallow streams like this that flow down from the fells into the river in the bottom of the valley.
This is one of the umbellifers that's common in the old, flower-rich grassland: pignut Conopodium majus. There's archaeological evidence that its underground tubers were once an important food source during the Bronze Age and those who have tried them report that they taste like Brazil nuts although, given the poisonous nature of many umbellifers, this isn't something that anyone should try unless they are absolutely certain of the identification. Many of the plant poisonings that are reported, including fatal ones, are the result of mistaken identification of umbellifers - usually water dropwort species which also have roots that resemble carrots.
If you travel from sea level at the coast up into the Pennines you can walk back through the seasons in County Durham. Because of the late spring and the altitude, there was a fine display of bluebells along the footpath (which is part of the Pennine Way), even though they had long since faded away at Hawthorn Dene on the coast, which we'd visited recently.
The smell of the bluebells, confined between the dry stone walls early in the morning on a windless day, was glorious.
The steep banks of the Tees host fine displays of bluebells amongst the ferns, with...........
.... some fine specimens of early purple orchids amongst them.
Along the route the footpath passes through some beautiful old meadows, with shallow fast-flowing shallow streams like this that flow down from the fells into the river in the bottom of the valley.
This is one of the umbellifers that's common in the old, flower-rich grassland: pignut Conopodium majus. There's archaeological evidence that its underground tubers were once an important food source during the Bronze Age and those who have tried them report that they taste like Brazil nuts although, given the poisonous nature of many umbellifers, this isn't something that anyone should try unless they are absolutely certain of the identification. Many of the plant poisonings that are reported, including fatal ones, are the result of mistaken identification of umbellifers - usually water dropwort species which also have roots that resemble carrots.
If you travel from sea level at the coast up into the Pennines you can walk back through the seasons in County Durham. Because of the late spring and the altitude, there was a fine display of bluebells along the footpath (which is part of the Pennine Way), even though they had long since faded away at Hawthorn Dene on the coast, which we'd visited recently.
The smell of the bluebells, confined between the dry stone walls early in the morning on a windless day, was glorious.
The steep banks of the Tees host fine displays of bluebells amongst the ferns, with...........
.... some fine specimens of early purple orchids amongst them.
Bluebells are most familiar as woodland plants but one of the features of the meadows here is that they are sometimes full of bluebells too - a reminder that this cultivated land was once woodland and that some of the fields here have not been ploughed in recent memory. Double-click this image for a larger one, which shows the bluebells more clearly.
Bird cherry is a tree with a predominantly northern distribution and this year its floral display has been magnificent. It's usually a small hedgerow tree and large, well proportioned specimens like these two are uncommon.
Bird cherry blossom complements Teesdale's white painted farms perfectly.
When the footpath descended to the edge of the Tees we found these globe flowers, known to earlier generations of Teesdale folk as 'double-dumplings' . They are much larger relatives of the buttercup, with incurved yellow petals and sepals, so that they resemble art deco lamps. These days they are mostly confined to the riverbank, but they used to be common in wetter areas in old unimproved meadows, growing alongside meadowsweet, ragged robin and melancholy thistle.
Sunday, May 12, 2013
Newly minted butterfly.....
We found this newly-emerged green-veined white, still 'pumping up' its hind wings, when we walked along the sea cliffs south of Seaham this morning.
This early purple orchid - the first I've seen this year - was flowering in the meadows near Hawthorn Dene and was already past its best. Spring flowers are enjoying a very short season this year, having been held back for so long...............
........... but the display of cowslips in the same meadow is magnificent. We also saw ....
............ a few false oxlips, which are the natural hybrid between primroses and cowslips.
Down on Blast beach, at the base of the cliffs, landslips have created sheltered, steep banks at the top of the beach that are carpeted in primroses.
The finest floral display, though, is at the top of the cliffs, where the gorse is in full bloom, with its wonderful coconut aroma and .....
...flowers that are so closely packed together that they completely hide the bushes
Labels:
cowslip,
early purple orchid,
false oxlip,
gorse,
Primrose,
Seaham
Wednesday, May 16, 2012
The Cats' Pee Orchid's Life of Deceit
We found a fine display of early purple orchids blooming on the cliff tops south of Seaham, along the Durham coast, today. They're beautiful flowers to look at but less attractive when you smell them, as they emit a strong aroma of cat's urine which is generally repugnant to people but attractive to bees........ which are in for a disappointment when they visit these flowers.
Charles Darwin spent many years studying orchids and was intrigued by their elaborate flowers and complicated pollination arrangements. In his seminal book in the subject, The Various Contrivances by which Orchids are Fertilised by Insects, first published in 1862 and which you can download here, he noted that although the flowers have a well developed nectar spur they don't produce any nectar. Bees that visit are duped into exploring one or two flowers in an inflorescence but soon leave when they find no sweet reward - but by then they've performed the essential pollination service that the plant requires.
This is Darwin's detailed dissection of an early purple orchid flower. The two important features to note are the hollow nectar spur in the uppermost illustration, which shows a longitudinal section of the flower, and the club-shaped structure in the centre, which is the pollinium containing the pollen grains.
Try as he might, Darwin could find no trace of nectar in the nectar spur and was reduced to suggesting that if visiting bees did extract any reward from the flower it could only have been by piercing the floral tissues with their proboscis, which has never been proved to be the case. He concluded that the basis of pollinator visits was deceit on the part of the plant, that relied on naive, newly-emerged bees in spring making exploratory visits to any flower that might contain a food source.
The other part of the flower that intrigued Darwin was the pollinium - the male stamen that is carried away in its entirety when a bee probes for nectar and the pollinium sticks to its tongue (click here for a picture of a pollinium-encumbered bee visiting an orchid).
Each flower has a pair of pollinia - they're the two dark, club-shaped structures under the hooded petal in the flower above. When they're carried away by a bee they bend forward within about a minute, so they're well positioned to make contact with the stigma of the next orchid flower it visits.
In his book Darwin demonstrated rather neatly how you could mimic the whole process by poking a sharpened pencil into the flower. Try this - it really works. When you withdraw the pencil with the pollinia attached their stalks dry out and they slowly bend forwards. Incidentally, the ever-meticulous Darwin dissected, counted and estimated the number of pollen grains in a single pollinium - a staggering 122,400.
This orchid's deceitful pollination technique is only partially successful because bees are smart and after visiting a couple of flowers look elsewhere for an energy reward. Darwin's work was followed up in the 1990s by Dr. L.A. Nilsson at the University of Uppsala who showed that bees would visit more flowers on an inflorescence if those empty nectar spurs we filled with artificial nectar.
Nilsson noted that early purple orchids only produce a few seed pods, developing from the first few flowers to open at the bottom of the inflorescence. The rest almost always remain unfertilised, although 80% of them could set seed if they were hand-pollinated. The first bees of spring may be naive but they learn fast and if they don't find the reward they are looking for they soon ignore that attractive scent of cats' pee and take their pollination services elsewhere, leaving many early purple orchid flowers unpollinated.
Fortunately the seed production from a single pollinated flower is quite large ..........Darwin counted 6200 seeds in a single capsule of spotted orchid and this species' seed production would be similar.... so early purple orchids manage to survive on deceit.
Sunday, May 16, 2010
Life on the Edge
The Durham coast used to be famed for industrial dereliction and coal waste dumping, but thanks to a wonderfully successful clean-up campaign it's now a great place for coastal walking, where you can get eye-to-eye with a kestrel as it glides on the updraft from the beach.
The cliffs south of Seaham are becoming popular with birders - it's a great place to watch the fulmars that nest on the cliffs as they glide by ....
... and yesterday the scrub on the cliff top was alive with singing whitethroats
...
... along with this smartly turned-out cock chaffinch..
The calcareous grassland along the Durham Coastal path is now part of the Durham Heritage Coast and just now the cowslips are coming into full bloom ...
.... along with the early purple orchids - a narrow strip of floral diversity, perched on top of the crumbling cliff edge
Labels:
chaffinch,
cowslip,
Durham Coastal Path,
early purple orchid,
kestrel,
Whitethroat
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