In keeping with the Holiday spirit, I’m offering some Halloween images compliments of the Blue Jay Barrens Nature Division. Unlike my normal posts, some of these images were taken more than seven days ago, but they were all taken in October and they are all from Blue Jay Barrens.
A random test audience has concluded that these creations range from clever to dumb to you’ve got to have a twisted mind to see anything in that. If you like, you can consider this a contest to see if you can guess what natural feature supplied the images. Sorry, there aren’t any prizes for being correct. Tomorrow I’ll show you the original image from which these were cropped.
My daughter is currently a psychology major in school. She may enjoy the opportunity to analyze her father through these pictures.
Saturday, October 31, 2009
Friday, October 30, 2009
Arrow-leaved Aster

There is one plant in the dry prairies that refuses to stop blooming. This is the Arrow-leaved Aster, a short plant that seems to wait until summer is over before beginning to bloom. This plant isn’t just holding on. Despite the fact that we’ve had many hard frosts, it’s continuing to produce fresh flowers.
I love these mid-stem leaves. They are slightly thickened and sometimes feel like rough leather. This is one of those plants that has a lot of variation within the population. One day you may think you’ve found five different aster species in the field. The next day it’s just a field full of Arrow-leaved Aster. Variation is the key to new species development and this plant seems ready to take advantage of what ever the future may bring.Thursday, October 29, 2009
Oak Island
The Post Oak I do have isn’t even a prime specimen. The bulk of the tree is a horizontal branch that grows out over the eroded bank. The tree appears to be healthy, but horizontal growth like this is usually destined to failure. I’ve searched this tree every year for acorns and have yet to find the first one.
Growing beside the Post Oak is a Blackjack Oak, Quercus marilandica, another uncommon species. There is a general similarity in leaf shape here. If you look closely, you’ll see that the main veins of the leaf end at a bristle tip extending from the leaf margin. This puts the Blackjack Oak in the red oak group instead of the white oak group with the Post Oak. Oak leaves can be highly variable in shape, even when they occur on the same tree. This leaf is not the typical shape for a Blackjack Oak and more resembles the leaf of Bush’s Oak, which is a hybrid between the Blackjack Oak and a Black Oak. Checking twig, bud and bark characteristics suggest to me that this is in fact a Blackjack Oak. Of course, I’m often high susceptible to the powers of suggestion. Especially when I’m the one making the suggestion. These oaks deserve a more detailed study.
Shingle Oak, Quercus imbricaria, is common at Blue Jay Barrens.
Another common species is Chinquapin Oak, Quercus muehlenbergia.Wednesday, October 28, 2009
Little Bluestem
The fluffy spikelets catch the sun and make the prairie sparkle. Little Bluestem is the perfect grass for making waves and patterns on a windy day.
Little Bluestem holds its seed well and will stand up through most winters. When the sparrows have cleaned up the Indian Grass seed they will move into these fields and start going after the tiny bluestem seeds.
Grasses, including Little Bluestem, are host plants to many species of skippers. During the summer, skippers are very plentiful in fields like this. Having multiple grass species in the field increases the diversity of animals that feed on those grasses.
Many people confuse Little Bluestem with Common Broom-sedge, Andropogon virginicus, shown above on the right. Broom-sedge is a stouter grass that tends to hide the seed inside the curled leaf blade. The Little Bluestem holds its seed out in the open at the end of a short stem. Both are native grasses and have a place in the prairie landscape.Tuesday, October 27, 2009
Buck Moth
There are certain annual events that I look forward to each year. One of those is the emergence of the Buck Moth, Hemileuca maia, one of Ohio’s uncommon species. The Buck Moth is a member of the giant silkworm family, but unlike most others of that family, it is a day flier and is most commonly encountered in the middle of a warm, sunny late October day. This is a fast moving moth that resembles a very hefty black and white butterfly in flight.
The bushy antenna shows this to be a male. In fact, every Buck Moth I intercepted was a male on the search for a female. These moths are constantly moving and the only way to get a picture is to hold them. They don’t seem to have much awareness of their surroundings and occasionally run head-long into a tree trunk or get tangled in the branches of a shrub. I suppose they are following a pheromone trail towards the female. I’ve only seen one female Buck Moth and that was also the only Buck Moth I’ve seen that was sitting still. I watched dozens of moths travel through the woods, but never saw one stop flying. If they are following pheromone trails, just where are the females waiting?
This is one hairy moth. It looks like this one is wearing one of those Halloween fright wigs. I suppose the hair must provide some protection against the cold, frosty nights this time of year.
The tip of the abdomen is colored a bright orange-red. The abdomen was in motion the entire time I held the moth. Perhaps it sensed a female and was probing around in an effort to find her.
This is more the image you get when you see a Buck Moth coming through the trees. This moth’s activities were only briefly interrupted for a short photo shoot. It was released unharmed and continued its flight through the woods.Monday, October 26, 2009
Transition Point
Sunday, October 25, 2009
Checking Nest Boxes
Saturday, October 24, 2009
Looking Up
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