Translate

Wednesday, August 23, 2023

Folds

 "Our village life would stagnate if it were not for the unexplored forests and meadows which surround it. We need the tonic of wildness -- to wade sometimes in marshes where the bittern and the meadow-hen lurk" - Thoreau (author)

Corrales Village can be quite a conflict of ideas. Near to the big city of Albuquerque, the developing resources of Rio Rancho, the organization of Los Ranchos, and the Pueblos. It is influenced by, yet very different from them all. We nestle between the mountains and the mesa, the river and the desert. With all this diversity it can be easy to forget that the bosque is neither wild, nor self sustaining and far more fragile than it would first appear.

The fall migration in Corrales is known more for the Sandhill cranes and the Balloon fiestas, but it is worth taking a moment to look at the last of the summer blooms. The common morning glory is a weed to some, an ornamental to others. Some call it poisonous and others use it to get a cheap, but risky high, and it is all these these things to different people. Corrales is likewise known for both expensive land and amateur real estate deals.
Field bindweed is also a climber that takes advantage of the tall pigweeds, or kochia, to grow towards the full sun. It is considered a noxious weed, related to morning glories, and hated by horse people.
Another hated plant is the beautiful silverleaf nightshade. Much is made of the (slightly) poisonous berries, thorns and deep roots. This close relative of the potato is a magnet for bumblebees and also is used to set milk for making cheese.
The desert globe mallow is adapted to all soils and full sun. It has the huge advantage of not offending anyone. Occasionally you can be lucky enough to find native bees sleeping among the anthers.
Desert chicory is an aster related to dandelions that attracts a wide range of pollinators. The burnt root of a related flower has been used (as a last resort) as a coffee substitute.
While I may not know (or care too much) about the difference between a desert dandelion and chicory, I know this plant is a long leaved groundcherry, or tomatillo. Oddly, it is also a nightshade like the silverleaf, but is much less vilified even though it is not (strictly speaking) native.
This is some sort of American aster. Could be a daisy species because the flower center is simple, not a group of flowers. These flowers are difficult to separately identify, can hybridize readily and often are found outside of their "official" range areas.Human migration has spread the flowers all over the globe, further confusing the taxonomy.
Sacred datura is a full sun plant that is appreciated by many insects. Among them tortoise beetles, sphinx moths, ants, bees, and hummingbirds. The flowers were often painted by Georgia O'Keeffe when there weren't any monsoon clouds, or animal bones around.
Along many of the smallest acequias in Corrales, there are many escapees from gardens. This is a day lilly and is much less common on this side of the Mississippi. The showy flowers have been selectively breed by gardeners for many generations.
This is one of the few venomous caterpillars from the foothills of Cuba. It is a type of silkworm called an Io moth. It is not actually dangerous, but can give a rash that might last a few days.
This hornworm has a false horn on the posterior to mimic a venomous insect, but the cocoons on the rump also so that the parasitoid wasps were not fooled and have laid their eggs on the inside of the body. This is a main reason that insecticides are a bad idea, while it kills the caterpillars, it also eliminates the natural control agents of these caterpillars.
This is a fiery skipper, one of the medium sized butterflies we see late in the season here in Corrales. The skippers have been used to study the benefits of using DNA instead of traditional taxonomy. It turns out, DNA is not the silver bullet biologists thought, and Linnaeus hierarchy still has a place.
Catfish thrive in the low water conditions found at the end of the Corrales irrigation season. There are many young fish that often swim in shoals as they forage for food using their sensitive barbels. These ones stand out, but against a dark mud background they are totally invisible.
While bullfrogs have some ability to change colors, they can often stand out against the wrong background. These large frogs have few predators if they are close to a pool. Their normal predators, such as pike and bass are not found here in any numbers. They are also safe from snapping turtles while out of the water, and their raccoon and fox enemies are not around during the day.
The numerous toadlets on the sandbanks left by the receding river will only move if threatened, and occur in such large numbers they are in no danger of extinction. They have an unpleasant flavor, which many dogs learn to avoid, eventually.
Mosquitos are completely resistant to most forms of human extermination. They now thrive in underground pipes and concrete areas all through Albuquerque and are no longer at risk of killing frosts, thanks to global warming and human causes of local warming, such as leaking septic systems and houses. Recently the city of Albuquerque has noticed exotic disease carrying mosquitos, such as this yellow fever mosquito. This insect has the distinction of being the cause of more human death than any other creature.
This harmless orb weaver is a beautiful and impressive spider that evokes far more fear than the literal blood suckers we have seen all during the river flood season. Their large size and spectacular coloring makes it well worth the time to observe. While they are nowhere near as intelligent or interactive as the jumping spiders, or as impressively large as the tarantulas and wolf spiders, they have an appeal all of their own.
Spiders are well known insect eaters, but far less attention seems to be given to these amazing mosquito hunters. The meadow hawks specialize in hunting through grass during the colder months and collect large numbers of small insects such as gnats.
This insect was a new one for me. It looks like an ant but is actually a wasp. Most wasps are parasitoids that lay their eggs in other creatures. This one is looking for small moth caterpillars that eat paper, called clothes moths.
This is another parasitoid, but is a fly that is often confused with a bee. The specific species depends of identifying thin bands in the wings that I was not able to capture in this photograph.
This good picture clearly shows a pearl crescent butterfly. While lepidoptery is an important biology study in it's own right, it is also worth pursing just for the sheer beauty of the adult insects and crazy life stories they can follow. Confidentially, however, most of these particular naturalists appear to be quite insane.
It is worth being cautious around any plant with more than three names, such as this Foresteria species, New Mexico Olive, Privet, Texas forsythia, or whatever you choose to call it. Those purple drupes provide an important source of nutrients for winter birds and right now have a juicy red flesh. They are barely edible, however.
The fruit, or drupe, has a surprisingly scientific definition that is jaw droppingly badly applied to anything that looks even remotely like an olive. Russian olives are another starvation fruit used by many animals. They grow in profusion on the edges of riparian habitats, and while invasive, they have crossed the line into native as they are the preferred habitat for some endangered species, such as the southwestern yellow breasted flycatcher. These small birds need very thick cover to breed and use stands of tamarisk and Russian olive as a stand in for the dense undergrowth that willows and young cottonwoods used to provide. Thinning the forest would profoundly alter the delicate natural balance and lead to unpredictable results, which is already happening, or course.
There is a lot we do not know about coyotes. We know they have an impressive sweet tooth for fallen fruits, which abound now in Corrales (your neighbors will only accept so much fresh fruit). Here the grape seeds are left in the coyote scat that these canids use to mark their wanderings. While dogs cannot digest tannins and other components of grapes, the coyotes can adapt to them and even appear to relish their taste. They also like mulberries, apricots, apples and peaches. Most coyotes visit by crossing the river where there is more space to just be their wild song dog selves, but there are a few dens along the lateral ditch.
Crayfish are kind of a starvation food for humans. Widely available, easy to catch, and frowned upon unless served at a tourist restaurant. The ditches sometimes have people placing traps for these crustacean in them, but the effort to clean and prepare them is hardly worth it. Then there is the issue of trapping on publicly owned lands...
Most crayfish are very small, although some can reach large sizes. This mess appears to be from a human, as most animals crack open the carapace, or just swallow the whole animal.
Garter snakes specialize in examining small pools for minnows cut off from the receding waters. They can be found during the early morning, especially if there are many fish or tadpoles in a watering hole.
This puddle held a goldfish that was definitely dumped here as an abandoned pet. The pet industry has a lot of very dark secrets in it's closets that most people chose to not think about (yes, this applies to cats and dogs, too) but released goldfish are a true scourge.
As winter approaches, the last of the young fence lizards are scurrying around. A majority will not make it through, but they are perfectly adapted to the imperfect world they have found themselves in. Lizards do not get the same love from Corrales residents that even the lowest of flowers do, but they are all connected together. This youngster might live another six years, while that flower's bloom will not have more than a few weeks, at most. So even though this lizard is fragile appearing, the species is tough, rugged and well adapted to navigating a changing world.

"Adapt yourself to the things among which your lot has been cast and love sincerely the fellow creatures with whom destiny has ordained that you shall live. " Marcus Aurelius (Stoic philosopher)
 

No comments:

Post a Comment