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Winter
2001

Here's
what's debuting this season
on nature's stage in Chicago Wilderness
by
Jack MacRae
THE
BEGINNING OF WINTER
Our
Native Pines
Late
December seems an appropriate time to write about pines,
as assorted cedars, firs, and spruce are being hawked as
Christmas trees. But Chicago Wilderness has only two native
species of pinethe white pine and the brilliantly
named jack pine. Both have been growing here for thousands
of years while all the others have been introduced from
other regions. Up until the time of settlement in the 19th
century, white and jack pines were abundant in the sandy
soils adjacent to Lake Michigan. The great majority of them
were harvested for lumber to build the early buildings in
Chicago. At the Indiana Dunes National Lakeshore, the shifting
sands have covered and uncovered stumps of white pines that
are older than the Great Pyramids in Egypt.
Rough
Legs
A
few rough-legged hawks have begun their annual winter sojourn,
down from their summer nesting grounds around Hudson Bay.
Prairie in the winter, their habitat is tundra in the summer.
These misnamed buteos actually have soft legs, with a layer
of feathers covering their tarsi. Approximately every four
years or so, there is an increase in the number of northern
birds of prey including rough-leggeds and snowy owls. This
irruption is caused by the cyclical fluctuations in the
rodent populations, creating a situation where there are
a lot of predators and relatively few prey. When this happens,
winged hunters are forced to expand their winter range to
the south.
THE
MIDDLE OF WINTER
Poop
as Communication
The
crushed limestone trails that wind through our forest preserves
seem to serve two purposes. First, they enable people to
walk through the preserve, ideally seeing nice things without
causing damage to the plants and animals. The other purpose
of our trails is to provide a place for coyotes to go to
the bathroom. Using their feces as a means of communication,
coyotes are careful to place it in a location assured of
being well traveled.
At
a glance, coyote scat looks a lot like dog poop. But if
you get down on your hands and knees and look real carefully,
youll notice coyote poop has lots of hair. Domestic
dogs usually dont get a lot of hair in their diet.
(I was kidding about getting on your hands and knees. Most
people are able to see the hair while standing, without
drawing too much attention to themselves.)
Sycamore:
A Tree with Balls
There
will be a full moon on February 8, 2001. If there is a fresh
layer of snow, it would be an ideal night to sneak out and
pay a visit to our stately sycamore trees. Their smooth,
gleaming upper branches contrast beautifully against the
dark night sky. Dangling from the top branches are their
balls, distinctive spherical seed clusters that will break
apart during the gusty winds of spring.
Sycamore
trees are common throughout the valleys of the lower Des
Plaines and Kankakee River systems. They are uncommon in
the northern section of Chicago Wilderness.
Gulls
of Winter
Most
of the sleek gulls that all year long patrol the skies above
our landfills and strip mall parking lots are either ring
billed or herring gulls. But at this time of year, large
majestic gulls known as black-backs are soaring over the
cold waters of Lake Michigan. With distinctive slate black
feathers on their wings and across their shoulders, these
dashing birds may finish the winter in our area, then take
off and spend the rest of the year cruising the waters off
the coast of northeast Canada.
Most
of the visiting black-backs are youngsters, their plumage
containing streaks of gray and pale brown. They dont
receive their striking adult plumage until they are four
or five years old.
Greater
black-backed gulls are a little bit bigger than lesser black-backed
gulls. Say that three times fast.
THE
END OF WINTER
Thawing
Frogs
This
time of year some wood frogs are frozen as a fish stick.
But no need to worry. Theyll soon be defrosting and
hopping down to a local flatwoods pond, eager to procreate
their species. Wood frogs have the shortest window for breeding
activity of our local frogs. As the air and water temperatures
rise to 41 degrees, wood frogs show slight breeding activity.
When the air temperature rises to 50 degrees and water temperature
reaches the upper 40s, breeding activity reaches maximum
intensity. In a few short weeks it will be over and these
dark frogs with the black mask will quickly return to their
solitary lives in our mature, mesic forests. Wood frogs
are uncommon in northeastern Illinois, but frequent in northern
Indiana, and common farther east.
Looks
Like Liver
A
very early blooming woodland wildflower hepatica
is often found on slopes in our wet forests. The
fragile flower emerges from the decaying red oak leaves.
The spring leaves of the hepatica are actually from the
previous growing season, still green after several months
under the snow. The green color, of course, is leftover
chlorophyll from last years photosynthesizing.
Hepatica
gets it name from looking like liver. The two species of
hepatica in our area are the sharp-lobed and round-lobed,
referring to the shape of that livery leaf. The round-lobed
species prefers to grow in soil slightly more acidic than
the sharp-lobed variety.
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