This is the 15th year of continuous daily publication for 365Caws. All things considered, it's likely it will be the last year as it is becoming increasingly difficult for me to find interesting material. However, I hope that I may have inspired someone to a greater curiosity about the natural world with my natural history posts, or encouraged a novice weaver or needleworker. If so, I've done what I set out to do.
Sunday, May 1, 2016
An Uncommon Evil
Day 201: Not all rare/uncommon plants are things to celebrate; case in point, Tussilago farfara, European Coltsfoot. This invasive has only recently started showing up in Washington and British Columbia, otherwise unreported west of Minnesota and Ontario.
A few days ago, a friend (Park colleague) sent me a cell phone capture of a plant she couldn't identify, apologizing for the lack of clarity in the photo. That said, her image showed enough diagnostic features that I figured I could find it in my field guides. When I could not do so, I asked her for more details about where she had found it, and last Wednesday, the Park's plant ecologist and I stopped by to have a look. We discovered a dozen or so 12-16" stalks each bearing a single closed flower. Peeling one apart revealed what I thought I had seen in Kristyn's photo: a central disk with rays. I was baffled, and Arnie admitted that he had no idea what it was, either. I resolved to go back for more photos on a sunny day when I knew it would be open. Arnie took the next step and referred it out, with the result that it was identified as Tussilago farfara. Arnie told me, "I'll take a couple of herbarium specimens and then will eradicate it early next week."
With a short time-frame in which to get photographic documentation for the Invasive Plant Council, I made a trip to the site this morning. The flowers were just beginning to open with the first rays of sun, and the mosquitoes were out in numbers. By the time I'd gotten a handful of snapshots, I was gnawed from stem to stern. I went off on another natural-resources project for a few hours, and upon my return after noon, the flowers had opened up.
Tussilago farfara may occur in Mount Rainier National Park, but not for long!
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