2
   

Wildclickers #74 - The "Tree from Hell??"

 
 
ehBeth
 
  1  
Reply Mon 2 Oct, 2006 04:56 pm
You and your 299 friends have supported 2,590,319.9 square feet!

Marine Wetlands habitat supported: 131,550.7 square feet.
You have supported: (0.0)
Your 299 friends have supported: (131,550.7)

American Prairie habitat supported: 56,345.6 square feet.
You have supported: (13,952.7)
Your 299 friends have supported: (42,392.9)

Rainforest habitat supported: 2,402,423.6 square feet.
You have supported: (173,905.0)
Your 299 friends have supported: (2,228,518.6)

~~~~~~~~~~~

1 Aktbird57 .. 1595 59.462 acres
0 Replies
 
teenyboone
 
  1  
Reply Tue 3 Oct, 2006 04:11 am
Re: Wildclickers #74 - The "Tree from Hell??"
danon5 wrote:
"The Tree from Hell??"
The "Tree of Heaven" is a popular ornamental tree in China, valued for its tolerance of difficult growing conditions, and its uses in Chinese traditional medicine. The leaves are also used to feed silkworms which produces silk that is stronger and cheaper than mulberry silk, although with inferior gloss and texture. It was first introduced to Europe (France and England) by a French Jesuit priest returning from Nanking in 1751, and the United States by William Hamilton, a gardener in Philadelphia in 1784. Tree of Heaven has become a problematic invasive species in many areas with warm temperate climates. Because of its aggressive spread, vigorous growth, allergenic and allelopathic chemicals, it has become a problem in many areas, out-competing native species. It is also sometimes counter-nicknamed "Tree from Hell", from its prolific invasiveness. In cities, it often bears the name "Ghetto Palm", because of its propensity for growing in urban areas, on abandoned or poorly maintained properties. The Chinese name for this tree contains the descriptive word "stinky".

Not all trees are this problematic, thank goodness. The trees living in the Rainforests of our planet are good and help us in many ways.
This is the SEVENTY-FOURTH thread we have begun and are very close to saving SIXTY ACRES of Rainforest around the world.
Please join us in daily clicking for the Rainforest (and other worthy causes), and become a part of our cordial group on this Rainforest thread. We are the aktbird57 team in Race for the Rainforest, and we are the number ONE team in the world!

Please help! Go to the Race for the Rain Forest at Care2.com. Just click on a button and somewhere in the world, you'll save a lot of square feet of rain forest, prairie, or wetlands, -- you choose! Corporate sponsors show their logos when you click, and in return, they pay for the habitat saved.

Just click: http://rainforest.care2.com/welcome?w=856730509

To register for the first time, create your own Distinct Log-in name and Password. Then each time you visit the site to click you simply Log-in and click on the Rainforest button. It's that simple. The site is FREE. If you have a question, we have plenty of answers. FREE.

After clicking, feel free to post on this thread. We have the most wonderful and helpful group of people clicking here. Any time you can't click, we can arrange for a substitute to click for you.


Thanks for the invitation! All clicked! Cool
0 Replies
 
sumac
 
  1  
Reply Tue 3 Oct, 2006 05:50 am
http://www.nytimes.com/2006/10/03/science/03butter.html?pagewanted=1&th&emc=th

Fascinating article, good pictures, the effects of logging and storms on migration of monarch butterflies. New information and new research.
0 Replies
 
ul
 
  1  
Reply Tue 3 Oct, 2006 10:08 am
Danon,
what a wonderful tree!

Didn't know about the toothbrush-

I am still sad that the huge oak, more than 100 years old and home of crows was taken down this spring. I could see the crown over the roofs.
Lovely in fall- copper colored leaves against a blue sky.
0 Replies
 
danon5
 
  1  
Reply Tue 3 Oct, 2006 11:29 am
Hi teenyboone - it's great to see you again.......

sumac, I bet the trees are getting good color where you are......

ul, You are welcome to all the oaks you want and the crows too - I have more than enough. How about cedars? Or, Pines? Grin

Here are closeups of the tree I showed you yesterday - - -

Leaves turning red
http://img127.imageshack.us/img127/726/almostredleavesbr6.jpg

More leaves turning
http://img127.imageshack.us/img127/2193/turningleavesny9.jpg

Killer Warrior Grape vines
http://img127.imageshack.us/img127/7052/aggressivegrapesky4.jpg

Here is my "Witching Tree" - I call it that because there is an "eye" on the trunk - and it "follows" you as you walk through the forest............Big Grin
http://img403.imageshack.us/img403/487/witchingtreesi5.jpg

all clicked
0 Replies
 
Stradee
 
  1  
Reply Tue 3 Oct, 2006 12:26 pm
Great photos, Dan!

The Maple isn't quite as large as the photo...the Ambers leafs just beginning to turn...Japanese and Boxwood <not> awsome! and the Heavenly Bamboo bloom each season - berries, amber leafs, and delicate white flower clusters.

The deer are everywhere! Two females with their babies, and of course Clem... - frequent visitors grazing on clover, alfalfa, and Quaker Oats.


Liquid Amber...

http://www.sonoma.edu/photogallery/Images/medium/fall_colors/liquid_amber_tree.jpg

Japanese Maple

http://www.sonoma.edu/photogallery/Images/medium/fall_colors/japanese_maple.jpg

Heavenly Bamboo...

http://www.thegardenhelper.com/nandina.JPG

Maple

http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/6/6b/Redmaple.jpg
0 Replies
 
danon5
 
  1  
Reply Tue 3 Oct, 2006 02:56 pm
Stradee, what great pictures..... I like the pic of the Japanese Maple - I planted one in my, then front yard, in Gig Harbor, WA when it was only a baby (about two feet across). I lived there almost twenty years and when I last saw it - it was about eight feet across and turned bright red each year. Beautiful plants.......... Ah, memories.

Here's a short story = I've been walking each morning along a country path. I have carried my camera each day - until, a couple a days ago I left it - GUESS WHAT? First thing I saw was a herd of deer - I stopped - they just stood there looking at me and talking to each other - saying stuff like, "Yeah, I saw him all last week with the camera, and, look, today we got cleaned up and are wanting to make the cover of Esquire - what does this guy do? Doesn't bring his camera......"

Head hung low, ambles off in distance.....................
0 Replies
 
Stradee
 
  1  
Reply Tue 3 Oct, 2006 05:02 pm
Isn't that amazing, Dan! Recall planting Italian Cyprus trees, and when daughter and i visited the old neighborhood, there was the grove of trees taller than the house! Lovely

LOL, you would not have a problem making the cover of Esquire, Dan.

The deer however, are critters that seem to defy every attempt humans have for taking their pictures! Clem stands on the lawn, looking every bit the perfect photo op, i say to the deer 'i'll be right back'! - run inside the house, grab the camera - return to the yard - raise the camera, and 'poof' - pics of deer ambling out of sight. LOL They don't mind chatting though, and have delightful personalities, especially when grazing Alfalfa hay and oats. to cute

cheering dan Very Happy
0 Replies
 
ehBeth
 
  1  
Reply Tue 3 Oct, 2006 08:26 pm
Great tree pix!

~~~~~~~~~~~

aktbird57 - You and your 299 friends have supported 2,591,795.0 square feet!

Marine Wetlands habitat supported: 131,714.6 square feet.
You have supported: (0.0)
Your 299 friends have supported: (131,714.6)

American Prairie habitat supported: 56,392.4 square feet.
You have supported: (13,952.7)
Your 299 friends have supported: (42,439.7)

Rainforest habitat supported: 2,403,688.0 square feet.
You have supported: (173,975.3)
Your 299 friends have supported: (2,229,712.7)

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

1 Aktbird57 .. 1596 59.496 acres
0 Replies
 
ul
 
  1  
Reply Wed 4 Oct, 2006 07:02 am
Beautiful tree photos.

Here it was too warm, no cold nights which prompt the change of colors. Dull green leaves, no flaming forests near Vienna. Even the Boston Ivy on my balcony is still green.

Clicked.
0 Replies
 
sumac
 
  1  
Reply Wed 4 Oct, 2006 08:10 am
Time to change my avator to a fall colored sumac? I have it on the computer but don't think I ever put it on a public site.
0 Replies
 
sumac
 
  1  
Reply Wed 4 Oct, 2006 09:03 am
Brown Widow makes its home on Gulf Coast Tue Oct 3, 7:39 PM ET



As if the West Nile-toting mosquito isn't enough to worry Mississippians, add the poisonous Latrodectus geometricus to the state's list of creepy-crawly creatures.

Dr. Jerome Goddard, entomologist with the Mississippi Department of Health, said the poisonous Brown Widow spider that is a cousin to the well-known Black Widow, is now calling the Mississippi Gulf Coast home.

"The tropical Brown Widow spider .... has recently been captured in many locations along the Mississippi Gulf Coast," Goddard said in a news release Tuesday.

He said his office has been receiving many phone calls reporting buildings and grounds heavily infested with this type of spider.

"This spider is in the same family as the Black Widow, and is poisonous to humans," Goddard said. "I first heard of a collection of this spider at Keesler Air Force Base in Biloxi in early 2005 and figured it was probably just an isolated incident."

The Health Department said the Brown Widow can grow to 1 1/2 inches long. It is brown or grayish-brown instead of black and has an orange-to-yellow hourglass design on its underside, as opposed to the familiar red hourglass design on the Black Widow.

"That's a dead giveaway," Goddard said. "When the hourglass design is yellowish or orange, instead of deep red, you know it is a Brown Widow."

He said there is a positive note ?- the Brown Widow is not as aggressive as the Black Widow. And although some scientific reports claim the Brown Widow is twice as poisonous, Goddard said that was doubtful.

"One very good medical review of 45 cases of Black Widow and Brown Widow bites showed that the symptoms of Brown Widow bites were mild and tended to be restricted to the bite site and surrounding tissues (not the case with black widows)," Dr. Goddard said. "Brown Widows will not attack if they are not bothered or made to feel threatened."

Most spiders in Mississippi are unable to puncture human skin, and if they do, their venom is not generally harmful to humans. There are three main spider species in Mississippi that health officials worry about ?- the Black Widow, Brown Recluse and now the Brown Widow.

Goddard said he was unaware of the new species existing anywhere else in Mississippi.

"I've gone down to the Gulf Coast several times and looked for myself," he said. "They are, indeed, in many places."

He said the spider probably made its way to Mississippi from Florida through commercial imports of plants, food, building materials, or furniture.

___

On the Net:

Mississippi Department of Health at http://www.HealthyMS.com.
0 Replies
 
sumac
 
  1  
Reply Wed 4 Oct, 2006 09:04 am
And how did everyone like that wonderful article on Monarch butterflies?
0 Replies
 
sumac
 
  1  
Reply Wed 4 Oct, 2006 01:09 pm
Then there are the willows planted too close to a house, and liking water as they do, the root systems grow into septic systems and wells and create havoc. Or the elms and other street treets with upward heaving root systems, planted too close to sidewalks, driveways, patios, and other hardscape surfaces, wrecking them. Then there are the builders and homeowners who don't take into account a mature tree's eventual size and plant them too close to a house. And on and on.
0 Replies
 
sumac
 
  1  
Reply Wed 4 Oct, 2006 01:10 pm
Report says hurricanes turned 217 acres of marshland into open water

07:29 AM CDT on Wednesday, October 4, 2006

Associated Press

BATON ROUGE -- New estimates on wetlands loss from hurricanes Katrina and Rita show that the storms turned 217 square miles of coastal marsh in Louisiana into open water, according to U.S. Geological Survey report.

The agency released preliminary estimates last fall that showed southeast Louisiana had lost about 100 square miles of marsh. This latest report adds 98 square miles of loss from southwestern Louisiana and 19 more square miles in the southeast.

The estimates are based on comparison of satellite photographs from Oct. 2004 to others taken last October, said John Barras, a USGS geographer.

However, some areas remained flooded last October and additional monitoring will determine how much of the land loss is permanent and how much will recover, he said.

Jimmy Johnston, branch chief of habitat analysis with USGS, said some areas appear to have new plant growth. But he said the damage from the hurricanes was the most devastating since 1983, the year the USGS started using satellite images to track land loss.

Drought conditions further weakened the marsh, and kept saltwater from being washed out.

Johnston said the satellite comparisons confirm what many people suspected -- that hurricanes do much more damage to wetlands than was previously thought.

The new estimate shows a loss of land in the space of one month equal to what scientists thought would be lost by 2050 across the coast.
0 Replies
 
sumac
 
  1  
Reply Wed 4 Oct, 2006 01:11 pm
See also the second section about rainforest tree frogs.

http://www.nytimes.com/2006/10/03/science/03observ.html?ei=5087%0A&em=&en=267a136232fcd122&ex=1160107200&pagewanted=print

October 3, 2006
Observatory

Global Warming on the Forest Floor

By HENRY FOUNTAIN

Along with rising temperatures, global warming is very likely to cause a shift toward more extreme weather ?- stronger storms with more rainfall, and longer and more severe droughts. Those changes are likely to have large-scale, obvious effects on farmlands, grasslands and forests and on the creatures that inhabit them.

But many smaller, more subtle effects are likely too. Researchers at the University of Kentucky looked at one: the impact of climate change on the decomposition of leaf litter on the forest floor.

The researchers, Janet R. Lensing and David H. Wise, studied the process of leaf decay in hardwood forests in central Kentucky. The main instigator in leaf decay is fungi, which get nutrients from the organic matter. But fungi don't exist in a vacuum. They are grazed upon by springtails, primitive insects of the Collembola order. In turn, springtails are the prey of wandering spiders.

The who-eats-whom makes for a complex web, where changes at one level can have cascading effects. Too much or too little grazing by springtails, for example, can reduce fungal activity and slow decay.

Environmental changes can have an impact, too, and that's what the researchers studied. They set up forest plots and manipulated precipitation to match anticipated future levels, both wet and dry. They didn't see much change in leaf decomposition under higher-rainfall conditions. But under drought conditions, they found, decay accelerated significantly. Their findings are published in The Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

"Our hypothesis is that during drought conditions, the fungi are already drought-stressed, and the Collembola are overgrazing them, which slows down decay," Dr. Lensing said. Under these circumstances, by preying on the springtails, the spiders reduce the pressure on the fungi, thus allowing for more leaf decay. Under wetter conditions the fungi are not so stressed and so easily overgrazed, so spider predation on springtails has less effect.

It's not that the dryness has a direct influence on populations of spiders, say, or springtails. Instead, Dr. Lensing said, "it affects how the cascading occurs" within the food web. This indirect impact on leaf decay, she added, "shows how complex the effect of altered rainfall can be."

Survival Diet, for Frogs

Here's a question that ecologists have wondered about for years: Is there a connection between how widespread a species is ?- the size of the territory it covers ?- and its diet?

One idea is that a species with a restricted range should have a specialized diet, in part because there is a less diverse selection of foods available in a smaller area. By the same reasoning, a species with a broad range should have a more varied diet, because there are more menu choices.

Selection might come into play as well. With a species shoehorned into a small space, there is a greater likelihood that any adaptation ?- to a single food source, for example ?- will spread through the species. This is less likely in a species with a broader range, where there would always be some mixing among individuals from different environments.

It's a nice idea. But a new study shows the opposite is true, at least for rainforest frogs from the wet tropics area of northeastern Australia.

Yvette M. Williams of James Cook University and colleagues studied the stomach contents of 11 related frog species with ranges from 2,500 square miles to slightly more than 1 square mile (on a single mountaintop). All of the frogs dined on ants, spiders, beetles and other bugs, but the species with the smallest ranges had the most diverse diets. Those with the largest ranges ate mostly ants. The findings were reported in Biology Letters.

The researchers suggest that another hypothesis might explain this. The smaller the range, the more prone a species is to extinction. A small-range species that depends on one food source, then, risks being wiped out if that food source dries up. But one that is a generalist eater can better survive the vagaries of the food supply.

Silk Stockings, for Spiders

Web-spinning spiders have specialized organs, called spinnerets, that produce silk. They are usually located on the underside of the abdomen.

But scientists have discovered that a species of tarantula also secretes silk through its feet. The spider may use the fibers to help it climb slick surfaces.

Stanislav N. Gorb of the Max Planck Institute for Developmental Biology in Germany and colleagues made the discovery in zebra tarantulas, found in Costa Rica. The spider, which is about an inch and a half long, produces the silk through tiny nozzles in the base of the feet. The finding was reported in the journal Nature.

Like other spiders, the zebra tarantula also has thousands of tiny hairs on its feet that help it stick to surfaces through molecular attraction. But the researchers found that the foot silk, laid down as tracks, helped the spider walk on vertical surfaces. In experiments on glass, the researchers found that if the spiders slipped, the silk arrested their fall.

It's not known if other spider species also have this capability. But however widespread it is, the researchers say, it raises new questions about the evolution of silk-making. Foot production of silk may be the ancestral condition, with spinneret production evolving later. Or the two may have evolved independently. Comparison of the genes involved in silk production from the feet and from spinnerets, the researchers say, should provide some clues.

Springtime on Uranus

With their swirling atmospheres, gaseous planets occasionally produce dark spots (Jupiter's red spot being the most famous example). Spots are rare on Uranus, however, and no definitive images of them have ever been obtained.

Now, though, Lawrence Sromovsky of the University of Wisconsin and other astronomers have used the Hubble Space Telescope to produce clear images of a dark spot in the atmosphere of Uranus.

The spot, about 1,900 miles long and 1,100 miles wide, is in the planet's northern hemisphere. The researchers say the spot may be new, a result of gradual warming of the northern hemisphere as Uranus moves into "spring" in its 84-year orbit around the Sun. Images are at hubblesite.org/news/2006/47.
0 Replies
 
Stradee
 
  1  
Reply Wed 4 Oct, 2006 03:24 pm
The Emergence Of A Monarch

http://www.adver-net.com/Monchrgr.jpg

The Monarch chrysalis is one of nature's most beautiful creations.
This butterfly wears a crown of gold on jade green.

http://www.adver-net.com/Monchrcl.jpg

About 24 hours before the emergence of the adult butterfly, the chrysalis
becomes completely transparent, revealing the new butterfly inside.

http://www.adver-net.com/Monemer1.jpg

Breaking free of the chrysalis, a Monarch greets the world.

http://www.adver-net.com/Monemer2.jpg

After struggling free of the chrysalis, the Monarch immediately begins to inflate its wings
with a reservoir of fluid contained in its swollen abdomen.

http://www.adver-net.com/Monemer3.jpg

As the wings inflate, the body of the butterfly attains its normal proportions.

http://www.adver-net.com/Monemer4.jpg

In a few hours, with its wings dried and hardened,
the Monarch will take wing on its first flight.
0 Replies
 
Stradee
 
  1  
Reply Wed 4 Oct, 2006 03:53 pm
sumac wrote:
Then there are the willows planted too close to a house, and liking water as they do, the root systems grow into septic systems and wells and create havoc. Or the elms and other street treets with upward heaving root systems, planted too close to sidewalks, driveways, patios, and other hardscape surfaces, wrecking them. Then there are the builders and homeowners who don't take into account a mature tree's eventual size and plant them too close to a house. And on and on.


Sue, yep - but 'audacious' or 'warrior trees' are quite beautiful.

Depends upon the geological ground soil. Red clay and rock is the norm for the foothills - so even the silver birch probablility of its roots distrubing cement driveways, or walkways unlikely, as the landscaping celebrates its 19 birthday next Spring. No damage so far.
0 Replies
 
danon5
 
  1  
Reply Wed 4 Oct, 2006 05:30 pm
Interesting stuff, sumac..... thanks.

Stradee - great series of photos showing the butterfly. I didn't know they "inflated" their wings. That's interesting.
0 Replies
 
ehBeth
 
  1  
Reply Wed 4 Oct, 2006 05:54 pm
aktbird57 - You and your 299 friends have supported 2,593,457.3 square feet!

Marine Wetlands habitat supported: 131,878.4 square feet.
You have supported: (0.0)
Your 299 friends have supported: (131,878.4)

American Prairie habitat supported: 56,462.7 square feet.
You have supported: (13,976.1)
Your 299 friends have supported: (42,486.6)

Rainforest habitat supported: 2,405,116.2 square feet.
You have supported: (174,022.1)
Your 299 friends have supported: (2,231,094.1)

~~~~~~~~~~~~

1 Aktbird57 .. 1597 59.533 acres

~~~~~~~~~~~~

A tree grows in the city.

http://img304.imageshack.us/img304/5204/2547or.jpg
0 Replies
 
 

Related Topics

 
Copyright © 2026 MadLab, LLC :: Terms of Service :: Privacy Policy :: Page generated in 0.08 seconds on 03/09/2026 at 04:44:02