Vacation at Toadstool Geologic Park

One of the best tourist stops in Nebraska gets very few visitors (which doesn’t hurt its value as a site I like to visit).  Toadstool Geologic Park is in the northern panhandle of Nebraska, north of the town of Crawford.  We stopped there on a short family vacation trip this week and enjoyed hiking and camping in relative solitude.  The landscape is otherworldly and beautiful, and full of interesting plants and rock formations.  The geology and paleontology of the park are legendary, but I spent most of my time (of course) looking at bugs and flowers.  The boys and Kim, however, hadn’t been to the park before and really liked the self-guided tour that showcases rock formations, volcanic ash deposits, ancient rhino footprints, and much more.

After leaving Toadstool this morning, we cut north for a brief stop at Wind Cave National Park in South Dakota.  Caves and I don’t get along well (I’m an open skies person, myself), so while the rest of the family is down in a dark closed-in space, I figured I’d knock out a quick blog post.  Apologies for not including more detail, but I didn’t have a lot of time!

The landscape of Toadstool Geologic Park is rugged and gorgeous.

Wildflowers were putting on a real show while we were there, including white beardtongue (Penstemon albidus).

White penstemon was pretty, but crested beardtongue (Penstemon eriantherus) was even more spectacular.

This is, I think, leafy musineon (Musineon divaricatum), growing on rocky flats, surrounded by rock formations.

Large rocks suspended on eroding soils were common across the park.

Alkali milkvetch (Astragalus racemosus) was growing all over the place, and seemed to be particularly attractive to bumble bees.

The mud at the bottom of the ephemeral stream courses was drying out after recent rains, and there were some fascinating reticulated patterns here and there.

The landscape was no less impressive after dark, especially when illuminated by a crescent moon.

We saw a lot of these evening primroses (I think they are gumbo-lily – Oenothera caespitosa) seemed to be able to grow in almost no soil, along with many other plants in the park.

Photo of the Week – May 26, 2017

Shell leaf penstemon (Penstemon grandiflorus) is one of the showier wildflowers in the Platte River Prairies during late May and early June.  It is most often found in dry soils and where the surrounding plants aren’t overly competitive.  We often see populations increase after droughts and grazing events and then decrease again as grasses recover their vigor in subsequent years.

Shell leaf penstemon has big showy flowers that are just the right size for bumblebees, but are used by other pollinators as well.

For years now, I’ve been periodically coming across patches of shell leaf penstemon plants that have been decapitated by a rabbit or something.  That wouldn’t be surprising except that the top of the plant is usually just lying next to the plant uneaten!  There is a single angular slice in the flowering stem, usually well below the bottom-most flower, and the entire flowering stem just (apparently) falls to the side.  I’m at a loss to explain this.  I don’t know if an animal is doing this to lick the juices out of the stem for some reason?  I honestly can’t think of any other good reason for what I’m finding – not that juice licking is a very good reason…  I’d love to hear from someone who knows the answer to this.

Yesterday, Nelson (our land manager) and I were touring a colleague from Wisconsin around one of our prairies and found a patch of decapitated penstemon.  As we were discussing the mystery, Nelson grabbed one of the stems and saw what he thought might be a black stem-boring insect.  As we peeled apart the stem to see it, it turned out to be a small black wasp or bee that Nelson had apparently squished when he picked up the stem.  Before I could get a very good look, the wind blew the deceased insect off the stem and down into the grass at our feet.  I didn’t worry too much about it, but as we continued to peel open the stem, I wished I’d tried to recover the insect.

Here is the detached flowering stem Nelson picked up.

The penstemon stem was stuffed full of flies.  Flies of all shapes and colors.  There were more than 20 of them, separated intermittently by wads of dried plant material.  Based on what we found, I guessed the insect we saw, and then lost, must have been a wasp and that it was laying eggs in the stem and provisioning them with flies.  I took the stem home to photograph it and then sent the photos to my friend Mike Arduser, who knows everything about bees, and an awful lot about wasps and other insects as well.

Here is a close-up photo showing the diversity and abundance of the flies jammed into the stem. I looked, but didn’t see the eggs that must have been there.

Mike said the insect was very likely a wasp in the genus Ectemnius that usually uses flies as the food source for its larvae.  They frequently excavate the pith out of twigs and other stems.  Based on the behavior of other wasps, I assume the flies were paralyzed, not dead, and that there was an egg laid with them, but I didn’t actually see any eggs.  According to Mike, Ectemnius wasps have a kind of “cuboidal” shaped head and the various species are between 6 and 14 mm in size.

I’m very certain the wasp wasn’t responsible for cutting the flowering stem off the penstemon, but it was pretty interesting to see something taking advantage of the destruction.  I didn’t see any other stems with similar nests in them, but I’ll sure keep an eye out for that in the future…

Now if I can just figure out who or what is decapitating our penstemon plants, I’ll be satisfied.  Until the next mystery comes along.

PLANT GAME RESULTS:

On the whole, you did pretty well on the plant game this week.  I tricked most of you on the first one, but the majority of you guessed correctly on the second and third questions.

On the first question, 161 people voted (as of this afternoon) and almost 50% chose Candy Lovegrass as the fake name, which is wrong – it’s a real plant.  Look it up if you like.  The actual fake name in that list was Clark’s Blisterpod, which came in 3rd at 22%.

More people (212) were bold enough to guess on the second question, and 50% of you were correct that Bully Pulpit was the fake plant.  However, about 1/3 of you guessed Beefsteak Plant, which sounds fake but is real – and invasive in at least some places/situations.

On the third question, 172 people voted, and 47% correctly identified Slipper Cherba as a fake plant name.  Autumnal Water Starwort and Beaked Ditchgrass were second and third in the voting with 25% and 21%, respectively.  I really thought more people would go for Beaked Ditchgrass, but what do I know?

Thanks for playing my goofy game.  The hardest part of putting it together is coming up with names that are weirder than the real ones…