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Fall
2003
By
Jack MacRae
Here's what's debuting
on nature's stage in Chicago Wilderness
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In September, monarch
butterflies sometimes congregate before taking
off from Chicago Wilderness. they will spend
winter in Mexico. Photo by Phyllis Cerny.
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EARLY FALL
Silk
Degrees
Tiger swallowtail butterflies are non-migratory.
In the fall, the second-generation caterpillars
(there are two generations each summer) will construct
a resilient silk chamber on the underside of a leaf.
Here they will spend the winter slowly transforming
into adult butterflies. Real cold.
On the other hand, monarch butterflies
are migratory. They'll spend the fall flying to
the Michoacan Mountains in central Mexico. Sweet!
In-Flight
Meals
Fall migrations provide endless opportunities to
study predator-prey relationships. The last few
years, research-ers have been looking at the association
between small falcons and dragonflies.
During September, large, loose
clusters of dragonflies, primarily green darners,
will move south along ridges and lakeshores. Simultaneously,
merlins and kestrels will be in flight, perhaps
following the same geographic clues. Inevitably,
the two groups will meet and the feasting will begin.
The falcons eat on the wing until they're full.
One study found that green darners accounted for
15 percent of kestrels' diet during migration.
A few years ago, a notable cloud
of tens of thousands of green darners, red- and
black-mantled gliders, and meadow-hawks impressed
the afternoon crowd at the Skokie Lagoons, north
of Chicago. Toward dusk, the insect mass began heading
southeast toward the parks and beachy spaces near
the big city.
Maybe
Cry Wolf
My predictions are usually wrong, but I think it
is only a matter of months not years
before we have a legitimate timber wolf sighting
in the region for the first time in nearly 200 years.
After all, we have a healthy population of wolves
only a few hundred miles to the north, and valid
reports are continually getting closer. In recent
years, at least three young wolves have been found
DOR (dead on road) between Madison and Milwaukee.
Most notable, however, is the year-old male that
traveled from central Wisconsin, through Illinois,
and into Indiana, where he was hit by a car and
died in an adjacent bean field. His exact route
through Illinois is unknown, but it is conceivable
that his journey took him through Chicago Wilderness.
How cool is that!
MIDDLE
FALL
Ancient
Beaver Food
Imagine the impact a few 500-pound beavers would
have on our riverine and wetland vegetation, especially
during the fall, when, scientists believe, these
prehistoric creatures ate more to prepare for winter.
We know these giant rodents lived here during the
cool Pleistocene we've found their bones
near the Fox River.
We also may have found some
of their food. Scientists discovered two spruce
logs, radio-carbon-dated back 10,860 years, near
Brewster Creek as it winds through DuPage County
toward the Fox River. The logs shows definite gnaw
marks, although the marks seem to be similar in
size to contemporary beavers, not their massive
ancestors.
Living
Color
The burgundy red leaves of sumac can fill the fall
woods with an unmistakable hue. The fiery color
comes from the pigment anthocyanin, and is greatly
influenced by the weather. Here is how: Cool nights
(below 45 degrees) inhibit chlorophyll production.
Without chlorophyll, sugars accumulate in the leaves.
Increased levels of sugar lead to a rise in anthocyanin,
and the more anthocyanin in the leaf, the more color.
Simple, no? Warm sun following cool nights produces
the most intense colors.
We have several kinds of sumac
in the region. Some are rare (fragrant sumac), some
are common (smooth sumac), and some are poisonous
(poison sumac). Musically, my favorite is Yma Sumac,
the multi-octave singer from Ichocan, Peru, a town
high in the Andes.
LATE
FALL
Mud
Honeys
Fall is the season for mudpuppy boys to look for
mudpuppy girls for the purpose of mudpuppy love.
Their relationship is brief, the father doesn't
stick around, and the young mother will deposit
her fertilized eggs in the spring. People rarely
encounter these large aquatic salamanders, though
veteran fishermen will occasionally find one wriggling
on the end of their hooks. Hip herpetologists know
where to find these waterdogs in their favorite
habitat, along the southern shores of Lake Michigan.
Late
Bats
I once was surprised to find five little brown bats
huddled in the rafters of an old Civilian Conservation
Corps shelter in a west-suburban park. I wasn't
surprised to find the bats there the structure
provided nice habitat but this was almost
Thanksgiving and it had been a cold week, with blowing
sleet and snow. Flying insects were scarce; perhaps
the bats were already living off the layer of fat
they put on when the skies were warmer and buggier.
Eventually, these cute little
furballs left for a warmer winter home. They didn't
have to fly too far. Perhaps they went to hang out
with their compadres in those spooky old mines along
the Illinois River in LaSalle County. They'll dangle
by their toes, in a deep sleep, until spring.
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