Reading Pictures

Spring 2003

Specialists

The big toe pads secrete a slightly sticky substance that helps them cling to the smoothest bark. You might mistake a Cope's gray treefrog for a toad, given its mottled, textured skin. But stand back. Toads hop only an inch or two. Tree frogs perform "astonishing acrobatics" and are said to be so agile that they seem to fly through the trees.

When they leap, a shocking flash of bright orange and yellow on the inner thighs (see a picture of one in action) distracts the potential predator. Just a hint of this color is exposed above. Look at the edge of that contortionist hind leg on the right, near where those cupped toes cling to the mottled trunk that, itself, is just getting its first dark bark.

Chamelionlike, these frogs change color — from green (when they're warm and dry in the treetops) — to gray (when they're cold and wet).

Each spring, the males sing high in trees near water during the day, then at night descend closer to the ground. Females climb the song-filled trees. When a female finds the singer that's just right for her, she puts her hand on him, and he stops singing. They embrace, descend, and swim together for an hour, depositing and fertilizing eggs. The couple may remain quietly joined for a few hours more.

Michael Redmer is a knowledgeable and dedicated conservationist with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. He has found treefrogs to be doing well in the larger preserves like Palos, Midewin, and Waterfall Glen where they even try to breed in the entry fountain of a nearby gated community. But they're not so often found in apparently suitable habitat in preserves of less than a few hundred acres. No one knows why.

 
   

The showy lady's slipper is another puzzle. It may grow in fens, bogs, woodland seeps or sand savannas — very different kinds of places — but only rarely, in small areas. The flowering stems were once heavily collected for commercial sale, and, like most species, the showy lady's slipper does not persist under dense invasives. Thus, most populations have vanished, and it is now a rare plant. One site in Hammond still had hundreds of them in 1986. Near Barrington, when volunteers cut back the brush in a area fen, one splendid plant appeared. Something was right for it.

There are thousands of specialized imponderables about thousands of species in Chicago Wilderness. And there's no chance we'll have scientific certainty about the answers in time to save most of them. But if their beauty and grace — and our curiosity — help us cherish them, perhaps we can marshal enough science, enough land, enough common sense, and enough good stewardship to hold the ark together.

In a sense, every species, indeed every genetically unique individual, is a specialist. One goal of conservation is to save growing conditions for as many of us as possible.

Cope's gray treefrog photo by Michael Redmer. Showy lady's slipper by Doug Sherman. Words by Stephen Packard.