|
Summer
2000

Here's
what's debuting this season on nature's stage in Chicago
Wilderness
by
Jack MacRae
JULY/AUGUST
Red-Eye
Concert
Through
the hottest days of summer, the red-eyed vireo will continue
to sing its short, simple song. Raising their offspring
in our parks, the red-eyed vireo may be the most prolific
singer of all North American birds.Researchers
found one individual repeating the same song 22,197 times
in a 10-hour period! Sort of like a Grateful Dead concert
for the avian world.
Goat
Suckers
My
mother used to call them onomatopoeia birds. That is, birds
named for their calls. Whip- poor-wills are well known examples.
Along with the more common nighthawk, whip-poor-wills belong
to the bird family known as goat suckers from the charming,
albeit silly, notion that these birds used their wide mouths
to suck the milk out of lactating nanny goats. Actually,
they use their wide mouths for scooping cecropia moths and
June bugs out of the late evening sky. These birds spend
their days flat on their belly, lying on the ground or on
wide, horizontal branches. At nightfall listen for them
to call their name in large tracts of lands with a mosaic
of wooded and open areas.
Turtleheads
and Butterflies
The
rare and beautiful Baltimore checkerspot butterflies have
been spotted flitting over the bogs and fens of Lake and
McHenry Counties. The females are in search of the creamy
white, pink-fringed flowers of the white turtlehead, an
uncommon member of the snapdragon family and the only plant
she will lay her eggs on. White turtlehead grows in wet
soils and has rebounded nicely in some preserves since the
reintroduction of fire into the natural systems.
Hootchie
Cootchie Man
Willie
Dixon was one of the great bluesmen of the Chicago Wilderness.
He wrote in his classic love song, "Hootchie Cootchie
Man," that he was in possession of a John de Conqueroo,
which he intended to use in casting a spell on his girlfriend.
He was actually singing about the root of the St. Johns
Wort, a plant with several species growing in the region.
Folklore contended the root of St. Johns Wort was
an important source of mystic power. One of the endangered
wetland varieties, marsh St. Johns wort, is found
only in a few wet areas of the Chicago Wilderness.
AUGUST/SEPTEMBER
Morainal
Retentive
For
my money, the baby northern red belly snakes currently being
born are the cutest little reptiles youve ever seen.
Theyre scarcely three inches long at birth, and have
the same attractive red belly and dark back as their secretive
parents. Red bellies are the smallest snakes in the Chicago
Wilderness, with adults usually measuring less than 10 inches.
They live only in the forested, morainal areas, occasionally
in wet meadows, but never far from trees.
Joe
Who?
Joe
Pye weed is a seven-foot tall plant that grows in our sun-dappled
savannas. The large, lavender blossoms blooming in late
summer seem to be a favorite of an assortment of swallowtail
butterflies. There are a number of stories about the origin
of this plants unusual name, but most refer to medicinal
properties attributed to the plant against disease, specifically
typhoid fever. One story has jopi as the native word for
typhoid fever.
Another
widely spread story contends that there was a native doctor
in colonial America named Joe Pye, who used this plant for
curing typhoid. Also, Chippewa Indian mothers bathed fretful
children in a tea made from this plant to bring restful
sleep. If anyone knows the real stories, please let me know.
Road
Vipers
August
appears to be a month of increased activity for our local
pit vipers. Not too long ago, on late August afternoons,
massasauga rattlesnakes could be seen crossing roads near
the Lake-Cook County border. Last August, a road-killed
adult massasauga was found near Crete, Illinois. While small,
isolated populations of these state endangered rattlesnakes
are struggling to survive, local researchers using radio
transmitters have been learning more about their little-known
lives in the Chicago Wilderness. It seems slow draining,
wet prairies, with a good
population of prairie crayfish adjacent to dry areas with
shrubs all seem to be part of the massasauga habitat. Lets
hope they stay off the road.
On
the Wing
During
these cool early fall evenings, in the skies over our heads,
our local red bats are mating on the wing. The females have
said goodbye to their last brood and are ready to start
the cycle again. Shortly after copulation, red bats will
take off for warmer weather down south. The female will
store her mates sperm through the fall and winter,
postponing ovulation and fertilization until she returns
to our area next spring. Sentimental, dont you think?
|