FINSBURY FESTIVE SEASON 25/26
What a festive season it has been! In the two months from the beginning of December till the end of January, we have had an average of 396mm precipitation over the estate, with a high of 474mm in the north (Pebble Creek), and a low of 318mm falling at Patrick's gate in the west. I am sure that more has fallen in the north and east, but I was unable to check the gauges at these two locations for the final seven days of rain because I was unable, due to flood waters, to get to the locations, so I averaged the figures for the remaining locations for that period.
This is a rather common moth species found in the Lowveld and Kruger National Park, but not common here on the estate at all. It is a Reticulate Bagnet Moth, Anaphe reticulata, but may be better known by the common name of their caterpillars: Processionary Worms.
I'm sure many of you have been to the Kruger Park in Autumn (particularly May) and seen long lines of green, hairy caterpillars, touching head to toe, as they cross the road in single file. These are what are referred to as Processionary worms and that is what it is, a procession to the nearest foodplant after resting up in a safe place.
This long line of worms travelling in single file resembles a larger organism to smaller predators and the slightly toxic hairs dissuade larger predators, so pretty good protection, then. The reason I say they are not common here on the estate is because I have never seen a procession here yet, although the main foodplants of the caterpillar do occur here. They are Crossberry bushes, Grewia occidentalis, and Wild Pear trees, Dombeya rotundifolia, both from the Hibiscus family.
The pathfinder or leader of the procession establishes its direction (not sure how, but I would assume that the colony hatched on the host plant and that, when they first sought refuge for the night, they left a pheromone trail to follow on their return) and begins to move off while releasing a continuous strand of silk. The silk provides traction for the feet of the next individual in line who is also physically touching the one in front. The leader also releases a fresh path pheromone which enables others to follow if the line is disrupted. The second individual in line also releases a strand of silk and the pheromone to the one behind it which is also physically touching it. This continues till the end of the line which could be as much as six hundred individuals away!
Way into winter, the caterpillars would have completed their final instar and will be ready to pupate. They gather in a place which they feel is suitable, and construct a communal cocoon called a bagnet, with individual cocoons inside accommodating, once again, up to six hundred pupae! The final product looks like a dense silken handbag hanging in a bush.
Well into the following season, the adults emerge and the cycle continues. In West Africa, the bagnets are collected after pupation and the adults have vacated them. These are processed into fibres that are woven into yarn. The process has been happening for hundreds of years, at least, but more than likely thousands of years.
Globally, this species is the most cultivated of all the species of the genus and is known by a huge assortment of common names like Hanging Milkwort, String of Hearts and a few variations of that, Heart Vine, Jacob's Beard and many more!
The trailing stems grow from a bulb between rock surfaces and at each node, a pair of leaves, flowers or even new bulbs can grow. The heart-shaped leaves are succulent and arranged neatly in pairs and if the plant resides in a spot that offers dappled shade, marbled or variegated leaves develop, like in this specimen. The leaves develop a plain, dark green colouration in complete shade.
The strange looking flowers are extraordinary little traps and are of a similar design throughout the genus. They have a swollen base and a long tube that has four lobes on top that join at the tip to form four windows (openings) that emit a very specific odour that attracts its small pollinators, Jackal Flies from the Millichiidae family.
These flies are called Jackal flies because they are scavengers that feed off the leaked juices from unfortunate insects that have been captured by predators like spiders, assassin bugs and Robber flies. When an insect is attacked, it releases defensive volatiles which have a very specific scent. The flies are attracted to this scent and approach the scene and, like jackals, hang around the predator while it eats its prey and snatch bits that leak out or are discarded.
The fly is attracted by this odour thinking it is an insect in distress. Instead, it finds this strange flower. It enters the window to find maroon nectar guides that lead it down towards the tube where it suddenly gets very slippery and the fly falls down the tube into the swollen chamber where the fused anthers and stigma reside with the nectar and pollinia (bags of pollen). The tube is filled with stiff down-facing hairs that allow the fly to fall down, but do not allow the fly to climb up again. This imprisons the fly for six to twelve hours in the chamber. At the base of the chamber are very precisely positioned patches of nectar which forces the fly to position its body in the correct way as to firmly clip the pollinia onto its mouthparts.
There is sufficient nectar in the nectary to ensure the fly's comfortable survival until the flower droops to the horizontal or more, the stiff hairs relax, and the fly is allowed to exit its temporary prison and fly off in search of a real source of food!
The pollinarium clipped to the mouthparts are extremely uncomfortable for the fly, and so it usually spends some time trying to groom the things off, but they are firmly clipped there. This grooming process is important because it usually turns the pollen bags inside out, so that the cleft which attaches to the guide rail in the following flower is exposed. This ensures that the cleft does not attach to the guide rail of the original flower, avoiding cross-pollination while the fly is incarcerated and stumbling around searching for a way out.
If the poor fly finds another flower instead of a real source of food through this incredible deception by the Rosary Vine, it will inevitably slip down into the flower tube again and attempt to access the small patches of nectar the flower so deviously offers so as to position its body so that it connects with the guide rail which collects the pollinarium with glee!
Wow! What an elaborate design. After successful pollination, the ovary develops into a follicle, a double horn-shaped seed pod that splits horizontally and exposes many flat seeds with long hairs attached. The change in the moisture in the air around the seeds when the follicle splits, causes the hairs to begin to spread open to form a parachute for the seeds that are then dispersed by the wind. These seeds are characteristic of the Milkweed family, the Apocynaceae. What a crazy little succulent!
Ceropegia: keros = (greek) wax; pege = (greek) fountain, referring to the flower that resembles a wax fountain.
| Diachea leucopodia - White-footed Slime |
Biological Taxonomy is the classification of all living organisms into taxa (singular taxon), showing their relationship with other organisms. It consists of eight main taxa, from the vaguest to the most specific. As an example I will use an iconic Finsbury animal we all know: The LEOPARD, and show you how it is classified taxonomically:
Kingdom: ANIMALIA - This taxon includes all eukaryotes that can move around in search of food. On the estate, I have found representatives for the kingdoms Protozoa (single-celled organisms like these Slime Moulds); Animalia; Plantae; and Fungi.
Phylum: CHORDATA - All animals that share a nerve chord. Other phyla in the animalia kingdom include Annelida (earthworms and co.), Mollusca (snails and slugs), Arthropoda (insects, ticks, spiders, mites, scorpions, crabs, millipedes etcetera).
Class: MAMMALIA - All chordates that nurse their babies with milk from mammary glands. Other classes in the Chordata phylum include Amphibia (frogs and toads), Reptilia (snakes, lizards and tortoises), and Aves (birds).
Order: CARNIVORA - All animals exhibiting the carnassial sheer, premolar teeth with cutting edges enabling the animal to cut through meat like a scissors. Other orders in the class mammalia include the Artiodactyla (antelope, pigs, giraffes), Perissodactyla (zebras and rhinos), Rodentia (rats, mice and porcupines), Chiroptera (bats), Lagomorpha (rabbits and hares), etcetera.
Family: FELIDAE - All cats. Other families in the Carnivora class include Canidae (dogs), Viverridae (genets and civets), Mustelidae (honey badgers, otters and co.), Hyaenidae (hyaenas and aardwolf) and Herpestidae (Mongooses).
Genus: PANTHERA - All the cats that have an elastic ligament attaching their oesophagus to the skeleton, allowing the throat to vibrate, creating a deep growl when required. Other genera in the Felidae family include Leptailurus (servals), Felis (wild cats and the domestic cat), Acinonyx (cheetahs) and Caracal (caracals).
Species: PARDUS - Leopard and all its subspecies. Other species in the genus Panthera are lions (Panthera leo), jaguars (Panthera onca), tigers (Panthera tigris) and the snow leopard (Panthera uncia).
So far, I have identified seven different species of slime mould on the estate, including these two new ones!
This is a description of the standard slime mould life cycle:
A single spore finds itself in a suitable environment, it germinates a few flagellated (have a tail for movement) protoplasts called Swarm Cells (not to be confused with a bee hive). These cells move around their environment eating bacteria and other microorganisms.
When they meet up with a potential mate they form a zygote and grow into a plasmodia as they split nuclei. A plasmodia is defined as a living structure of cytoplasm that contains many nuclei, instead of individual cells each with a nucleus. This plasmodia, which resembles slime or foam, feeds on more bacteria and other microorganisms and grows in size as other zygotes "swarm" to join and become an interconnected network of protoplasmic strands, with each strand's cytoplasmic contents streaming back and forth within itself.
When this mass of single-celled organisms, that now behave like a multi-cellular organism, wants to move, the strand's contents stream in the required direction while protoplasm is withdrawn from the rear, allowing it to move at a top speed of about one millimetre per hour, leaving a snail trail behind.
When food becomes scarce, the slime mould's behaviour becomes more fungus like and dries, forming a crust to which the nuclei migrate from within the cytoplasmic mass. This crust forms fungus-like fruiting bodies (both photos above), resembling minute mushrooms, that produce millions of spores that are released into the air, and the cycle continues.
What a beauty! This is a Mole Snake, Pseudaspis cana, and it is a very big snake. This individual was almost one-and-a-half meters long and five centimetres thick at its thickest part! And that is not fat, it's muscle, lots of it. I know this because the snake lunged at me, lifting and throwing its thick body straight at me! This photo was taken moments before it lunged, and it didn't allow me to take further shots. Very aggressive indeed.
This is a Cicada bug that I photographed some time ago but have finally managed to identify! It is a Hairy Orange-wing Cicada, Platypleura hirta, and, like most cicadas, it is very specific about which trees it sucks its juices from.
This is the species we will encounter in the open grasslands sucking juices from our Silvery Sugarbushes, Protea roupelliae (the same protea that the Guerney's Sugarbird associates with). In forested areas, they associate with another tree from the same family, the African Beechwood, Faurea saligna, so if you see a cicada (or hear) on any of these two trees, it will be of this species.
This is a life history description I have given before in those blogs:
All the literature I have read through regarding the Transvaal Dwarf Chameleon, Bradypodion transvaalense, suggests that it is beholden to the small pockets of forest in our grasslands. And indeed, I have always found them in those forests or, at least, in the forest edges or riparian bush along the rivers.
This chap, on the other hand, was encountered in the relatively short, open grasslands high up in our neighbouring Emoyeni property. Not even a small tree within sight in a three-hundred-and-sixty-degree radius! If it was looking for a forest, it was very lost! It did, however, appear quite content, so I think its presence in a treeless environment was by intent.
These odd reptiles are an African thing, only occurring naturally on this continent and her islands, with half of all species restricted to Madagascar alone. There is one species indigenous to southern Europe and a few species in south-western Asia, all obviously radiating out of Africa.
There are five features that sets these unique reptiles apart from all other lizards: The ability to change colour which helps hide them from predators and from their prey; the arrangement of digits on the hands and feet opposite to each other (zygodactyl), enabling them to cling tightly to branches and twigs; Their remarkable ability to focus each eye in a different direction, an ability which is still not entirely understood; the presence of a prehensile tail (a tale that can grab hold of things), enabling them to climb more efficiently; and, of course, their long, sticky tongue that can shoot out of its mouth and entrap prey as far away as the full length of the chameleon's body!
This is a Leafcutter Bee from the Megachile genus of typical bees. They are called leafcutter bees because they cut leaves up into flat sheets that they use to construct the walls of the chambers they build in an existing hole in wood. Those "Wasp Hotels", a block of wood with numerous different diameter holes drilled into it that you hang in your garden, are designed for these bees and their relatives.
These bees collect pollen just like honeybees do, except the main differences are that these bees are solitary and that these bees do not make honey as a source of energy during the winter.
Firstly, the female bee finds a suitable existing hole in the surface of a log or twig or any other object. She then flies to a nearby tree and lands on the flat surface of a leaf. She then cuts the leaf around herself so that she leaves a neat hole in the leaf. She uses the neatly cut leaf disk to line the inside of the hole she has identified.
She then divides this lined hole into separate sections, separated by folded green leaves, creating cells which are stacked one after the other over the entire length of the hollow passage. Each cell is stuffed with pollen, an egg is laid within, and the cell is sealed off from the following one.
After a suitable time, the egg hatches and the larva (maggot) emerges and eats the pollen, moults a few times, and then spins a silken cocoon around itself within its cell and pupates. The adult emerges usually in the following season, and the males go in search of a female and, after mating, promptly die. The females remain alive long enough to build the cells to nourish their offspring. And so the cycle continues...
This is another special type of bee that I encountered on one of my hikes during December. It is a White-barred Cuckoo Bee, Thyreus delumbatus. Another common name for the bee is Curved Cloak-and-dagger Bee. Both names indicate that this bee is deceptive in some or other manner.
If one notices that a green part of a plant is wilting, it is often worthwhile to approach the plant to see why. In this case, the wilted section of plant was infested with aphids, the bugs that suck the juices from the plant. When I approached this particular plant, I found the aphids were being attended to by Hairy Sugar ants, Camponotus niveosetosus, while they solicited honeydew from the aphids.
| I mentioned some amazing facts about the fecundity of aphids in my July 2019 blog, adding how important their enemies were in keeping their numbers down. The aphids though, are certainly not taking things lying down and actively employ guards to protect themselves when the opportunity presents itself. In this case the aphids attract ants with a sweet excretion called honeydew, which is the still-nutritious waste of the copious amounts of plant sap that they consume. These big, aggressive ants become protective of the sapsuckers and defend them against enemies like Ladybirds, their larva and others (like Lacewing larvae). |
And on the very last day of January, I conducted one of those bird walks where there are literally zero birds, and, while staring forlornly up, for non-existent birds, in the Steenkamps' forest, I noticed this most delicate string of flowers hanging from the branch of one of the forest trees. It is a new species of orchid for our Finsbury list and is called a Common Summer Tree Orchid, Mystacidium flannaganii.
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Hi Jimmy, did you manage to get any camera trap photos of the Red Duiker after your initial sighting in the lower Steenkamps? Rob
ReplyDeleteNope. Too much traffic over the festive season. I am trying again. I hope....
ReplyDelete