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earthalmanac By Ted Williams
As of old, the comparison of human epidermis with lotus
blossoms elicits blushes in America and Asia, where the other lotus
species evolved. But he who compares a woman's skin to lotus leavesthat
brown, crinkled, mud-stained foliage pushing up from pond muck in May
and Juneis likely to get slapped. American lotus, found in roughly
the eastern two-thirds of the nation, starts blooming in late spring.
Pale yellow flowers, sometimes 8,500 per acre, open in full sunlight,
but when the hot earth belches clouds into the firmament, they close
to protect delicate pollen from possible rain. Showerhead-like seedpods,
which keep growing after the petals fall off, contain about 20 acorn-size
seeds that are relished by all manner of wildlife and sufficiently hard-shelled
to stay viable for years. Hence the plant's other names: duck acorn,
alligator button, and rattlenuts. If you are abroad in the woods anywhere from the upper midwestern states to the Maritime Provinces, and south to Iowa and Virginia, you may encounter the wood turtle, named less for its habitat than for its spectacular carapace, which looks as if it has been carved from black walnut. Depending on date and latitude, your wood turtle may be newly emerged from hibernation and easing over the bed of an ice-girded stream, or high and drypositioned under an evergreen canopy to catch a shaft of sunlight no wider than itself. You may even find a courting couple facing each other and swinging their heads back and forth. If a turtle is walking on land, follow. Unlike other pond turtles, this species spends much of its life foraging in uplands. It will pause, stretch its orange neck, then daintily pluck a mushroom, berry, or dandelion. Occasionally it will stop, stomp its feet, bang its yellow plastron on the wet earth, then snatch the earthworms brought to the surface by the vibrations. If it's a female, it may be en route to an open, sunny spot to lay eggs. Wood turtles can live for a century. And, as with many long-lived creatures, reproduction is limited; they don't even reach sexual maturity until they are at least 15. Illegal collecting threatens the species' existence. In one study 33 marked specimens began disappearing immediately after the public was invited into a 2,471-acre reservoir watershed. Eight years later only 14 of the turtles remained. Two years after that they were gone. . Poets commonly celebrate the first robin and bluebird
of the year. Not the first black vulturecousin to the stork but
also an "anti-stork," symbolizing death instead of birth.
We are talking about a bald-headed scavenger, drawn flylike to filth,
that gorges on rotting offal, that cools and possibly disinfects its
legs by hosing them down with acidic excreta, that hisses and grunts
if you startle it on the ground, then projectile-vomits into your face.
So if your heart soars at the sight of the first black vulture of spring,
you have arrived as a naturalist. You may spy a black vulture almost
anywhere in the Southeast. Black vultures will roust larger turkey vultures
from carrion. They flap more than turkey vultures, lack their red heads,
and are aloft later in the day and on straighter wings. One poet who
did celebrate the black vulture was George Sterling: "Aloof upon
the day's immeasured dome, / He holds unshared the silence of the sky.
/ Far down his bleak, relentless eyes descry / The eagle's empire and
the falcon's home."
Vernal poolsthose pockets of snowmelt and rain that vanish in
summer heatteem with life unseen by those who hasten through their
days oblivious to earth's wonders. Don't be one of them. Among obligate
denizens of vernal pools are fairy shrimp, an order more ancient than
dinosaurs. Keep looking under the dappled surface, between the floating
pine needles. First you'll see the two white stripes on the tail, then
a translucent creature roughly an inch long will materialize. Fairy
shrimp hang and hover, always swimming on their backs, rowing and extracting
oxygen with 11 pairs of legs. They are there because fish are not. Ducks
eat fairy shrimp but also transport their eggs to other vernal pools.
There are two kinds of eggsone for times of plenty and one for
low, warm water laden with salts concentrated by evaporation. The first
type, laid by unfertilized females, quickly produces clones. The secondactually
encysted embryosresults from male-female unions and remains viable
through summer dust and winter ice. Because vernal pools are generally
regarded as worthless puddles, many species of fairy shrimp are endangered. In most of North America there is a delicious pause between
spring and summer when those who have been waiting repair quietly to
secret places to pick blueberries with beak, muzzle, or fingers. Some
blueberry species grow high, some grow low, and all favor forest disturbances.
As Robert Frost noted: "But get the pine out of the way, you may
burn / The pasture all over until not a fern / Or grass-blade is left,
not to mention a stick, / And presto, they're up all around you as thick
/ And hard to explain as a conjuror's trick." On those fleeting
mornings when ripe fruit and dew hang together like sapphires and diamonds,
don't miss the chance to take children blueberrying. Note the color
of their tongues when they tell you that all the berries went into the
pail.
There is no better time for mink watching than now. From the Canadian
treeline south across the entire United States, save the driest portions
of our Southwest, these efficient predators are on the move. They fear
nothing, including you. A mink may chase a muskrat into its burrow,
devour it along with its young, then take over the quarters. Or, perfectly
aware of your presence, it may run across your feet in pursuit of newly
emerged turtles, frogs, and crayfish. Confront a mink up close, however,
and you may find yourself wearing vile-smelling musk similar to eau
de skunk. In fact, the name mink derives from the Swedish menk,
meaning "that stinking animal from Finland." Keep watching
and you'll see another side to the mink's personalityplayfulness.
Like its larger cousin, the otter, it will slide down rocks and slippery
banks.
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