Missouri Master Naturalists- Springfield Plateau Chapter

Saturday, June 28, 2025

Life and Death at a Mountain Lake

Master Naturalist roving correspondent - Becky Swearingen)


Every visit I make to Rocky Mountain National Park includes several visit to Lily Lake. This high mountain lake (8931 feet)  has a trail around it that is slightly less than a mile long. Something interesting happens almost every time I visit it. I’ve seen moose, elk, long-tailed weasels, snakes and numerous species of ducks and birds. 


One interesting aspect of this lake is that there is a population of Western Tiger Salamanders (aka Barred Tiger Salamander (Ambystoma mavortium) that live there.  The interesting thing about these salamanders is that they stay in the paedomorphic stage for their entire lives. That means that they stay in the water and have external gills. 

As with many of the park's fauna, they are being impacted by climate change.  One study done in Yellowstone suggests that as we  get higher temperatures it will cause a rise in the temperature of these high-altitude lakes which will cause the paedomorphic salamander to mature into fully adult Tiger Salamanders and that we may begin to see these adults out of the water in the future years.


For now, though, I always look for these fairly large creatures (up to 14 inches) in the water. Last summer, I got more than I expected when walking the trails. At the water’s edge was a Common Garter Snake that was attempting to swallow a paedomorphic Tiger Salamander. I watched for about 10 minutes and from what I could see no progress was being made swallowing it.  You can see the video at this link.

Above is a picture of a Red Speckled Dun.  While the Tiger Salamander is known for being a voracious predator, it was interesting to see that it is not without its own predator.
"OK,, now what??
Meanwhile this Garter Snake is left deciding what to do next.  Give up or risk a bad case of constipation!

Saturday, April 19, 2025

Fritillary Feast at Caterpillar Cafe

 

We are fostering this family of Great Spangled Fritillaries courtesy of Chris and Deb Barnhart.  They are gorging on violets which Barb protected in our rain garden. Barb has also planted 90 species of native plants in our suburban yard. The violets below have now have spread out into the lawn, bringing color as well as food for these cats. You can watch them feast at this Youtube link.


They will soon be graduating to chrysalis stage and then emerge for a debut at the Roston Butterfly House at Close Memorial Park in Springfield Missouri.

More about these fritillaries is at this MDC Link.
This is just one more benefit of planting native species around your home. Barb's 90+ species of native plants on our 1/4 acre lot in Springfield are in the middle of a neighborhood with closely manicured lawns and typical shrubs and plantings. Somehow a variety of species have arrived including skinks, voles, lizards, and chipmunks as well as lots of pollinator species of butterflies and many species of birds. Besides the benefit to wildlife it also bring us pleasure watching them.

Thursday, April 10, 2025

Cedar Apple Rust Revisited


I have always been interested in plant galls and wrote about the cedar apple rust gall in this blog in 2010.   Checking our the cedar tree by our garage I found this years crop of galls and picked a few.  It had been dry for weeks and yesterday's rain hadn't changed the galls.  I picked a few and photographed them before and after a 30 minute soak in a pan of water rejuvenated the fungus which literally said....."Thanks, I needed that!"

Here is the before and after their little dip in the water.


Now if that raised your curiosity about cedar apple rust galls, check out this blog from 2010 and more at this MDC Discover Nature page.  Even more on rusts in this video.


Monday, March 24, 2025

Garage Floor Life

 Life under a country floor.

An opening under the wooden floor of our garage at Bull Creek has proven to be attractive to wildlife.  After seeing a squirrel crawl under it, I set up a game camera and over several weeks collected a cross-section of wildlife which you can see at this link.  Over several weeks it caught squirrels, a wood rat, box turtle, rabbit, armadillo, and a timber rattlesnake! 

First, can you spot the red-shouldered hawk in this picture?  Hint, click to enlarge.

 
 Now focusing down on the floor, try to find the timber rattlesnake.  You can see the rattles at its tail.

Again, you can see all of them  at this Flicker link.  

Life just wants to be; but it doesn't want to be much.”

Bill Bryson, A Short History of Nearly Everything


Thursday, February 20, 2025

Fire in the Ozarks

Fire in the Ozarks

Spoiler Alert!  This ends with a great movie.

 Where there are forests there are fires.  For thousands of years, humans have created forest fires by accident or on purpose, shaping the Missouri landscape.  While lightening sparks an occasional wildfire, human activity today causes about 99% of fires. Native Americans, we now know, used fires to their advantage. In 1750, Father Vivier described the effect of this burning:

… wherein trees are almost as thinly scattered as in our public promenades. This is partly due to the fact that the savages set fire to the prairies toward the end of autumn, when the grass is dry; the fire spreads everywhere and destroys most of the young trees.

Henry Rowe Schoolcraft, traveling through the Ozarks in 1819, described a landscape of prairies, oak savannas and oak-pine forests shaped by fire. He didn’t know that Native Americans had used fire as a tool for promoting hunting.  Lacking ways of controlling the burn, Native Americans would allow a wildfire to spread for miles, widely suppressing the growth of trees. The result was large areas of grasslands and savannas, providing food for bison, elk and deer, and openings in the forest for sun-loving fruits and berries.

Studies of dendrochronology have shown a link between population density and the frequency and intensity of fire over the last four-hundred years.  While sparsely populated areas had fires every ten to thirty years on average, more populated lands recorded fires every one to five years.   As groups of Native Americans were driven westward and the population of fire-using Euro-American settlers expanded, fire frequency actually increased in some areas.

They began seasonal burning of the cut over woods to encourage fresh grass for grazing, as well as ridding the land of ticks and snakes.  This practice suppressed the regrowth of timber and woody plants, further depleting the leaf litter and organic matter that formerly covered the forest floor, intercepting and holding rainfall. Attempts to grow crops on old forest land resulted in more rapid runoff and erosion. With a loss of shallow groundwater recharge, many of the perennial springs dried up, providing yet another challenge to the subsistence of the settlers.

It wasn’t until the first quarter of the twentieth century that the government stepped in to manage and protect Missouri’s degraded forests. In 1925, the Missouri Legislature appropriated $10,000 to create a Department of Forestry, but the governor promptly vetoed the bill.  The idea of protecting forests as public land might have died except for the creation of the Missouri Forestry Association, a coalition of private citizens and wood-using industries. This organization raised funds from public subscription and hired a forester for fire prevention education. He drove around in a Model-T nicknamed the “Showboat,” hauling a trailer with a generator and motion picture projector, showing the film, Trees of Righteousness, all around Missouri.  In the days before widespread electrification, the mere presence of a movie in the woods brought out large curious crowds.  The 1925 silent film is combined in three reels of 20 minutes each and you can see it on Youtube at this link.

The federal government intervened in the protection and management of forest lands in 1911 with the passage of the Weeks Act. This allowed the government to purchase land to set aside in National Forests in order to protect watersheds and wildlife habitat and provide for sustainable wood production. The Mark Twain National Forest was created, now encompassing over one million acres in the state. Modest investments in firefighting equipment and fire towers promoted early detection and suppression of wildfires.  With the creation of the Missouri Department of Conservation in 1937, a state agency also began to work toward better management of Missouri’s forests. 

A sizeable part of the Bull Creek watershed is in the Mark Twain National Forest, especially in the headwater areas. Private landowners still hold onto much of the cleared bottomland with its more fertile soils. In Linn Township, where our property is located, 70% of the land is owned by the Forest Service.

Enhanced fire control measures in the 1960s, along with robust reforestation programs promoted by the Conservation Department, led to a significant regrowth of the state’s forests. The accessibility of publicly-owned forest land has created great opportunities for hunting, hiking, camping and in some designated areas, off-road vehicle recreation. To some extent, the availability of these activities has led to an increase in the human population of Linn Township.

We have also re-discovered the value of fire as a management tool for maintaining high-quality prairies, glades and even woodlands. Prescribed burns (a controlled fire with a defined purpose) can foster improved wildlife habitat, plant diversity, and even timber production.  Controlled burns are even used for reestablishing oak woodlands as part of TSI (Timber Stand Improvement), removing shrub undergrowth to allow sunlight to reach the forest floor and nourish the new young oaks.

I would highly recommend turning off the sound and watching Trees of Righteousness at this Youtube link.