By Beth Sullivan
This time of year
can be pretty bleak, especially if there is no snowfall to brighten
up the gray landscape.
The most widespread
woodlands have been pretty colorless. Only a few fluttering beige
beech leaves remain. The best place to find some green is to find a
conifer forest with some pine trees or hemlocks to break up the
scenery.
Snow can actually be
essential to the survival of many organisms. With a normal snow
cover, the ground remains somewhat insulated. Hard to believe, but
remaining at a steady freezing 32 degrees is perfect for protecting
plants, root systems, seeds, and seedlings, and even providing ‘warm’
safe passage for small mammals. Keeping the ground temperature
stable also assures that the soil is not continually freezing and
thawing causing upheaval and exposure all winter long. When we have
sub zero temps for extended periods, and no snow cover, the ground
surface freezes more deeply and solidly. But with temperature
fluctuations as we have seen, a hard freeze may be followed quickly
by a warm up, and changes in the soil moisture and texture create
havoc for anything living or trying to live in those top inches of
leaf litter or soil.
Green all year
There a number of
organisms that stay evergreen through the coldest seasons, and most
of us immediately think of trees and shrubs that we recognize pretty
easily: pines and hemlocks, spruces and firs, laurels and hollies.
These are all true vascular plants.
But lack of snow
cover invites a closer inspection, and the ability to observe some
gems that are often overlooked during the lush greenness of spring
and summer. This is the world of mosses, liverworts, and hornworts.
They are hardy and can survive with or without snow cover in some of
the most challenging conditions.
Most of us recognize
mosses of so many varied textures. They remain green all year and
inhabit a great variety of conditions. Most seem to like it moist and
shady, but there are others that we can discover on bald rock faces,
in places where just enough soil has built up to allow them to get
the moisture they need. Mosses are, however, non-vascular plants.
This simply means that they do not have the same internal structures
that most plants do, to transport food, nutrients and water. They
have no true roots, leaves, flowers, or seeds. Some mosses are dense
cushions of green, soft to touch, and a startling color in the brown
and gray leaves. Some are fuzzy, some spikey. Many display their
spore cases on longer stalks still visible and held above the main
portion of the plant. Clubmosses can look like individual mini
Christmas trees, and the two most well known we call princess pine or
running ground cedar.
Keep looking. Get
down closer to the ground in wet areas, bases of rocks, and old wet
stumps. Here you may find a couple of very strange organisms. They
look like tiny, flattened, fleshy leaves or even ribbons of green,
with spikes or horns rising above. These are the liverworts and
hornworts. Botanists continue to change classifications and naming
of these odd species. They are plants, they contain chlorophyll and
they make their own food. But, like mosses, they are non-vascular and
have very different reproductive processes. These plants were among
the very first to come out of the water and colonize the drier earth.
They are ancient. They are gems. They are worth getting close to,
getting out a magnifying glass or your macro lens, and really
examining. These plants inhabit all the climate zones on earth,
from tropics to tundra. They provide moisture in dry places, cover
for small organisms, and even food sources for others. Interestingly,
I often find them colonizing the surface soil on potted plants I find
at nurseries that have had them growing in damp, warm greenhouses.
Our photographers
The collection of photos here were taken by Carl Tjerandsen and his
team on Avalonia’s Tri Town Forest Preserve. Some plants are
named, others are yet to be identified. Botanists, naturalists, and
photographers have been combing this huge, beautiful preserve for the
last several years. They are exploring the unique habitats and the
flora and fauna associated there. Check our website Preserves
section to see more photos of this beautiful acquisition:
https://avalonia.org/tritown-forest/
. It may be hard to see past the dull colors of a snowless woodland,
but look closely and you will find green in beautiful hues and
unusual forms.
Avalonia protects
unique properties with varied habitats such as this one. We can
continue our mission to preserve these places and open them to you
and future generations, but we can only do so with your support. If
it matters to you, please support us with your membership and join us
in our efforts.
Beautiful pictures, Carl!
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