Tuesday, July 28, 2015

Headwaters Protection

Playground to be replaced with a rain garden
The Pennypack Trust is one of 80 watershed-protection organizations in the Delaware River basin that are participating in an ambitious collaborative effort called the Delaware River Watershed initiative funded by the William Penn Foundation to preserve and restore water quality in the Delaware River.

While the Pennypack Trust has not yet undertaken any projects in the Pennypack watershed, our sister organization, the Tookany-Tacony-Frankford Watershed Partnership (TTF) is going gangbusters on a small, heavily urbanized stream located just over the divide from the Pennypack watershed.

The stream, Jenkintown Creek, rises in a play area on the grounds of Abington Friends School.  The school is very interested in improving water quality in this small headwaters stream - both to be a good citizen, and also to use the restoration work as an educational resource for its students. On July 23, several of the local watershed organizations partnering in this collaborative effort took a tour of the work that has been completed on the school's property.

In the image at the beginning of this post, my friend and colleague Julie Slavet, director of the TTF, explained that the school is going to replace the existing grassy playground - the very beginning of the stream - with a rain garden that will capture runoff and allow it to percolate into the soil.
Newly planted riparian buffer.  The stream is flowing down the center between deer exclosures.
Just below the existing playground, the school has created 50-foot-wide riparian buffer plantings to shade and filter the nascent stream.
De-vine buffer
A bit downstream of the newly planted riparian buffer, the stream flows through existing streamside woodlands.  However, like all woodlands in the urbanized northern Piedmont (including the Pennypack Preserve), these trees were cloaked with invasive non-native vines.  The school's contractor removed the vines and planted individual trees in the areas freed of invasives.
Existing riparian buffer cleared of vines and expanded with new plantings
At the edge of playing fields
The soccer fields to the right of the image above shed precipitation almost as effectively as asphalt.  The school plans to create an infiltration trench at the base of the hill where the visitors are standing to capture the water coming off the fields and allow it to percolate into the ground rather than run directly into the stream to the left.
Parking lot runoff
The last stormwater management structure at the school will be a rain garden built at the end of the parking lot shown in the image above.  Now, when it rains, all of the water from the parking lot pours into the stream through the rocky gully visible in the image.  The school plans to capture the water in another rain garden and allow it to filter into the soil slowly.

Obviously, to make a difference in the overall Delaware River watershed, these types of projects will have to be repeated thousands of times over on countless small tributary streams.  But this is a great first step, and it serves as a model for others to emulate. 

Tuesday, July 21, 2015

Wait! Wait! Don't Pull Me!


Have you ever seen a vine creeping up on a shrub or tree and thought, “Oh, no you don’t! YANK!” That’s good, right?  Not necessarily. I’m Josh Bruce, a Biology major from Vassar College and long-term resident of the greater Philadelphia area.  As a research intern at the Pennypack Trust this summer I am studying the possibility of unintended environmental damage from well-meaning management practices.
Although invasive vines have become an incredibly destructive force on the East Coast—toppling thousands of acres of forests from the edges inward—combating them with brute force may not be the best strategy. In fact, tearing vines out could lead to greater environmental damage than stability in the long term: tree limbs can be accidentally broken, invasive seeds may be spread, and, most importantly, the forest floor can become disturbed.  Uprooting the shallow root networks of invasive vines largely also clears the ground layer of any plants and tree seedlings that are entangled in the invasive plants' roots, leaving bare patches and, even worse, furrows of loose earth like a tilled garden ready for new seed.

Unfortunately this blank space will either be eroded away or filled by whatever can get there first. Since the area was previously invaded, seeds of that very same invasive plant are likely already in the soil. If the original invasive species doesn’t re-invade, hosts of other invasive species have a chance, and a management area can quickly become a foothold for secondary invasion. The initial invader may have had to contend with a thick layer of dead leaves and a diverse community of native plants when it first tried to invade; the newly "managed" site is left with neither of these defenses; therefore, a secondary invasion will likely be even denser and more successful at suppressing native plant regeneration than the initial invasion.
 With my research this summer I am specifically focusing on Oriental bittersweet (Celastrus orbiculatus). This invasive vine, though hard to pull from trees and shrubs, is relatively easy to pull from the soil, making uprooting a tempting management strategy. I have used a 2-meter-wide, custom designed plot frame (a loop of PVC plumbing pipe) to survey the ground cover vegetation in bittersweet-dense areas in the Pennypack Preserve. This gives me a baseline idea of what an initial bittersweet invasion may look like. Following my survey, I either (1) leave the plot alone, (2) cut the bittersweet stems where they emerge from the ground and clip away as much of the top as possible, or (3) rip all traces of Oriental bittersweet from the plot, along with anything else it might have tangled-up in it.
Next year and for several years thereafter, I (or another young scientist) can go back to these plots, survey what has grown or regrown, and repeat the treatments. After several years I hope to be able to say with confidence whether we should or should not use uprooting as a management strategy for Oriental bittersweet, whether clipping the stems year after year is enough to suitably quell an invasion, and what kind of plants are likely to grow in place of Oriental bittersweet that has been ripped or cut. Until then, cutting and carefully removing the top of invasive vines while leaving the roots intact is the safest, if not the most efficient, way to go.
Submitted by:
Joshua Bruce, Research Intern

Friday, July 10, 2015

Foray to Frazier's Bog

Morton Arboretum's Joe Rothleutner's preparing an herbarium specimen
On Wednesday, July 8, I had the good fortune to escort two horticultural professionals to an amazing wetland located 0.3-mile from the Trust's headquarters - a forested swamp known as Frazier's Bog.

The swamp is not, in fact, a bog.  Bogs are characterized by standing water which is often stained tea-brown by tannins leached from decomposing organic matter.  In addition, bog water is acidic.  Frazier's Bog is actually a fen, which has running (albeit slowly running), clear water that tends to be neutral or slightly basic.  The water at Frazier's Bog seeps out of the porous quartizite bedrock Edge Hill Ridge immediately to the north, and the shallow rills, runnels, and rivulets that thread through the wetland flow over sandy beds.

The swamp is also amazing because it's a Coastal Plain outlier.  The Pennypack Preserve and environs are on the solid, metamorphic rocky Piedmont; the edge of the sandy Coastal Plain lies about 10 miles to the south.  Nevertheless, many of the the plants that occur in Frazier's Bog are plants typical of the Coastal Plain in New Jersey, not the Piedmont.  So, Frazier's bog is a rarit y- an island of the Coastal Plain 250 feet above sea level in a shallow basin in the Piedmont. 

The bog's unusual nature has been recognized for a century and a half, and over the years countless botanic field trips have tromped through the spongy, saturated site.  Currently, the wetland is located at the edge of the second fairway of Huntingdon Valley Country Club's C-golf course, but fortunately the country club recognizes the botanic gem and has posted signs to keep golfers out of the swamp (which is a treasure trove of lost golf balls).
Fortunately, the country club recognizes the wetland's value
Frazier's Bog (and and only two other sites in Pennsylvania) support sweetbay magnolia trees (Magnolia virginiana).  The Morton Arboretum in Lisle, Illinois and the Chicago Botanic Garden (CBG) have joined forces to create a sweetbay magnolia collection that includes specimens from the full range of the tree - Massachusetts to Cuba.  On Tuesday, Andrew Bunting of CBG and Joe Rothleutner of the Morton Arboretum came to Frazier's Bog to take softwood cuttings from 10 magnolias growing in the swamp.  They will attempt to root the specimens so they can be planted in the botanic gardens, and so that they can be propagated and shared with other gardens.  In addition, they are creating a germplasm "bank" in case the sites where these trees occur naturally are eliminated by hurricanes, tornadoes, fire or development. 
 Chicago Botanic Garden's Andrew Bunting "bagging" his quarry
The swamp floor is carpeted with skunk cabbage and ferns
In addition to taking the softwood cuttings, the pair collected specimens of the leaves and fruit from each of the sampled trees to include in an herbarium collection.
The Dynamic Duo just before leaving the swamp
After we left the swamp, we crossed to the opposite side of the fairway (fore!) to check on another Coastal Plain species, netted chain fern (Woodwardia areolata).
Joe photographing netted chain fern
When the country club resurrected this 9-hole course about 20 years ago (it had been "abandoned" during the Great Depression), they had enclosed the stand of ferns inside orange construction fencing.  The construction fencing is long gone and has been replaced with unobtrusive wire mesh fencing (which is collapsed and useless); the ferns, nonetheless, are thriving.
 
Submitted by
David Robertson, Executive Director

Dog Vomit Slime

Now that I've got your attention...
On the wood-chipped path outside my office
Of late, I'm obsessed with slime mold, and one species in particular: Fuligo septica.  Last year, a neighbor cut down several large tuliptrees that had grown too near his house.  His arborist chipped the wood, and Pennypack took the wood chips for our trails.  This spring, the wood chipped trail has come alive repeatedly with slime mold aggregations.

At first, this slime mold is a strikingly bright, brilliant yellow.

Image from Wikipedia
Image from Wikipedia
But after a day or so, it turns dun-colored and looks like its common name.

When I saw it, I knew this organism was a slime mold, but I knew very little about it, so I checked out the citation on Wikipedia and found out that Dog Vomit Slime (also known in more genteel circles as Scrambled Egg Slime [still not too appetizing] or Flowers of Tan) is one of the most common and widely distributed of the slime molds.

Slime molds are not molds (i.e., fungus) at all despite their common name. They and the other protists (i.e., single celled organisms) are lumped into their own kingdom equivalent to the animals, plants, and fungi, but the classification is constantly in flux because the relationships among these organisms are so poorly known and understood.
Like many slime molds, the cells of this species typically live independently, then based on some unknown cue, they come together and aggregate to form a plasmodium. Each cell gives up its individual existence and merges its cell body and nucleus into a mass that may move in an amoeba-like fashion in search of nutrients. F. septica's plasmodium may range from white to yellow-gray, and is typically 1-8 inches in diameter and 0.4–1.2 inches thick. The plasmodium eventually transforms into a sponge-like aethalium, analogous to the spore-bearing fruiting body of a mushroom, which then degrades, darkens in color, and releases its dark-colored spores. F. septica produces the largest aethalium of any slime mold.
Close-up image of the aethalium.  Soo cool!
In Estonian mythology, the aethalium was thought to be the leftovers from a kratt, a creature created by farmers out of hay and/or farm implements, given life by the devil after the farmer surrendered three drops of blood, and obligated to do the farmer's bidding. F. septica in Finland was believed to be used by witches to spoil their neighbors' milk. This gives it the name paranvoi, meaning "butter of the familiar spirit." In Flemish, it is known as "heksenboter," which refers to "witch's butter."
What strikes me as most odd is that none of the myriad visitors to the Trust's office who walk past the slime molds ever come in to inquire about them, especially when they're in their bright yellow stage.
 
Submitted by
David Robertson, Executive Director

Wednesday, July 1, 2015

Feodor Pitcairn's Iceland Revealed Exhibit at Smithsonian

A Smithsonian staff member in the hall outside Iceland Revealed exhibit
Pennypack's founder Feodor Pitcairn is a very accomplished nature photographer.  Though he worked in his family's financial business, his true love was photography.  He began his photographic career making stunning, natural-light undersea still images, then graduated to undersea videography. 

At 80 years old, he has forsaken diving (too dangerous, he claims; he has related some really "close calls").  Now he photographs terrestrial landscapes with high definition equipment.  He has spent the last several years making expeditions to Iceland, which has resulted in an exhibition of his work at the Smithsonian Institution's National Museum of Natural History in Washington opening on July 2, 2015.

Mr. Pitcairn collaborated with Icelandic poet Ari Trausti Guðmundsson to "reveal a land of fire, ice, hardy life, and natural beauty. Visitors to the exhibit experience the remote beauty of Iceland, a land sculpted by the elements and forged by active geologic activity."
Enjoying the exhibit
Mr. Pitcairn organized a bus tour to Washington for a group of his friends for the exhibit's opening on June 30, and my wife Mary and I were invited to come along.  It was the culmination of years of work, and he was in "seventh heaven."
A beaming Mr. Pitcairn
A well-known Icelandic folk troupe with the (translated) name "Seasons" happened to be in town on tour and entertained the crowd during the reception.  During the mingling after the formal speechifying, Mary and I had a chance to speak with the Icelandic Ambassador to the United States and former Icelandic Prime Minister Geir H. Haarde.  He gave us his card and invited us to contact him if we wanted some "special considerations" should we choose to visit Iceland.

Though Mr. Pitcairn's images are striking, Mary's not much motivated by stark, sere landscapes.  I doubt we'll take Mr. Haarde up on his offer.

Mr. Pitcairn has also published an art book of his Icelandic images.  Pennypack can obtain copies for anyone interested in buying the book.

Submitted by David Robertson
Executive Director