Before we look at the nursery log, here's the loon update. All our hopes for fledging a chick this year may fall upon little Northern Pip and its parents' vigorous protection of it from all danger.
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| Northern Pip, five days old. Photo by Debby Crowley. |
Which by all appearances, they are doing.
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| Two parents and one chick means twice the attention. Photo by Debby C. |
The reason we have all our hopes on Pip is because the southern pair has abandoned its nest - and for no clear reason. On Monday, Shayne D. noted that both adults were out on the lake away from the nest. On Thursday, seeing the same situation, I took a look at the nest, and found a single egg.
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| A lone, unattended egg in the southern nest. |
On Friday afternoon, the Loon Preservation Committee (LPC) gave the order to mark the egg and check it on Saturday. Dave T. did that and found it had not been tended, so he collected it for analysis by the LPC. We may not know the status of the egg until winter when things slow down enough for the LPC biologists to do forensics, but we may learn then why it was abandoned. There's a chance the southern pair will attempt a second nest, but if not, we'll have to hope the big, strong male, and unknown female that make up the northern pair can keep Pip safe all summer long.
| Our banded male, up close and personal. |
Now the "nurse log". You may have heard about nurse logs in the forest - large trees that fall to the ground and decay slowly over many years, providing a fertile bed for plants to grow. Much of a forest floor is covered with a dense layer of leaves which can prevent germination, so these fallen trees can become filled with new life. Well, on a paddle this week I came across an aquatic analog, an old log floating in the lake that's serving the same purpose, but for bog-centric flora.
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| Nurse log |
The primary base plant is Sphagnum Moss, which covers much of the log and may provide a good place for other plants to take hold.
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| Sphagnum Moss |
The tall, grass-like plant growing most profusely on the right is a sedge. There are many varieties of sedge and I won't attempt to determine which this is.
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| Sedge |
In the center is another tall plant, this one woody, which can grow quite tall and dominates much of the higher ground in the bogs around Lake Wicwas: Leatherleaf.
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| Leatherleaf |
Growing on the right side of the log, with a reddish-green color (which helps identity this species) is Bog St. John's Wort.
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| Bog St. John's Wort |
One of the most interesting of our bog plants is the carnivorous Round-leaved Sundew, which is on the log in several places, but most visibly right in front of the St. John's Wort beside the bare spot on the log.
| Round-leaved Sundew |
When you find these on your paddles near a bog, look closely and you'll see fine hairs with a sticky drop of dew on each which catches small insects which the plant then digests.
Hardest to find on the log is the Purple Pitcher Plant, another carnivorous plant. These are small, tubular stems growing right along the water's edge. They'll be easier to spot in fall when they've grown larger.
| A mature Pitcher Plant, fully grown in October. |
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| Rose Pogonia |
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