Tuesday, March 15, 2011

The Pine Cone Detective...

Winter is a fabulous time to see the structure of plants, and some unusual adaptations that insects use for wintering. Have you ever seen pine cones growing on willows? Wait a minute, willows don't grow "pine" cones! No but, an insect can cause this look-a-like gall.




The pine cone gall on willow is not uncommon. Deep inside this structure, a little insect has created an inner sanctum. Not unlike the thickened bulbs on the stems of goldenrod, it is the winter home of a insect- just trying to get by.


Or this- the bag worm. Finding unusual cone-like structures on your arborvitae or blue spruce? Weirder yet, I have seen these "cones" on sycamore trees. So, they can't be a pine cone, right? These structures are created by an insect, which gathers leaf (needle) pieces and web them together for its winter home.
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We studied some of these in an eye-opening "Diagnostics" class, taught last night by Denise Ellsworth, at Master Gardener training. I tend to look at these problems with a bit of a different perspective though. Instead of wanting to know what to spray them with, or how to kill them, I always wonder... what eats them? Will these larva hatch out when the warblers are migrating? Will they provide food for a family of Phoebes? If you DON'T spray them with poison, what happens next?

Tent caterpillars- the bane of gardeners everywhere. Except me. I have watched a Baltimore Oriole feasting on these fuzz-balls during migration. And cuckoos are adapted to tolerate those stiff-bristled larva; could I deny them a meal?
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Once you tune into nature, your first reaction ceases to be: reach for the spray! Most of these insects will naturally occur and naturally be held in check in a balanced ecosystem. After all, web worms maybe considered unsightly, but they are unlikely to kill a a tree.
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Bag worms can defoliate pines and spruce to the point of no-recovery, since they do not regenerate needle like a deciduous tree. So if it is already a goner, why not see which interesting birds come by to feed?
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Live Curious. It is not just a Nat Geo saying, it is a whole way of life.

3 comments:

  1. I feel like I should get a university credit from reading such an informative post. Lots of good info.

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  2. Thanks Red...
    I need a University Credit, too. Most of this stuff I learn from the "School of Hard Knocks"!

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  3. Couldn't agree more about letting our instinctual feelings of repulsion to pass on these little guys. There's a rhyme and reason for all things in nature and I'm sure these "pests" make for excellent meals for all kinds of our avian friends! As Red said, excellent post with enlightening info :)

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