Sunny, Summer, Sunflowers

It’s not been a particularly sunny summer here in normally sun-blasted Central Texas. If it’s not vomiting rain, it’s cloudy and threatening to open up.  A break from the Texas sun is okay with me, though having grown up in the Sun Belt, I must admit I’ve grown weary of the dreary.

The volunteer sunflowers haven’t though.

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For days on end this summer, these fun annuals have invited sunshine into my garden.

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These four–Moe, Larry, Curly–and Shemp–planted themselves on the edge of my front garden.

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Acting as Guardians of the Gardens, they’ve grown to height and bloomed, rain or shine, and they will do so until they seed out for the birds–and next summer’s bounty.

The sunflowers along the driveway are growing in hopscotch fashion, spreading their happy flower ways,

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…reaching to the sky,

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…and leaning into the drive to wave a friendly welcome home to me.

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These sunflowers are planted by birds who visit my black-oil sunflower-filled bird feeders. Early each spring, MANY germinate in my gardens and pathways.  Actually, only a few seedlings germinate in the gardens proper because I mulch thoroughly, but in the rock walkways, scads of nascent sunflowers develop, most of which end up in the compost. One of the first chores after winter perennial pruning is weeding the dozens of sunflower wannabes.  I leave a few, sometimes transplanting one or two to more desirable spots. Then I enjoy the show in late spring and summer.

This year, there’s some variety in flower form, like this giant bloom, caught toward its end,

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…or a few that are channeling zinnias,

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…and finally, the well-known and loved ray form of this summer staple.

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And do they feed anything, you ask?  Why, yes they do, as a matter of fact! My honeybees are especially fond of these flowers.

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Honeys buzz around the sunflowers all day/everyday, but native bees and flies nectar too, as well as butterflies of all stripes and dots.

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Once the flowers are finished, the local finch gangs will come a callin’ to gather their share of nutritious seed,  assuring a future sunflower crop for my garden and  surrounding areas.

In addition to the non-native, who-knows-where-they-came-from sunflowers, my beloved Goldeneye, Viguiera dentata,  have made their floral debut for the year.

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Their bloom time is toward the end of summer and gloriously, early fall, but there are June and July previews of the autumn show.  Goldeneye feed the same critters as the larger sunflowers with both pollinators and seed spreaders.

Once the birds have eaten their fill of the annual sunflowers and have moved on, I’ll cut down the huge stalks,  relegating the remains to my compost bin or yard waste for pick-up to produce Dillo Dirt, a City of Austin soil conditioner.

 

Summer sunshine.

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Even when it’s rainy.

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Sunny sunflowers!

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Wildlife Wednesday, June 2015

What a wild month May was for Central Texas.  Heavy rains caused severe and deadly floods in a number of cities and smaller communities in Texas, including my own.  Along with the bad, some good happened too:  in most areas of Texas, the drought of these past eight years is declared “over”.  The downside, of course, is that the drought ended with  massive rain “bombs” which exacted a high cost in lives and property.  So far, 27  people are confirmed dead, with several still missing.  The property damage is estimated at least $27 million.

I’ve continue to hear that 35 trillion gallons of water fell on Texas in May. While I’m not quite sure how that’s measured (buckets?)–it’s a lot of rain.  Here in Austin, the official rainfall total was 17.59 inches for May, compared the the “normal” of 4.37 inches.

Yup, lots of rain.

Texas weather is dramatic, to say the least.  As National Public Radio’s Texas reporter extraordinaire, John Burnett, stated in one of his stories last week about the disastrous  Texas floods:  It seems to affirm a quote attributed to a meteorologist in 1927. Texas is a land of perennial drought broken by the occasional devastating flood. 

Wildlife perseveres through it all though. Native flora and fauna have developed mechanisms to thwart, or at least, mitigate, nature’s challenges, be it drought or flood, and all other things being equal, will recover–in time.

Early in the month, there was plenty of wild and honeybee activity on native blooms in my gardens. I fear that some of the ground nesting native or wild bees that live in and around my garden were flooded out, but mason and wood nesting bees continue, mostly unmolested, by the rains.  There will probably be a dearth smaller metallic, sweat and other ground nesting bees for a time, until their populations rebound.  My gardens will be ready for them when the next generation emerges.

I identify bees (and other insects and birds, for that matter) by visually comparing my photo(s) with an example found on a legitimate website like bugguide.net or The Jha Lab of The University of Texas–assuming I can find a photo, that is.  Then I research whether the critter-of-choice photographed elsewhere visits the same or similar plant species–or if there’s any related information on feeding or behavior. I usually confirm with at least one more reference, if possible.  If I can draw a connection, either by physical similarity and/or behavior, to what I’ve seen in my gardens, combined with information gleaned on scientific websites, I feel reasonably confident about my identifications. As I’m only just learning about the multitudes of native bees in Texas (300-plus species), keep in mind that my identification of wild bees are worth what you paid for them.  Come to think, that probably holds true for most of the insects I name.

You’ve been warned.

This is a Miner Bee, Perdita ignota, I believe.  During the first weeks of May, several crawled around the Engelmann or Cutleaf Daisy, Engelmannia peristenia, blooms, ending up covered in pollen–which is typical of the way bees, especially wild bees, cross-pollinate so efficiently.

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I haven’t seen any adults for a couple of weeks and because these particular bees ground nest, I’m guessing that some nests were flooded out with heavy rain.  Poor bees.

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I like the sharing of flower-space between this very tiny bee and the Ladybird Beetle (one of the good guys).

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But there’s an unwelcome visitor to the neighborhood in the guise of the Spotted Cucumber Beetle.  These beetles certainly chomped their share of petals and leaves recently, which I’m not thrilled about. Squishing is my preferred method of destruction (yes, I wear gloves!), but honestly, they’re pretty quick-n-crafty, therefore uncatchable.

I think the bee on the flower left of the “Native Bee” label is a Minor Bee, but the tiny bee on the right is a mystery.  It might  a wasp or even a fly.  But the body form looks bee-like to me: wider body, not so skinny, and no dangly-wasp legs.  I’m sticking with a Teesny Bee ID.

I witnessed these two Ceratina ssp., Small carpenter bees, in the process of making more bees.

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Blush.

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After the untangling and with full pollen sacs, the female will have placed the eggs in wood or maybe masonry, then closed off the opening by packing with pollen and soil so that the eggs can hatch in privacy and protection.  The larvae will develop as they eat the pollen,  but it might be a while for the next generation pollinates and nectars–and creates more of the same.

In between rainstorms, this  Eastern Carpenter BeeXylocopa virginiana, visited the Barbados Cherry.IMGP8028_cropped_2327x1871..new

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That’s quite a load, eh?   There’s something comically cute about bees carrying pollen–I always smile when I see full pollen pantaloons, whether on my honeybee gals or native bees.  And I wonder,  How does she fly with that mass of pollen?  

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I guess she rests at some point.  As I watched and photographed her, she was vibrating along the plant, near an open bloom.  Native bees shake or vibrate to induce the flower to release pollen.

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I think this one, sipping nectar at  Purple Coneflowers, is a another Eastern Carpenter Bee, though her coloring is a little different.

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Most of the carpenter bee species  I’ve observed in my gardens are black with stripes or black with puffs of yellow, here and there.  This gorgeous, shiny black bee (or maybe fly?) is pure, glistening black.

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It doesn’t matter all that much to me because all  pollinators are welcome in my garden.

The Syrphid Flies continued their love affair with the Engelmann or Cutleaf Daisy in my back garden.

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Syrphidae, also known as Flower Flies, are great pollinators and are beautiful garden visitors.  They come in a variety of color combos, but his yellow and brown is the one that I see most often and alights long enough for photographs.

Because of that, they are my favorite of the Syrphidae.

This fetching Long-legged fly, in the family Dolichopodidae, rested on the large leaf of a non-native Sunflower. Such a pretty fly, its metallic green color mirrors its chosen plinth.

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Green Lacewing, Chrysopidae, insects are a personal favorite of mine.

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So graceful and fragile looking, they are garden beneficials in larval and adult form.   The larvae eat spider and insect eggs, as well as aphids.  The adults feed on nectar and pollinate, as well as, adding crunch to their diet by consumption of smaller insects and eggs.

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An influx of the Four-lined Beetle, Poecilocapsus lineatus, proved a problem in my garden this past month, especially on the foliage of the Cutleaf Daisy.  The Four-lined Beetle is handsome in its suit of red-to-yellow stripes, but I don’t like what they do to MY plants.

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These true bugs feed on foliage, sucking the juice of leaves, causing this stippling.

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Other insects with sucking mouthparts cause discoloration to or rotting of foliage.    Not friends to the garden, that’s for sure.

The butterflies and moths are making a comeback after the floods and ready for summer action, as witnessed by this Little YellowPyrisitia lisa, feeding on a Four-nerve Daisy, Tetraneuris scaposa.   

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I used to see these interesting pollinators, Snowberry Clearwing MothHemaris diffinis, frequently in my gardens,

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This Little Brown Grasshopper-thing, (actually, two different ones), have tooled around the Winecup, Callirhoe involucrata.  

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I gave up identifying this guy/gal–there are too many different grass and leafhoppers to narrow down an identity.  I have one or two other things to do, you know.  Whatever it is, I love the powder-sugar sprinkling of pollen grains and appreciated their cooperation for the photo shoot.  The photo above doesn’t show damage on the Winecup, though the one below does.  What I don’t know for certain is whether it was the grasshopper who was the villain or whether the grasshopper was in the wrong spot and at the wrong time, where the botanical crime was committed..

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As for avian visitors, May was no slouch in that department.

During fall migration, I saw a male American Redstart, but due to his fast movements through the trees, I never got a good photo. I did, however, enjoy observing him for a day or two, before he headed southward.  This female or immature male American RedstartSetophaga ruticilla, flitted through my trees and shrubs for a week or two this past month.

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There were several, actually and I think they’ve headed north–I haven’t seen any of these warblers in the last couple of weeks.  I look forward to their return in September/October.

Finally, I was charmed by the antics of this Gray CatbirdDumetella carolinensis, helping himself to my Brazos blackberries.

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I feigned annoyance at his or her thieving, but I don’t mind wildlife sharing the garden bounty.  I had a bumper crop of blackberries this spring and where this particular vine is located is an ideal spot for Gray Catbirds:  it’s a tangle of various shrubs, including the blackberry vine, which provides shelter and respite.  And blackberries.

I hope your gardens benefited from wildlife visitors this month and that you will join in posting for June Wildlife Wednesday. Share the rare or mundane, funny or fascinating, beneficial or harmful critters you encounter. When you comment on my post, please remember to leave a link to your Wildlife Wednesday post so readers can enjoy a variety of garden wildlife observations.

Happy wildlife gardening!

Hope Dashed

Astrud the Cat loves Green Anole lizards. She watches and chases them, always hoping to catch them, if she can.

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This lucky anole knows he’s safe–at least from this feline, if not from birds or other predators.

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Astrud is probably disappointed that there’s a screen between Mr. Green and herself. But she’ll be more disappointed if she misses seeing other anoles from garden bloggers during Wildlife Wednesday, this coming Wednesday, June 3rd.  Astrud and I are looking forward to lots of posts about wild things in the garden–flitting, flying, creeping, and crawling–whatever wildlife visited or moved in–please share photos and stories.

June 3rd,  Wildlife Wednesday–Astrud loves to watch.

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