July 13, 2023

Ringlet Butterfly

There are three common, medium-sized brown butterflies in the UK: Gatekeeper, Meadow Brown and Ringlet. From June to the end of August you are likely to see all three fluttering by the QEII nature reserve, though they have slightly different preferred habitats, with the Meadow Brown in grassy areas, Gatekeepers along the hedgerow and Ringlets near the trees.


You might even see a young Ringlet on a cloudy day as its dark brown velvety wings readily absorb warmth from the sunlight, though the wing colour of the older butterflies fades. They feed on the nectar of the pink blackberry flowers and the yellow ragwort, so keep an eye out along the brambles and near the stage.


With a life-cycle of just one year, in the summer the female drops her pale yellow eggs amongst the coarse grasses. The larvae hatch a few weeks later, then hide during the day, waiting until night-time to feed on the grass. After overwintering, the larvae pupate in the spring, before a new adult emerges two weeks later from the chrysalis.


Links to further information and images


First Nature


UK Butterflies


The Woodland Trust


July 05, 2023

Water Horsetail



The Equisetum genus, which includes water horsetail(1), is a relict of spore producing ancestors that grew in the Carboniferous period (300 million years ago). These ancient plants formed much of the world’s coal deposits; some grew up to 30m tall(2).

You can see this carbonised fossil, from nearby,
at the Museum in the Park, Stroud

Like those by the QEII pond and along the Stroudwater Navigation, the fossilised specimen looks like a bottle brush, though new spring shoots are naked, and look quite similar to asparagus.


Once around 10 cm high, they develop needle-like green branches, which are arranged in whorls at nodes up the stem. The purple-toothed sheaths, above each node, are the non-photosynthetic leaves.



While by late spring only non-fertile shoots emerge, in early spring the first  stems are tipped with a cone, the strobilus, which ripens to release millions of green spores. Each spore has four short legs which may help gliding in the air, and, intriguingly, once on the ground, allow it to walk and jump as the humidity levels change(3), to aid its dispersal.






The segments between the nodes gradually decrease in length up a stem in a regular way, which is said to have inspired the 17th century Scottish mathematician John Napier to invent logarithms(4).








Early morning dew on the plant forms as almost spherical droplets. Various plants, such as grasses, elicit this same superhydrophobic effect(5).







Horsetails have evolved a unique way of achieving this, producing a micro-bobbly surface by incorporating silica balls under a waxy coating.


.
magnified branch
magnified stem












If you rub a branch it feels like very fine sandpaper, and traditionally a wodge of the plant was used to polish metal, such as pewter, and wood, which gave rise to the folk name ‘scouring rush’.


Links

1 The Wildlife Trusts (Beds, Cams, Northants): a revised key to the horsetails

In defense of plants: Ancient Equisetum

The walk and Jump of Equisetum spores

Maths is fun: introduction to logarithms 

Maths Inside: Nature’s Raincoats


White dead-nettle

White dead-nettles in foreground, stinging nettles at back right Patches of stinging nettles are left around the Reserve for the benefit of ...