|
Spring
2001

Here's
what's debuting this season on nature's stage in Chicago
Wilderness
by
Jack MacRae
EARLY
SPRING
Northern
Pike. While most of our large land predators are long
gone their aquatic equivalents are still around. We have
massive northern pike lurking in the shallows of our rivers
and lakes, ready to ambush an unsuspecting fish. During
the spring, a large, 3-foot long female will lay many thousands
of eggs, randomly strewing them through he emergent vegetation.
She has no further parental responsibilities.
The
spawning areas found in the backwaters of the Des Plaines
River have a long-standing reputation for producing untold
numbers of large pike. The scientific name for pike, Essox
lucius, is Latin for pitiless water wolf, a testament to
their hunting talents.
Platform
Appeal. A very cool event happened a few years back.
A pair of ospreys decided that one of the many sloughs in
the Palos forest preserves would be a nice place to raise
their young. While these birds of prey were initially attracted
to the site by the natural habitat, what most likely convinced
them to stay was the artificial nesting platform that had
been constructed and erected by the good people at the Forest
Preserve District of Cook County.
The
osprey couple will probably arrive in early April and add
a new layer of dead sticks to the last years nest.
They obviously feel secure in this location; the pair fledged
three young in 1998, two young in 1999, and three young
last spring. Area birders feel this may be the first productive
osprey nest in the region for five decades.
MIDDLE
OF SPRING
One
Good Tern. After spending the winter in Central and
South America, a few black terns will return to our area
around the start of the baseball season. They will
construct
their nests on the floating mats of decaying vegetation,
with the mother depositing her eggs on the damp, spongy
platform. After a few weeks of incubation, the young terns
will hatch and be swimming about, watching their parents
grab small fish and insects for their meals. Young terns
are fed fish early in their life for added protein, but
will usually switch to an insect repast as they grow up.
While they used to breed throughout Illinois in the pre-settlement
prairie marshes, today only a few high quality wetlands
in our area are home to black terns, notably Lake Elizabeth
in McHenry County and Broberg Marsh in Lake County, Illinois.
The
List of Avian Visitors. I think it would be great if
International Migratory Bird Day, this year on May 21, were
as well celebrated as St. Patricks Day, where we exalt
the exploits of a reputed snake killer. During the annual
migration last year, spring visitors to the Chicago Wilderness
included such colorful birds as the purple gallinule, the
ruby-throated hummingbird, the blue-headed vireo, the scarlet
tanager, and the black-throated green warbler. Its
a great day to get out and enjoy the multi-hued spectacle.
Awfully
Cute. An adorable sight in the natural world is watching
the young pied billed grebes taking a ride on the back of
their mother. Mom can submerge like a submarine and, with
her young clinging tenaciously to her back, she will
swim
under the water in search of small fish and crustaceans.
Grebes will build their nest in our high quality wetlands,
along the water line, where they inevitably end up covered
with duckweed and other nature that looks like pond
scum to many. The Lake Calumet area, with its vast expanse
of marshy
areas, is a fine place for these uncommon birds to raise
their families.
END
OF SPRING
Cartoon
Educators. Bart Simpsons teacher at Springfield
Elementary School is Edna Krabapple. She may be named for
the native Iowa crabapple, currently in bloom with their
fragrant pink blossoms, growing along the edge of our woodlands.
The not quite equally beautiful flowering crabapples in
our neighborhoods are native to other lands, originally
found far away across the seas.
From
"Calvin and Hobbes" we have Ms. Wormwood, Calvins
nemesis. I think shes probably named for dragon wormwood,
a close relative of tarragon and one of over 330 plants
found on the Illinois list of endangered flora. While dragon
wormwood had been recorded as occurring in Lake County,
it may have been extirpated from the region, although not
by Calvin.
Lifeline.
It
cant be easy for a mother hoary bat to give birth
to twins while hanging by her toes in a tree. To perform
the feat, the mother maneuvers her body to
hang in a horizontal position, clinging to a branch with
her thumbs and feet. During delivery, mom will use her wings
to support the tiny, naked pups. Within minutes, she will
resume her usual head down position, cradling her babies
and grooming them until they are clean and dry. For the
first few hours after giving birth, the placenta acts as
a lifeline to the newborn. One researcher saw a newly born
hoary bat fall from its mother, only
to crawl up the umbilical chord to safety.
Hoary
bats are the largest, fastest, and most widespread bats
in North America. Though not common, there are reports of
them from Waterfall Glen and other forested areas in the
Chicago Wilderness.
|