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Summer
1998
[TEXT ARCHIVE WEB-PUBLISHED
MARCH 2002.
ORIGINAL PRINT PUBLICATION DATE: SUMMER 1998.]

Here's
what's debuting this season
on nature's stage in Chicago Wilderness
By
Jack Mc Rae
AUGUST
Teach
Your Children
The
sandhill crane pair that have taken residence in Pratt's
Wayne Woods in DuPage County are busy teaching their youngster
how to be a good adult crane. This week's lesson is how
to catch the young bullfrogs that are swimming in the water.
The crane family does not want to be embarrassed this autumn,
when they will join their crane friends from Lake and McHenry
Counties and travel to their winter home along the coast
of Texas.
Picky
Eaters
The
juvenile Franklin's ground squirrels at Gensburg Markham
Prairie are having a hard time. This is their first time
out foraging for food by themselves and, like most of us
at that age, they're picky eaters and have found nothing
that tastes good. They require the shelter and food found
only in the tallgrass prairie, specifically along the prairie/woodland
edges, amongst the shrubs. Listen as you walk through the
tallgrass prairie for the loud, bird-like whistle of the
Franklin's, a sharp ringing note that may be heard for a
considerable distance.
Lucky
13
The
13-lined ground squirrels are doing well in our area. Historically,
these rodents were found on the shortgrass prairie. As the
landscape was altered through settlement and development,
the 13-liners were able to move east. Now they are common
residents of the Chicago Wilderness, living the good life
on our golf courses and public parks and the grounds of
Brookfield Zoo.
Flitter
About
Do
you remember those long summer drives the family took to
visit your mother's relatives? Remember all the butterflies
found plastered on the car grille? Chances are good that
a regal fritillary was one of these unfortunate victims.
Today, this orange butterfly is uncommon in this region
as its habitat has been greatly diminished. The Braidwood
Dunes and Savanna in Will County does have the appropriate
habitat; specifically, it has bird's foot violets, the favorite
food of the fritillary caterpillar.
Fortunately,
the butterfly news is not all gloom and doom. There are
some species such as the red admiral whose populations are
holding their own, due to their ability to adapt to the
urban landscape. Another example is the strikingly colored
black swallowtail, whose caterpillar has found the Queen
Anne's lace to be quite tasty.
Other
butterfly success stories stem from the efforts of the human
species. Restoration volunteers removing brush in wetland
areas such as Nelson Lake Marsh in Kane County and Bluff
Spring Fen, east of Elgin in Cook County, are improving
habitat for the eyed-brown butterfly. A marvelous place
to see a multitude of butterflies is the Parson's Grove
of the Danada Forest Preserve in Wheaton, Illinois.
Crayfish
Beware
The
thousands of young crayfish living in the creeks of McHenry
County had better watch out. The rare Blanding's turtles
will be hatching soon and are going to be mighty hungry.
Showing excellent culinary taste, these turtles would like
nothing better than to chomp on some crawdads. Always health
conscious, Blanding's turtles receive calcium from eating
the shells of freshwater crustaceans.
SEPTEMBER
Hickory Nuts
For
many centuries, the nuts of the hickory tree were an autumn
staple for the earliest residents of the Chicago Wilderness.
It's not surprising. Hickory nuts are high in protein, but
perhaps more important, they taste much better than other
local nuts, such as acorns and black walnuts. The sweet,
delicious meat of the nut can be ground into flour and baked
into dense muffins. Trivia enthusiasts will be glad to know
that, when burned, hickory wood produces more British Thermal
Units (BTUs) than anthracite coal.
Hatching
Snappers
The
snapping turtle eggs that were laid during the last issue
of Chicago WILDERNESS are hatching during this issue. The
baby snappers are now searching for a water home, using
their primitive little reptilian brain to tell them where
to go and what to do. Snappers, by far the largest of this
region' s turtles (some specimens reach 50 lbs.), are
common throughout our waterways. They are often unseen by
the public because they spend much of their time crawling
slowly along the bottom in search of carrion and crayfish.
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