Southern trees

January 24, 2024 • 12:00 pm

by Greg Mayer

While Jerry’s traveling, I thought it would be a good time to post the second installment of southern trees. In the first, I showed mostly the epiphytes that grow on trees, and now it will be the trees themselves.

The northeastern US– roughly around the Great Lakes, New England, and the mid-Atlantic– is dominated by broad-leaved, deciduous, hardwood forests (think oaks, maples, hickories), grading to evergreen coniferous forest to the north, tall grass prairie to the west, and southern forest to the south. Interestingly, a big swath of the American south, like the far north, is dominated by coniferous forest: very tall pines, with a short, shrubby understory. As you get far enough south, the understory becomes palms.

Jacksonville, Florida, January 9, 2024.

The above photo is of a suburban front yard, but as either a remnant of the pre-development forest, or as a planted recreation, it gives a fair impression of a tiny bit of this southern conifer forest. We see about five pines, a thick palmetto (?Sabal sp.) understory, and to the left front and right background, two broad-leaved trees, deciduous on the left, evergreen on the right.

The pines have very long needles, many over a foot long, and longleaf pine (Pinus palustris) is one of the characteristic species. But there are several other pines with long needles, and I’ve never been able to convince myself that I can tell them apart. I think there are two species in this little stand, one with short cones and the other with long cones.

Jacksonville, Florida, January 9, 2024.

But cones vary both within a tree, related to age and cone-specific effects, and among trees of the same species, so I’m not sure. Here’s some of the range of variation in the long cones:

Jacksonville, Florida, January 9, 2024.

and among the short cones:

Jacksonville, Florida, January 9, 2024.
Jacksonville, Florida, January 9, 2024.

Many of the long cones were damaged, the scales being torn or chewed off. I’m not sure what does this, or why. Gray squirrels (Sciurus carolinensis) are common at this site, but I don’t think pine cone scales are edible or nutritious.

“Chewed” cone at top. Jacksonville, Florida, January 9, 2024.

There also seemed to be differences in the bark. The short cone pine has a more blocky texture to the bark:

Bark of “short cone pine”. Jacksonville, Florida, January 9, 2024.

While the long cone pine had longer, more flattened ridges; but, again, I’m not sure how much individual variation there is within species.

Bark of “long cone pine”. Jacksonville, Florida, January 9, 2024.

The broad-leaved trees included evergreen magnolias (Magnolia sp.):

Magnolia. Jacksonville, Florida, January 9, 2024.

with loads of their seed pods nearby. These pods were not under the magnolia, but over a fence and under one of the pines, so must have been moved– by squirrels?

Magnolia pods. Jacksonville, Florida, January 9, 2024.

This is the live oak of some sort (Quercus sp.) from my epiphyte post. Astute readers were able to identify the clumps of leaves higher in the tree as mistletoe.

Jacksonville, Florida, January 9, 2024.

The tree had lost most of its leaves, but still had some, including non-lobed, “live oaky” leaves”:

Jacksonville, Florida, January 9, 2024.

and slightly-lobed, much more, at least to a northerner, “oaky” leaves:

Jacksonville, Florida, January 9, 2024.

We’ll finish with the red maple (Acer rubrum) a tree I am very familiar with from the north, that in Florida seems to be semi-deciduous– losing most, but not all of its leaves in the winter. This row of trees is clearly planted:

Jacksonville, Florida, January 9, 2024.

And, though mostly leafless, there were some leaves still on the trees:

Jacksonville, Florida, January 9, 2024.

As with the previous post on this, please weigh in with plant identifications!

Readers’ wildlife photos

January 17, 2024 • 8:15 am

Today we have photos by Friend of the Site Greg Mayer, who sent these in when the photo well was about to run dry. Greg’s captions are indented, and you can enlarge the photos by clicking on them. This is part 1 of 2.

Southern trees: what’s on them?

One of the things you notice in heading south are the changes in the plants and animals you see. One of the most striking things you notice is the abundance of epiphytes– plants growing on plants– which are much commoner in the southern US than in the north. Epiphytes of all sorts, and often large ones– bromeliads, vines, strangler figs, etc.– are a typical characteristic of tropical forests, but there are a fair number in subtropical Florida. The following pictures are from Jacksonville, in northern Florida.

Among the first “southern” things you notice, even while driving, is Spanish moss (Tillandsia usneoides, in the bromeliad family) dripping off of trees; while driving south I first noticed it in southern Georgia. Unfortunately, there were none where I walked around to take these photos! But there were other air plants– which is what Spanish moss is. Here’s one, another species of Tillandsia, in a lime tree (Citrus sp.).

Tillandsia sp., Jacksonville, FL, January 9, 2024.

Air plants have no roots, consisting instead of twisted leaves clinging to other plants and surfaces; they get water and nutrients from the air and the rain. They are not parasitical in the usual sense– they don’t “feed” upon their host– but they are what are known as “support parasites”: their host holds them up, and gets them exposed to sunlight. Some support parasites can be inimical to the host, weighing it down and intercepting sunlight and rain; a friend here in Florida told me that a lot of Spanish moss will kill a tree.

Though the lime tree had no Spanish moss, it was not doing well, and epiphytes (mostly lichens) were abundant on the moribund parts of the tree; compare the left side, with leaves, vs. the nearly barren right side.

Lime tree, Jacksonville, FL, January 9, 2024.

A live oak (Quercus sp., I think) with lots of epiphytes was also not doing well. Notice the few bunches of live leaves higher in the tree; the ground below it was covered with broken-off, epiphyte-encrusted, branches. [Edit by GCM: The clumps of live leaves in the tree below are probably mistletoe, an epiphytic parasite, not leaves of the oak. Also the oak is probably not a live oak. See the comments for further details. My thanks to readers Dennis Howard Schneider,  j a higginbotham, bruce morgan, and debi!]

Live oak (Quercus sp., ?), Jacksonville, FL, January 9, 2024.

The most common epiphytes here are lichens. I won’t even venture an opinion on what species occur here, but there were differences in growth form indicating to me that several species were present. Here’s a wispy kind I found on branches.

Wispy lichen, Jacksonville, FL, January 9, 2024.

Nearby on the same branches could be found a lichen with a more “structured” form, with “chimneys”.

Lichen, Jacksonville, FL, January 9, 2024.

Lichens also grew on trunks; this is the same live oak as shown above.

Lichens on trunk, Jacksonville, FL, January 9, 2024.

A common sight in Florida is a palm whose trunk is covered with ferns. The ferns on this one are modestly dense– I’ve seen much denser. I think the tree is one of the twelve native palms of Florida– perhaps cabbage palm. (IDs from readers on this or other plants would be appreciated!)

Epiphytic ferns on palm trunk, Jacksonville, FL, January 9, 2024.

On this palm, moss is growing on the trunk, and we can see some epiphytic vines dangling.

Epiphytic moss on palm trunk, Jacksonville, FL, January 9, 2024.

Finally, neither trees nor epiphytes, and, in fact, not even plants, a couple of fungi on the lawn.

Mushrooms, Jacksonville, FL, January 9, 2024.