Sunday 29 August 2010

Beach thistles

A beach is fun for people, but not so much for plants. You are growing in, basically, powdered glass, with almost no nutrients, what water there is is salty. And yet there are many plants growing on the beaches of the Restinga, the coastal strip of the Mata atlantica. One of the commonest is Cereus fernambucensis, the beach thistle.

Cacti are especially adapted to living in hot arid places. It's all about storing what water you can, and minimising loss, so thick succulent stems with no leaves to reduce surface area and evaporation, and a waxy coating. Cacti, like all plants, have to "breathe", but they are adapted to only do so at night, storing CO2 from the atmosphere for use in photosynthesis during the day.

Cereus fernambucensis takes this one step further and even flowers at night. This means it can't be pollinated by the usual suspects, but no problem, it relies on local hawk moths. Both win, the cactus being pollinated and the moths getting a good supply of nectar. Once pollinated, the white flowers form red seeds pods which eventually burst releasing black seeds.

A little less mutually beneficial is an association with the local skinks, Mabuya agilis, which mostly run around in leaf litter catching and eating insects and spiders. Cereus makes a good perch for catching the suns rays and warming their little bodies, but even more so in the afternoon when the sun is low and the air is starting to cool. Heat absorbed by the cacti means they act as radiators, and skinks climb up the stems and absorb the heat directly.

Cereus would be a tempting source of succulent flesh it were not so fearsomely armoured with spines. But it has another enemy to cope with, fire. The restinga is baked dry by the sun, and fanned by winds off the south Atlantic, and fires are not uncommon. Even here Cereus toughs it out, being one of the first plants to regenerate on burnt restinga. The one thing it can't cope with is cold, suffering at temperatures below 10 C, which restricts the southern part of it's range.

A beach is not a healthy place to live, but as Robinson Crusoe found, if you are tough and adapt, a living can be made.

I would like to acknowledge the help of Helio Pacheco Filho in the preparation of this article.

Friday 20 August 2010

Witches of the tropical night sky

At certain times of the year, normally around December and January, it´s not uncommon to see "bats" fluttering through the night, and circling street lights. It´s only when they enter your apartment that you realise that they are huge moths, "bruxas". Bruxa means "witch" and this matches the English name, the "Black witch moth" and in deed the size of the moths has impressed many peoples, so that in French it is "La Sorcière Noire" (the Black Witch) and in Spanish, "Mariposa de la Muerte" (the Moth of Death!). The Mayans, with rather more humour, call them "Mah-Ha-Na", or "May I borrow your house", an allusion to their habit of entering houses, and the way they make their presence felt when they are there!

In fact, although Ascalapha odorata is large (up to 16cm) it is completely harmless. Indeed they can actually be eaten, well the larvae. They are especially a delicacy in Mexico and feature prominently in a book by Professor Julietta Ramos Elorduy on edible insects, which includes a recipe for "Black witch fondue". According to another source they have the taste of herring.

Ascalapha are found from the southern USA to Rio Grande do Sol in Brazil, and they are, not unnaturally, strong fliers, migrating through their range. The adult males and females can be distinguished by a pale stripe across the wings of the females and feed on fruit, though unlike some moths they cannot penetrate the skin and have to feed on rotten or damaged fruits. The huge larvae (up to 7cm) feed on leaves, and can be a pest of figs and mesquite.

It is not just humans who can eat then, adults make a tasty meal for bats too. Ascalapha is not without defences though. Bats hunt by echo location, or radar, and Ascalapha has the ability to tune it´s ears to the particular frequency of local bats and take evasive action when they are close.
So this is the Black Witch Moth, not dangerous, but magic in it's own way.