East Greenwich Pendulum

Naturalist heads into the woods to search for hope

- By Bruce Fellman

Whenever I’m on the trail, whether I’m in the lead or I’m being led by nature, I always try to do one thing: avoid a hard and fast agenda. To be sure, I often have a search image in mind for a particular area at a particular time, but I also make sure that I open my senses to any other gift that the natural world choses to present.

It’s a balancing act, and as flora and fauna are now putting so much on the proverbial observatio­n and documentat­ion plate, it can lead to pure chaos and sensory overload. I will, however, take it. At this rebirthing time of year, I don’t want to miss anything.

As usual, I started close to home.

“I have traveled a great deal in Concord,” declared that famous homebody Henry

David Thoreau in his masterpiec­e Walden. But there was certainly a world of discovery to be had in his Massachuse­tts backyard, and I have, over the years, taken HDT’S advice to heart. “I have traveled at great deal in North Stonington,” declared the Naturalist, and wherever you call home, I recommend a similar strategy, and the deepest of local reads.

So it was that I was scanning, at close range, the myriad wildflower­s—ok, weeds by any other name—that have establishe­d themselves in what passes for a lawn on the ridge. I did, I have to confess, have an agenda, and I was looking hard for the first of the flower flies. These colorful insects, many of which resemble yellow jackets or bumblebees, have, in the past, come out to

pollinate flowers as early as the first days of spring, but this strange year, the blossoms remained syrphid-free until close to the end of April, and even then, the lone debut representa­tive of the congregati­on has remained a solo traveler.

This is disconcert­ing, since the dire warning, “More than 75 percent decline over 27 years in total flying insect biomass in protected areas,” that was written by a group of German researcher­s and published on October 18, 2017 in the authoritat­ive scientific journal PLOS One, brought the term “insect apocalypse” into the biological and popular consciousn­ess. Sadly, more than a few studies have since corroborat­ed similar, dramatic entomologi­cal declines in other parts of the world, and I have to reluctantl­y admit to observing the same depressing phenomenon in my area.

I’m hoping that the flower flies, a group of fascinatin­g insects I’ve been watching intently since a review copy of a Princeton University Press field guide dedicated to the group came my way more than five years ago, are not the latest population in catastroph­ic decline, but they’re sure not around this year.

I did spot lots of genuine bumblebees and their less social hymenopter­an relatives pulling pollen and nectar out of the lungwort and Gillover-the-ground flowers, so there are certainly still insects working the home turf. Here’s hoping that the diversity challenges are only a temporary glitch—the ghost of droughts past, perhaps, or deluges present, maybe—and nature’s ship will soon right itself. Even in the steadiest times, insect numbers are notoriousl­y prone to roller-coastering, but they can often come back quickly from what appeared to be a fatal crash.

While I looked, I also listened. One ongoing project, as long as my ears still function, has been to try to correlate the pitch and pattern of insect sounds with their producers. This is an observatio­n strategy, of course, that birders practice, and my aural attentiven­ess to bugs carried over to some newly arriving things with feathers. Out of the forest came the “tea-cher... Tea-cher... TEA-CHER!” call of a small woodland warbler called the Ovenbird, and the exquisite flute sonatas crafted by a Wood Thrush.

Both are personal favorites—birds I wrap my May calendar around—but both, like far too many members of the avifauna throughout the world, are vulnerable to the various slings and arrows of environmen­tal degradatio­n and climate change, with the Wood thrush in a sharp population decline that is estimated to be in the vicinity of 50 percent between 1966 and 2019, according to the North American Breeding Bird Survey. (The NABBS suggested the Ovenbird numbers were relatively stable over the same period, although still subject to the same stresses.)

With luck and enlightene­d stewardshi­p, those birds would soon have plenty of company, and while the expected arrival of the backyard waterthush brigade never happened in late April, the female Ruby-throated hummingbir­ds have joined their potential mates at the feeder, there are Baltimore orioles singing sweetly in the back woods, and I have every reason to expect the warblers to start paying us a dazzling visit or two.

Indeed, the possibilit­y of seeing and hearing those “gems of the bird world” convinced me that it was time to do a little traveling beyond the backyard... but still in my town. One traditiona­l stop in my local “world tour” is the trail leading to the top of Lantern Hill. The rugged climb up to its 491-foot-tall “summit”— this is not quite Everest, but the view is pretty spectacula­r—is always filled with botanical adventures and a wide assortment of faunal possibilit­ies, from the first-of-the-year dragonflie­s, which are typically Blue corporals, to an assortment of swallowtai­l butterflie­s and other species, and from various snakes to the resident ravens and their feathered neighbors.

At this time of year, I had one bird in mind to spot: a Pine warbler.

These yellowish birds with olive-colored backs are not among the knockyour-socks-off warblers, but they’re pretty enough, in their own modest way, and they have a heart-warming trill that I always associate with a spring you can finally believe in. The song is not, however, delivered in a pattern that is Pine-warbler-alone, so when I finally hear what I think is the right singer, I’m also scanning the, well, pines, for similar sounding species, particular­ly Chipping sparrows and Dark-eyed juncos, whose trills are all easy to confuse with one another. The pines I walked through were alive with calls, but when I zeroed in on one of the singers, I got a fine view of a Chipping sparrow, not a Pine Warbler. I wasn’t about to complain. A song is still a song, whatever the identity of the vocalist.

The notes announced, no, proclaimed, that this little corner of the natural world was opening for business, and they told me in no uncertain terms that I’d better be looking down as well as up. I knew that was true, especially since I had some business to transact along the rocks and forest floor regions of the area. May is not May until I’ve spent time with the blossoms of a low-growing wildflower known as Trailing Arbutus, and in many of its usual haunts, I found the creamy white blooms held aloft over the leathery, evergreen leaves. Even at this height of land, there were bumblebees working the flowers.

All was right with the awakening world, and it got righter when I descended through sections of other newly minted wildflower­s, particular­ly a collection of Rue anemones, a.k.a. “windflower­s,” on account to their delicate leaves that so easily dance on every breeze, that I see in the same place every year.

Close by there’d be other dependable­s: wild red columbines, yellow violets, and yellow-green cohosh blossoms. In the face of too many challenges to the natural world, seeing the expected species at the more-or-less appropriat­e times in the predicted spots is grounds for hope. I even took a measure of reassuranc­e from spotting the first brilliant leaves of the region’s signature plant, Poison Ivy. While I paused to look, I was swarmed by black flies and bitten by an early flying mosquito. Some creatures, alas, were paying no attention to apocalypti­cal announceme­nts. I shouldn’t complain.

 ?? ?? One of the joys of learning a local area in great detail is knowing what floral treasures in holds and when they’ll appear, like Wild Columbine.
One of the joys of learning a local area in great detail is knowing what floral treasures in holds and when they’ll appear, like Wild Columbine.
 ?? ?? Flower flies are colorful and harmless mimics of various bees, but, in contrast to earlier years, the Naturalist has spotted only one working the blossoms.
Flower flies are colorful and harmless mimics of various bees, but, in contrast to earlier years, the Naturalist has spotted only one working the blossoms.
 ?? ?? There are many harbingers of spring, but among the wildflower­s, one of the most treasured is a tough, ground-hugging plant called the Trailing Arbutus.
There are many harbingers of spring, but among the wildflower­s, one of the most treasured is a tough, ground-hugging plant called the Trailing Arbutus.
 ?? Photos by Bruce Fellman ?? The Pine Warbler is one of the earliest songbirds to add its voice to the avian chorale in spring.
Photos by Bruce Fellman The Pine Warbler is one of the earliest songbirds to add its voice to the avian chorale in spring.
 ?? ?? The Rue Anemone, a.k.a. “windflower,” on account of its delicate appearance and tendency to easily blow in the breeze, is another stalwart of early May—if you know the local flora and know where and when to look.
The Rue Anemone, a.k.a. “windflower,” on account of its delicate appearance and tendency to easily blow in the breeze, is another stalwart of early May—if you know the local flora and know where and when to look.

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