...(and what we can do about them). Although these posts are primarily sketches for a book project on environmental critique I will also post from several other ongoing projects.
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Wednesday, December 19, 2012
Thursday, December 13, 2012
Looking for Shrubs in all the Wrong Places
Every time I
extricate a tick from near my groin I recall with fondness a trip I took with a
small group of youthful botanists to the west coast of Ireland in 1984. I
tagged along with third year undergraduates on the annual University College
Dublin Botany Department’s field trip to the Burren in Co Clare. The trip was
designed to help these naturalists hone their plant identification skills,
since the Burren - a grassland on karst topography — has a truly exceptional
flora. One finds botanical treasures there not readily found elsewhere. I was a
zoology major and at that time my passion was for chrysomelid beetles with
their shimmering metallic elytra and chironomid flies, the males of which
family have those marvelous antennae that perch like out-sized Christmas trees
upon their heads. I mention here, merely as a grateful aside, that my mentor
for beetle work was Jimmy O’Connor for Dublin’s “Dead Zoo” (National Museum of
Ireland, Natural History) and for flies it was Declan Murray from UCD. I am
indebted greatly to both these excellent men.
We crossed
through the Midlands early in the month of June stopping off at the Bog of
Allen, a fine though now of course greatly diminished raised bog, which
generation after generation of Irish folks have burned as peat to heat their
damp and somewhat chilly homes. And as we approached our destination we stopped
several times at sites of scientific interest. As groups of hushed botanists
whisperingly conferred over the relative hairiness of sepals, the flexuousness
of petals, the lanceoloation of leaves and so forth, I swept the margins of
small steams with my net with giddy abandon. The art of sticking one’s head
into a net of agitated insects to retrieve one’s prizes, and to transfer them
to a small vial of ethanol, has not received its due attention, but we shall
have to reserve that meditation for another time. Once back on the mini-bus I’d
stow the net under the bus seat and we’d be off to the next venue.
As we
approached Co Clare a mild clamor emerged from the botanists, upon whose finely
pubescent legs — need I point to the genderlessness of this observation? —
ticks were now promenading. By the time my net was recognized as the tick
delivery mechanism, the little blighters has already made their greedy ascent
to the humid and agreeable habitat of the nether-regions that seem to be their
preference. The ticks were painstakingly removed that evening, a process for
which I can admit to having a certain fondness. The trick here is patience, a
steady hand, and the graduated amplification of pulling force. Ticks relent.
Now, a point I
want to make here is metaphorically a rather small one. Ticks, not always
noticed when in the field become a nuisance when they are in the wrong place at
the wrong time. I had inadvertently transported these ticks from their point of
immediate origin, and their impact was uncomfortably felt in a manner that
demanded attention. These ticks that so afflicted my botanists were not, of
course, themselves invasive species, nevertheless they can serve to illustrate
the rudiments of invasive species biology. Invasive species are those spread by
human agency outside their typical range and have an impact in the host
location significant enough to warrant management action. Setting aside, for
now, the terminological skirmishes over distinctions between non-natives,
exotics, invasives and so on, I simply ask you to bear in mind as important the
factors of transportation between locations and an impact in a
new range that is assessed as consequential.
My botanists
forgave me, for botanists are generally an affable and forgiving race, and we
settled down to the real task of our trip, botanizing. On that trip I
encountered out on the limestone of the Burren, a plant that I barely
registered at that time, but that was later to assume a dominant role in my
life. This was Rhamnus cathartica, or buckthorn as it is commonly known.
Buckthorn is a shrub or smaller tree with alternate finely tooted leaves and
spiny twigs. It is, to my eyes, a fairly pretty plant. When I saw this
relatively rare Irish plant again fourteen years later it was as, arguably, the
commonest woody species in the Chicago Wilderness region. Introduced from its
native range across the Old World where its populations are generally small it
has become, after a lag-time of several decades, explosively successful in the
US Midwest. From a conservation management perspective buckthorn is “public
enemy number one” since it encroaches upon, and in many instances dominates,
open land set aside for conservation purposes. Much of my research work and
that of students I have worked with in subsequent years has been devoted to
this plant.
In the summer
of 2012 I traveled back to Ireland to find buckthorn growing natively. My
younger son Oisín (then 16) traveled with me. The trip was more arduous that we
expected. With time ticking away we discovered that although several Irish
botanists could tell us roughly where to locate the plant, none could say where
a population of buckthorn was to be found with the precision required by a man
with little time to spare.
Read on here.
Saturday, December 8, 2012
Patricia Monaghan, In Memoriam 1946 - 2012
I read this today at the memorial service for my dear friend Patricia Monaghan who died too young.
It
is with sadness, of course, that I say a few words on the occasion of Pat
Monaghan’s passing. We all know that this was too early, too early by decades.
My heart is with Michael McDermott and with Pat’s family and all of her
friends, her many, many friends.
Death
is the limit of words. We will see no more additions to the dozens of books,
essays, poems, works of criticism and so on that made Patricia such a great
scholar, and an unparalleled interdisciplinary researcher. No more will we get
updates on her garden, vineyard, on her teaching, on all of the projects that
made her so vital.
Death
is the limit of words when we are reminded of how much there is to say about
our departed loved ones, and how poorly words capture what is in our hearts.
How can I capture in a few or even in many words a friendship that has lasted
over a decade? I find that I cannot. I don’t want to say anything, rather I’d
prefer to play that time over again, but this is not given to us to do.
So
yes there is sadness. Much sadness. But as I thought over the last several days
about what I could say here, it became hard not to have some of that sadness
crowded out by gratitude, by a certain merriment in memories of her, by a pride
in having known her, by joy for the legacy she left with us.
Patricia
made us all smarter because she was so smart. She was not, we all recall, one
of those people who purported to know more about our own chosen fields of
expertise, rather she was the sort of person that shared our interests and
wanted to know what we knew. It made her the most generous of listeners, and
yet she always amplified a topic by the conversations she engaged us in. There
was always an interesting, and entertaining, and wise angle. For instance, I
work on invasive species, and the invasion of the land in Black Earth where she
lived with Michael was a concern for her. But once in a discussion on the topic
she told me that in conversation with a native woman in Alaska she’d inquired
what the traditional people make of one particular invasive plant (I can’t
recall which one, it may have been garlic mustard). The woman replied “What do
we make? We make soup!” Of course this
entertained her because more than any other serious scholar I know Pat made
things - a gardener, a winemaker, a knitter, a cook, poems, encyclopedias, a
maker of friends, a teacher, a founder with Michael of the Black Earth
Institute, that great arts and the environment think-tank.
Patricia
made us all more entertaining because she was so entertaining. In the days
after her passing I kept picturing Pat laughing. At her home in Beverly back in
the day, at her home in Brigid Rest in Black Earth, hell even at committee
meetings at DePaul she laughed. She would laugh and bring the back of her hand to
her face to wipe away irrepressible tears of laughter. Not only did Patricia
bring joy she was always prepared for joy. She was a great story teller and she
brought out the stories in others. For several years in a row I would visit Pat
and Michael at Black Earth with my family. My boys, who at the time when we
started visiting them would have been pre-teen and a teenager. I asked Oisín our
youngest what he recalled of the earliest of these visits: “Catching fireflies,
picking blackberries, Space balls (they have a VHS player), and cheese curds!” Not
only did we all love the house, and walking the land, and picking the
blackberries we loved sitting by the fire in the evening with Pat and Michael.
I bring this to mind because I fondly recall both of them telling stories there
for the first time. Sitting in the circle around the fire, looking out across
the land, the boys were called to that world that unites childhood and the
world of adults, the world of stories. Fiacha, my eldest, pretended to be
pulling on a pipe-full of tobacco as if he were a seanchaí of old. Patricia, in
so many ways the most modern of women (she took to online teaching for example
with reservations, of course, but not without her customary skill) but she also
brought out the perennial and enduring in us all.
Patricia
brought out the best in us, because she was the best among us.
I
want to close with a poem of Patricia that she wrote for a volume (Brute Neighbors) that Chris
Green and I edited last year, a reminder of her work.
Storm
Lessons
By Patricia
Monaghan
1.
Somewhere, right now, one is brewing.
2. The wind is not trying to get in.
3. In high winds, songbirds sing.
4. It is not storms that rage and batter.
5. Butterflies migrate within.
6. The
beauty of inky clouds
over a churning white lake and
the beauty of a still summer meadow
are equivalent.
7. Storms storm.
It’s nothing personal.
8. They
end
Thursday, December 6, 2012
Thoreau and a common soil mite
Main theme of my City Creatures essay:
From Thoreau environmentalists have inherited an inclination
to inspect matters from the periphery — the perspective of cordial criticism —
as Thoreau did from the vantage of Walden Pond on the outskirts of Concord. The
environmental tradition has also inherited a regard for inquiring into
necessities, now translated arguably into sustainability studies, a disposition
toward minute inspections of the workings of nature, and an amplified sense of
the affiliation between people and the wild, even if Thoreau had, at times, a
tendency to view his neighbors with a jaundiced eye. In other ways, though, the
environmental tradition has veered from Thoreau’s path. Though it is true that
Thoreau famously walked out of town, finding, he declared, little of interest
in that direction, nevertheless, Walden Pond is no glacial wilderness, it was
merely a walk away from home, from town, and from the neighbors. An ecology of
the urban environment had to wait for well over a century to emerge, even
though in some respects Thoreau’s Walden is the first volume of suburban
ecology. He provided, by way of illustration, detailed notes on the domestic
cat who appeared quite at home in the woods. Perhaps the most significant
departure from Thoreau’s legacy, however, is the bewitchment, in the modern
times, with the ecologically exotic, the cultivation of uncommon experience and
the infatuation with the rare. Rarity, of course, is the appropriate focus for
conservation biology, since rarity is an excellent predictor of vulnerability
to extinction. That being said, Thoreau’s genius for the ordinary may be worth
emulating. In the “Brute Neighbors” chapter in Walden, he described a
relentless battle between two species of ants, the sort of violent encounter
that is infrequently observed and almost never recorded though, presumably,
occurs all the time. What Thoreau’s account suggests is that if we look closely
enough we find that the rich dramas of nature are right at our feet, even if
this place is not very ecologically distinguished. One does not need to
peregrinate in remote parts to give witness to the marvelous.
I am not especially concerned in what follows with
reinvigorating a Thoreauvian approach to ecology. I simply want to suggest that
right here, under our noses in the towns and cities where most of us live these
days, there exist ordinary marvels if we only know where and how to look for
them. There is, let me suggest, another form of rarity - rarity of experience,
and a poverty in our attention, that may not be fatal but that is unfortunate
and consequential. O nova can serve as a mascot for this different form of
rarity: it is common but unfamiliar. That most have not seen it is by virtue
of its cryptic nature forgivable, but that despite its ubiquity most, I
suspect, know little about this species, needs rectification.
Outline of the full essay is here.
Outline of the full essay is here.
Outline of Essay: Being Unseen: the Gift of Oppiella nova
I
A strange gift from
John Lussenhop – small colony of O nova
Commonest animal in
terrestrial ecosystems
My first encounter with this animal 20 years earlier
Common but rarely analyzed.
Introducing main themes
of essay: necessity, minute inspection of nature, amplified connection between
humans and nature, commonplace rather than rarity. Connection with Thoreau!
II
Classification of mites
Morphology
Predation on mites
(ghoulish story of beetles feeding on mites)
Diversity of community
Poor man’s tropical rainforest
Illustration of temperate zone diversity
Enigma/Enigma resolved
Ecological role of mites
III
Specifics on Oppiella
Diagnostic
characteristics
List of exotic
locations where it’s found
List of less exotic
locations
What is known ecologically
Aggregation patterns
A lone O nova shows up at
the mall!
IV
Association with people
No comprehensive
studies of urban populations
Project with Amanda
Henderson :Great Oppiella nova census 2013
22 billion O nova in
Lincoln Park?
Hypothesis: diminished
population because of leaf removal
V
Conclusions
Necessity: means
essential but also intimately connected, rendering of serves
Broader concept of
necessary
~3000 words