Beginnings

For the sake of posterity and my own awful memory, I've decided to journalize some of my botanical adventures, but first I figured a brief account of how I got here might be appropriate.

I have been an arborist in the Alabama Piedmont for over 10 years. I have neither formal training nor relevant qualifications. I arrived in the United States from the United Kingdom approximately 15 years ago, and I started working with trees merely because my cousin-in-law needed help and I needed money--it was intended to be temporary. Before this, I had little to no interest in trees, and I had never so much as picked up a chainsaw. I grew up in the suburbs of London, but I had now moved to a very rural area with very many trees. My knowledge of botany at this time was paltry, and I mostly just believed what I was told about the local flora and fauna by the people around me.

Over a few years, I was gradually becoming more familiar with the local tree species, and I began to realize that there were very many more tree species than the locals had names for. With the help of a couple of tree ID books, I was putting the puzzle pieces together, but it was not a hobby at this time. An interesting tree might occasionally pique my curiosity and I would research particular plants, but progress was slow and inconsistent. However, I was beginning to realize that the Alabama Piedmont had a surprising diversity of trees, and the woods around our home seemed particularly impressive in that regard. Then I made, what at the time was, a fascinating discovery.

I was already familiar with the black cherry, Prunus serotina. It's common throughout most of the eastern United States, and it's also common in the Alabama Piedmont. I frequently found myself removing or pruning P. serotina at work and had come to recognize the leaves and bark. I was also aware that it was growing in the woods surrounding our home. One day, while outside with our dog, I leaned against a small cherry tree and became distracted by the leaves. The leaves looked irregularly shaped and strangely hairy. We had removed a large P. serotina tree the day before at work, and its leaves were fresh in my mind. Whatever this small tree was, it couldn't be P. serotina. I broke off some leaves and began looking for more cherry trees nearby to compare them against, and I discovered that there were apparently two different kinds of cherry growing around our home.

My initial attempts to identify the mysterious new cherry were unsuccessful until I read a passing remark about a rare variety of P. serotina called an Alabama black cherry, P. serotina var. alabamensis. However, the Alabama cherry was supposedly unknown in our county, and it seemed puzzling to me that both varieties should be occurring together in the same location. Nonetheless, after much digging, I resolved that these were indeed Alabama cherry. I also realized that P. alabamensis really ought to be considered its own species, albeit perhaps only recently and somewhat incompletely diverged from the P. serotina lineage.

This discovery was quite exciting. Here I had been living right beside P. alabamensis for years and failed to notice it, and I could find nobody else around who even knew this species existed, let alone could identify it. This event perhaps more than any other opened my eyes to the diversity hiding in plain sight, and it kicked me down a rabbit hole that I continue to delve deeper into today. Around this time, I resolved to not just learn all about the local trees, but about all the other flora in the surrounding area. However, it wasn't until early 2022 that I decided to finally put that plan into action--to make a hobby of botany--and to start learning and identifying all kinds of plants in earnest. Shortly thereafter I discovered iNaturalist.

Publicado el 21 de abril de 2024 por piedmontplants piedmontplants

Observaciones

Fotos / Sonidos

Qué

Cerezo de Alabama (Prunus serotina var. alabamensis)

Observ.

piedmontplants

Fecha

Abril 2022

Descripción

Actual taxon is Prunus alabamensis.

iNat recently changed this taxon to a variety of P. serotina. However, there are many good reasons to treat this taxon as its own species, not least that the two taxa are easily distinguished in the wild, Alabama cherry is entirely sympatric with black cherry, both species often occur right alongside each other, and their flowering periods partially overlap with little hybridization.

Fotos / Sonidos

Qué

Capulín de Montaña (Prunus serotina var. serotina)

Observ.

piedmontplants

Fecha

Abril 2022

Descripción

Oak-hickory woods.

Includes comparison images with P. alabamensis leaf.

Comentarios

Oooh! I'm looking forward to reading your posts!

Also, new iNat name! How exciting! Maybe one of these days I'll find it fitting to change mine. I've thought about it before. I only picked my current username because I couldn't come up with anything better at the time 🤷

Edit: Also, I'm definitely gonna add your journal posts to my RSS feed now so I don't miss any.

Publicado por southern_appalachia hace alrededor de 1 mes

Great post - also an excellent way to get to know other naturalists out there. I don't have any formal training in botany per se besides the hours I've put into this and I love to hear how others came to this niche interest.

Also love seeing the regional varieties of common plants!

Publicado por swampythings hace alrededor de 1 mes

I had no clue you were from England! That's cool! And you've learned more about botany than most (including myself) in a very short time which is impressive.

Publicado por willied1029 hace alrededor de 1 mes

Lee,

You have embarked on an inspiring journey of botanical discovery. With a natural affinity for plants and a relentless curiosity, you developed an impressive set of skills as a botanist. Yes, that is what you’ve become. Your knowledge of the flora expands on each expedition into Alabama’s Piedmont. It's truly inspiring to witness your growth and dedication to our field. All your work contributes to the flora of northern Alabama, which is my passion

Dan

Publicado por danbadlands hace alrededor de 1 mes

Thanks all for the kind words and support!

Publicado por piedmontplants hace alrededor de 1 mes

Agregar un comentario

Acceder o Crear una cuenta para agregar comentarios.
Vida Silvestre es una entidad asociada a la Organización Mundial de Conservación