Nebraskaland

July 2024 Nebraskaland

NEBRASKAland Magazine is dedicated to outstanding photography and informative writing with an engaging mix of articles and photos highlighting Nebraska’s outdoor activities, parklands, wildlife, history and people.

Issue link: http://mag.outdoornebraska.gov/i/1523285

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July 2024 • Nebraskaland 43 Finally, consider the fl owering heads that emerge in June as dense clumps that gradually unfold into agile arches resembling a scorpion's tail. The individual fl owers consist of fi ve hairy, greenish, sharp-pointed sepals surrounding fi ve whitish-green petals fused into a tube. Protruding from this tube is a long stinger-like style that persists well after the petals have fallen. Styles are the stalks on which the pollen-collecting stigma sits. While the fl owers are rather drab, I view the spiraled fl ower heads, with their arrangement of sharp sepals, tubular petals and projecting spiky styles, as abstract fl oral art, as if nature used geometry, rather than colorful, showy petals, to create beauty. Nature is strange that way. After heaping all this praise on marbleseed, I might have convinced myself it's my favorite plant. But honestly, I admire all the native plants that grace Nebraska's landscapes — even the ones with boring names. N A robust marbleseed plant grows in a prairie restoration along the Platte River of Hall County. CHRIS HELZER, THE NATURE CONSERVANCY A controlled prairie fi re cleared away the thatch, exposing a cache of marbleseed seeds hidden by a rodent. The heat from the fi re also caused the seeds to darken from white to tan. CHRIS HELZER, THE NATURE CONSERVANCY

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