Studying tough but fragile plants

Emily Stone

A common butterwort cluster. Photo by Emily Stone

Last week I wrote about the unique adaptations of common butterwort, an insectivorous plant with starfish-like leaves. I had just returned to Artist’s Point in Grand Marais, Minn., to see if their flowers were blooming, when I found a square of white PVC surrounding the mossy depression in the rock, and a person looking intently at the plot, notebook in hand. I was so thrilled to find a scientist in action, I didn’t even know where to begin!

Questions tumbled out, and Ryan Carlson explained that he was a master’s student from the University of Minnesota-Duluth, working on a long-term monitoring project with four research sites from Two Harbors to Grand Marais. The plots are designed to study common butterwort, bird’s eye primrose and a little plant called Hudson’s Bay eyebright, three subarctic species that mostly live farther north. Not wanting to interrupt his field work for too long, I made plans to interview him later over Zoom.

A few weeks later, Dr. Briana Gross, an Associate Professor at UM-Duluth, joined us on Zoom. 
“We’ve been collaborating with Dr. Julie Etterson on this project since about 2019 with funding from the Minnesota Environment & Natural Resources Trust Fund,” she said. “We’re very interested in these species as the vanguard of climate change for the Arctic. Whatever is happening here is what we expect to see happening farther north, as the climate continues to warm.” 

Butterwort, primrose and eyebright are arctic disjuncts, or northern plants that have been separated from their main populations. How did they get here? Twelve thousand years ago, melting glaciers revealed bare rocks and sediments across the upper Midwest. Wind blew in seeds from Northwestern Canada, the eastern coast of North America, and even from refugia in the Driftless Area. They sprouted into a narrow band of tundra-like habitat, no more than 60 miles wide, that skirted the southern edge of the ice for roughly 1,000 years. 

In their book, North Shore: A Natural History of Minnesota’s Superior Coast, Anderson and Fischer describe arctic disjuncts as “descendants of botanical pioneers that bear humble witness to a past that lies beyond human memory or record, to the wasting of towering ice sheets, and to the birth of nothing less than the lake itself…”

These plants are tough. They can survive cold, damp conditions, high winds and a short growing season. What they can’t handle are trees and other plants competing with them for sunlight. So when the climate warmed and new plants moved in, these tundra plants mostly retreated with the ice – except in a few naturally refrigerated habitats like Lake Superior’s shoreline on Artist’s Point. Visitors may curse the summer fog that often envelops Grand Marais, but the plants love it. 

These plants are rare here – common butterwort is a species of Special Concern in Minnesota and Endangered in Wisconsin – because their habitat is rare. In Iceland, they are common in pastures. 
Ryan has gotten to know these plants on a personal level. For three years, he monitored individual butterwort plants. He measured the size of the leaves, when they bloomed, when they produced seeds, how big their seed pods were, and what that meant for the number of seeds inside. 

This summer, Ryan is simply counting how many plants are in each plot. Meanwhile, when back at the lab, he’s analyzing the detailed data to answer questions like, “Does when a plant blooms impact the number of seeds they produce?” 

“It’s very detailed data that we don’t usually have for these types of populations,” chimed in Briana. 
There’s good news and bad news in the data, they told me. The butterworts are producing a ton of seeds – which pop explosively out of their seeds pods – but those seeds don’t seem to germinate and grow into new plants very often. Perhaps they need a perfect storm for germination. And I do mean storm quite literally.

On the wave-pounded and ice-scoured shores of Lake Superior, an entire pocket of butterwort might be wiped out in a single storm. Could that somehow stimulate seeds to germinate, too?
Since butterworts usually come back year after year, and can also produce offshoots that grow into new individuals, low germination may not be a problem. 

“You can be looking at a plant that’s smaller than a clothespin,” Briana observed, “and it might be a decade old! 

“They’re very, very tough,” Ryan added, “but they’re very fragile as well. So there’s a duality there.”
We can help. Goose poop or careless footsteps from dogs and humans can be devastating in the fragile habitats where butterwort, primrose and eyebright hang on. Don’t feed the wildlife. Take care to step only on bare rock or gravel when you visit the Lake Superior shoreline. And take a moment to admire the tenacity of these pretty cool plants!

Emily M. Stone is Naturalist/Educator at the Cable Natural History Museum. Her award-winning second book, Natural Connections: Dreaming of an Elfin Skimmer, is available to purchase at cablemuseum.org/books and at your local independent bookstore, too.

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