Grassland Groupies
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grasslandgroupies.bsky.social
Grassland Groupies
@grasslandgroupies.bsky.social
87 followers 17 following 64 posts
Nonprofit dedicated to inspiring the conservation of grasslands through science literacy, curiosity, and fostering bonds between people and their grassland. Based in Wichita, Kansas. Podcasts: The Best Biome, Filthy Animals (adult content)
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Oct. 21 is Reptile Awareness Day, and while you are undoubtedly aware of reptiles, are you aware of THIS reptile? No, not Texas horned lizards, I mean THIS particular lizard. It emerged from a peanut M&M-sized egg to gobble ants on our grasslands. We're making you aware of it. You're welcome!
On the left, a healthy Xyrus grass. On the right, a fungal pseudoflower atop a hijacked plant hoping to lure in unsuspecting pollinators! 😱
This month's Best Biome brings you tales of vegetative body horror that will make your chlorophyll run cold.
https://www.grasslandgroupies.org/the-best-biome/
The Evergreen Library planting was a success! Our sincere thanks to the 20 helpers that came out to put 31 different native plant species in the ground. Although this library is known to house The Very Hungry Caterpillar, we expect the garden will absolutely thrive when it blooms next spring!
In case you missed it, Nicole's celebration of rattlesnakes on Best Biome was short, sweet, and easy to digest. Just like... well, most things injected with rattler venom. 😌
Catch up now before next week's special Halloween episode drops!
https://www.grasslandgroupies.org/the-best-biome/
A new Smithsonian Institute study found that prairie dog towns do the heavy lifting when it comes to improving soil nutrition.  Another reminder that essential grazers include more than bison and cattle!
Smallest Herbivores Create the Biggest Impact for Grassland Forage
www.si.edu
On their lecture at Ninnescah Biological Field Station this week, our Friends U. students flipped a number of boards in name of scientific inquiry, finding ringnecks, ribbonsnakes, and a prairie king. Shout out to Station Manager Dexter Mardis for demonstrating proper (and fearless) herp handling!
Afraid of snakes?  On this month's Best Biome, Nicole illustrates how our lovely grassland rattlesnakes have helped humanity more than they've ever harmed it (even offering the cure to some nasty diseases). Now TICKS? Ticks you should be afraid of.
https://www.grasslandgroupies.org/the-best-biome/
The GG's took their Friends University Grassland Ecology class on their first field lab this week! Sightings include: monarch cats prepping for the big trip, bees and beetles crossing paths on gumweed, a coffee-loving pyrausta moth that's maybe a bit undercaffeinated. 

Reminder: go look at bugs.
Much like Maury Povich, scientists rely largely on egg testing to determine paternity in birds because they're very secretive with their extra-pair passions. The degree to which backyard birds are NOT the father of their broods is staggering.
 https://www.grasslandgroupies.org/filthy-animals/ (18+)
Want to learn more about native gardening, how to best support pollinators, and even certify your own garden to show off to your neighbors? ICT Bee Fest has you covered! Join us on Sept 27th in Wichita, KS for monarch tagging, native plant vendors, local art, and so much more! Read on:
ICT Bee Fest
ICT Bee Fest is a free come-and-go event perfect for nature lovers of all ages, celebrating native Kansas bees, butterflies, and more.
grasslandgroupies.org
One of the best parts about native gardening is taking the time to sit and watch nature use the space. Sometimes you get lucky enough to capture a bumblebee flying in and the perspective makes her look like a creature feature horror movie star. 🐝
Did you know "cuckold", "cuckquean", and even "bigamy" are used as legitimate scientific terms in breeding biology? On this month's Filthy Animals, Rachel explores the complexities of animal infidelity, from birds to beetles. New ep out now! (18+)
https://www.grasslandgroupies.org/filthy-animals/
American canebrake habitats may have gone the way of many of our world's grasslands, but they're far from extinct. This month's Best Biome takes a look at the people fighting to bring rivercane back. Listen now! https://www.grasslandgroupies.org/the-best-biome/
Not long ago, the eastern United States was populated with ample bamboo forests, where bison and elk plowed through the brush like elephants. Nicole tells us the story of America's rivercane ecosystems on this month's Best Biome, available now! https://www.grasslandgroupies.org/the-best-biome/
Wildflowers captivate. For many like Fuller, the flowers made them pause, consider the prairie, and fall in love with it.

"O, this square mile of prairie is an intoxicant to the soul!" wrote William A. Quayle about his KS prairie.

Fall's eruption of plains wildflowers is here, asking us to pause.
Its previous owner underlined in the introduction, "Even as a literary landscape, the tallgrass is endangered."

This being the result of the American imagination's fixation on forests, mountains, and other Thoreau-ish places of wild beauty—

"—or at least a more mainstream notion of that beauty."
"I enjoyed a sort of fairyland exultation never felt before, and the first drive amid the flowers gave me anticipation of the beauty of the prairies." - Margaret Fuller

I stumbled on a used copy of "The Tallgrass Prairie Reader," whose written accounts of the prairie obviously came home with me. 🧪📗
Dear scientists: As science communicators, we love sharing your work, jargon and all.
 ICYMI, be sure to catch Nicole's fantastic deep-dive on tegus. New Best Biome drops next Thursday! https://www.grasslandgroupies.org/the-best-biome/
Way more bee species were visiting that day, but I'll stop myself here. Thanks for checking out the bees, and as a bonus, here's a little guy I haven't identified. Anybody know who she is???
Finally, a good old-fashioned bumble bee. Brown-belted Bumble Bee, based on the Great Plains Bumble Bee Atlas, because that second abdominal thorax is crescent-shaped with a rusty swoop. FULL pollen baskets on that fella's legs. What a cutie.
TINY BEE ROUND: "tiny dark bee" and "green sweat bee" groups. That tiny little bee is ZOOMing, and she's probably a small carpenter bee. Then there's the itty bitty green, metallic sweat bee just doused in poppy mallow pollen. The purple poppy mallow neighbors the bee balm, and I had to include it.
This bee's long antennae caught my eye. They're thick and long, curling over its head. And that glassy eyeball! He's a member of the "Chap Leg Bees" group, probably a Long-horned bee (Melissodes) of some sort.