Short Wave

Come critter spotting with us on a cold winter's night

13 min
Jan 19, 20263 months ago
Listen to Episode
Summary

NPR's Shortwave takes listeners on a winter night hike through Patuxent River State Park in Maryland, exploring the hidden nocturnal world of bioluminescent fungi, fluorescent lichens, and winter wildlife adaptations. Led by naturalists and fungi experts, the episode reveals how organisms survive and thrive during winter through energy conservation and specialized biological mechanisms.

Insights
  • Bioluminescence in fungi may serve as a spore dispersal mechanism by attracting nocturnal animals to consume and spread mushroom spores
  • Winter represents a strategic energy conservation period in nature where organisms reduce activity rather than cease it entirely
  • Community-driven citizen science initiatives like the City Nature Challenge and iNaturalist are democratizing ecological observation and species identification
  • UV light reveals hidden biological adaptations in common organisms like lichens that fluoresce as a protective response to UV damage
  • Naturalist-led experiences create engagement with environmental science by making invisible natural phenomena visible and accessible to general audiences
Trends
Growth of community-based citizen science platforms for biodiversity monitoring and species identificationIncreased public interest in nocturnal ecology and nighttime nature experiences as educational toolsIntegration of technology (UV lights, iNaturalist app) into traditional naturalist practices for enhanced observationRise of non-profit organizations focused on connecting urban populations with local natural environmentsEducational emphasis on winter ecology and seasonal adaptations in wildlife conservation messaging
Topics
Bioluminescent fungi and fox fire phenomenonLichen fluorescence and UV light adaptationWinter wildlife adaptations and energy conservationNocturnal insect behavior and moth attraction to lightSalamander hibernation strategiesFungal reproduction and spore dispersal mechanismsCitizen science and species identification platformsUrban nature education and community engagementEcosystem monitoring through bioblitzesSymbiotic relationships in lichen colonies
Companies
iNaturalist
Citizen science platform used by naturalists to identify and catalog species observations during nature walks and res...
Wise
International money transfer app featured as episode sponsor offering multi-currency transactions
Nova Parks
Regional park system of northern Virginia employing roving naturalists who lead educational nature walks
People
Cerenella Linaris
Facility Director at NPR Nature Center and mycological expert leading the night hike, specializing in fungi and lichen
Natalie Howe
Ecologist with the US Department of Agriculture who explained lichen fluorescence and UV light protective mechanisms
Matt Felperin
Roving naturalist with Nova Parks who demonstrated owl call techniques and participated in Great American Campout
Anna Kahnuie
Co-founder of Capital Nature nonprofit, prolific iNaturalist user with 5,107+ observations promoting nature identific...
Quotes
"Learning to identify and name and even just notice the life forms around me is one of the best ways to deepen your relationship to land and to nature."
Anna Kahnuie
"The glow is basically an advertisement saying, come get me, I'm delicious. And by the way, take my kid away."
Cerenella LinarisDiscussing bioluminescent mushroom spore dispersal
"This fungi has twenty thousand different sexes."
Emily KwongDiscussing Gaseofilum Komune fungal reproduction
"That's what winter's all about, right? Slow down, rest, conserve your energy."
Berlin McCoy
Full Transcript
Support for NPR and the following message come from the William and Flora Hulett Foundation, investing in creative thinkers and problem solvers who help people, communities, and the planet flourish. More information is available at Hulett.org. You're listening to Shortwave from NPR. What's up, Deuteronauts? It's Emily Kwong and Berlin McCoy. Today, I hear you recently embarked on some late night reporting in the woods under the cover of darkness. So is this your way of telling us you're a spy? Would a spy reveal that? Okay, my thought's exactly, but seriously, what were you doing out there? Well, Berlin, I was on a night hike. So in about two minutes, we'll get started. Meanwhile, enjoy yourself. It was a tromp through Patuxent River State Park in Maryland, hosted by a group of naturalists. People trained in gathering observations and educating people about the environment. Now, naturalist lead hikes all over the world, but not all of them, like this crewhand at Homemade Banana Bread. That was pretty cool. And UV lights provided by our leader. Hi, my name is Cerenela Linaris. I'm the Facility Director at NPR Nature Center and the program's share of the Micological Association of Washington DC. Okay, so Cerenela is a mushroom expert, yeah, along with other fungi. She's been leading Nature walks since 2013. And tonight, I really wanted to see the forest through her eyes to know what flaps and flutters and floresces when the sun goes down in winter. It is a night for nature magic, bioluminescence, fluorescence of fungi and lichens, of insects that fly in the night and are attracted to the bait that we have set up. So I should really like try to listen very closely to everything. We will have and that's what I want to do with you today, Burley. I want to just get real quiet and listen to the sounds of a winner's night when everything is dead or dormant or is it okay? Today on the show, we are taking you on a night hike through the Patuxent River watershed in search of owls and salamanders and maybe if we're lucky, a bioluminescent mushroom. You're listening to shortwave, the science podcast from NPR. This message comes from Wise, the app for international people using money around the globe. You can send, spend and receive and up to 40 currencies with only a few simple taps. Be smart, get Wise, download the Wise app today or visit Wise.com, tease and seize apply. Support for NPR and the following message come from the William and Flora Hewlett Foundation, investing in creative thinkers and problem solvers who help people, communities and the planet flourish. More information is available at Hewlett.org. All right, Emily. So you went on this night hike last month. Set the scene for us. What does this park look like? No idea, because it was so dark. And we don't have half of these critters, nightfish. Okay, this makes sense. But I know that the park, because I looked at a map, sits along the Patuxent River, which flows into Maryland's Chesapeake Bay. We were bundled in our winter coats and the first stop along our night hike was a patch of lichen growing along a tree just off the parking lot. Remind me what are lichen exactly? Yeah, lichen is that stuff that grows on trees. It kind of looks like seaweed, but it's actually a hybrid colony of fungi and algae in a symbiotic relationship to show us serenella dramatically shines her flashlight up the tree trunk. Nothing out of the ordinary, right? That blue, gray, lichen color, everything looks pretty much the same until serenella then flips on her UV light and the patch of green lichen totally changes. And it suddenly glowed neon yellow. The lichen, one particular part of it was florescing. So absorbing the ultraviolet light from the flashlight and emitting visible light. Oh, and I'm just looking at the pictures you just sent me and this is like neon, neon yellow. Yeah, it was like the Las Vegas Strait. Natalie Howe and ecologist with the US Department of Agriculture steps forward and shoves her face into the tree bark. Can come up real close? You can sort of tell that there's a lot of diversity there because there's some that are a little yellow or a some that are a little gray or there's a lot of green in here. She sounds so excited. So we take a UV light and get up close to that tree to look and pretty soon serenella shouts. Oh, Natalie, what did you find? Oh, that's true. We barely ever see that orange one. They just sound so excited. This sounds like my kind of group. Okay, so like what did the different colors mean? Yeah, okay, so the yellow lichen is called Pixine Sub-Scenaria and the orange lichen is Pixine Serridiata and both have chemicals in their tissues which allow them to fluoresce. Okay, but like why? Natalie explained to me that lichen fluoresce as a protective response against ultraviolet light damage from the sun. Oh my gosh, I wish we could do this. Okay, that's so cool. So like these lichens are carrying their own sunscreen. Yep. So the group starts to branch out at this point away from the lichen depot, drifting into pockets of the forest, swinging their UV lights and headlamps up trees. Everyone's kind of getting into it now and they're breaking up books to try to identify what they see and suddenly it just feels weird to step on anything because like everything is alive. Yeah, except where there's trash. Oh, what's actually got to excited about finding like a soggy piece of toilet paper because it reflected weirdly. Okay, so what did you see next on your heck? Well, there was this gigantic piece of fabric that one of the naturalists had hung up and lit with mercury vapor lamps. So those are lamps that emit this very broad spectrum of light and attracted all these different kinds of moths just like clinging to the fabric. Come on over here if anyone wants to get a quick photo of the fall tanker worm. I want to see a photo of this fall tanker worm. Yeah, this moth along with all moths use the moon and stars to navigate so lamps are a good way to draw them out of the shadows. Then Matt Felperin, a roving naturalist with Nova Parks, the regional park system of northern Virginia makes an announcement that he will be, quote, doing owl calls intermittently. Okay, they're very defensive of their territory. So they will frequently come and check out who the potential rival is in their territory. So what's the best way to call Bartowl? There's a mnemonic for it. The mnemonic would be who cooks for you? Who cooks for you all? Matt learned how to do this while prowling for owls during the Great American camp out. What is that? It's this nationwide campaign that happens every June to get people outdoors in a safe way. And this was a really common theme among the naturalists. They're all involved with some kind of community work. Anna Kahnuie is the co-founder of the DC based nonprofit capital nature. I found her crouched over a log inches from the dirt taking a picture with her iPhone. Oh my gosh. What is that? It's a snow fungared. Oh, that's yeah, I just want to get a picture of it. It's like that. A fun guy that are jillied. Yeah, let me show you a better picture of it. It looks like slime. So you got Matt making alcohol in the background. Anna, face in the dirt showing me her eye naturalists. Okay, so eye naturalists is that app that helps you ID things in the natural world. I use it all the time for things like flowers and trees and one time a spider in my garden. Yeah, Anna's like a prolific user of eye naturalists. Well, you have 5,107 observations. I do make a lot of observations. 5,100. That's a lot. Yeah, I have, I don't know, a few dozen, but I have realized that learning to identify and name and even just notice the life forms around me is one of the best ways to deepen your relationship to land and to nature. Anna says you can also look up a bird counter, some other bioblits in your area. That's what they call like these nature searches. One of the biggest ones is the city nature challenge. Oh, what's that? It's basically a four-day sprint around Earth Day. Cities who enroll are tasked with identifying as many of a certain type of species as possible. It's multi-generational. So because you know, mom and dad and grandma and grandpa and the kids can go out and the kids are low to the ground. So did that owl ever show up? Never showed. K gave us the cold shoulder. But at this point in the hike, owl cameo didn't really matter. I mean over the course of the night, just watching these grown adults act more and more like kids was so amazing, like sticking their fingers in dirt, rolling over wet logs, jumping and shrieking when a tiny crustacean like an isopod appeared. I love it. Oh no, it's like a little shrimp. Or a tiny fungi shaped like a fan with an incredible secret. Gaseofilum Komune doesn't have two sexes, doesn't have four sexes. Give me a number of how many sexes do you think? Six? Eight? Higher. Twenty seven? It goes so much higher than you think is possible for how many sexes an organism can have. I mean, twenty seven was the highest, you know, like what? Hundreds? Twenty thousand. This fungi has twenty thousand different sexes. Amazing. It's very successful, very abundant and found almost everywhere. Take a look. And then there were life forms that were moving quite actively, like so I got low, you know, army crawling and peering through everyone's legs, hovering beneath this like chaotic cloud of science. Yeah, it's like orange and black and slithering. It looks kind of like a smith. Yeah, copper. One of the most interesting things I picked up was the fact that redback salamanders will bury themselves. Sometimes a foot deep in winter to basically be surrounded by decaying roots to stay warm and wet because the salamanders need the moisture to absorb oxygen. Yeah, and there's so many adaptations for winter when you really start to look for them. Sometimes that looks like a change of location. Sometimes that looks like energy conservation. Okay, give me an example. Yeah, this was towards the end of the hike. I hear Sarenella calling my name in the dark. Oh, all people look the same. We don't overlook the stick. The stick with the mushroom. With the mushroom. Wait, wait, is this the bioluminescent mushroom? That's right. That's right. This is the one Sarenella spent the whole hike searching for. It is a honey mushroom, our final observation of the night. So in the summertime, honey mushrooms produce a green light known as fox fire. They glow in the dark all on their own. No flashlight required. And we call this phenomenon bioluminescence. I am really sad to say I've never seen bioluminescence in nature, but honestly, I usually imagine it's like a frog or some kind of plankton doing the bioluminescent. Not a mushroom. Yeah, I had no idea that mushrooms bioluminesse either. Scientists don't entirely know why, but as Sarenella explained to me in my husband Duncan, it might be the fungized way of attracting nocturnal creatures. You know, the glow is basically an advertisement saying, come get me, I'm delicious. And by the way, take my kid away. So how do you advertise your burger king at 2 a.m.? You need an inside that people walk in by. So oh, yummy. Hungry animals, so birds, rodents, and insects eat the mushrooms and poop it out later, which may help with spore dispersal. But that's not what I saw, Burley. No, no, it was winter. And apparently the honey mushrooms will shut down all bioluminescent business. They will not glow at night in winter time. timer, you did not see the green glow. No, just a stick of happy brown caps that were not bioluminescing at all, which I think provides a nice life lesson for winter time, you know, about not spending energy when you don't have to. Honestly, Emily, this hike is reminding me that that's what winners all about, right? At least according to nature, slow down, rest, conserve your energy, and you can consider this hike, your permission slip. Thank you so much for this night walk. Any time, Burley. To join the City Nature Challenge or the Great American Camp out, check out the links on our website. Make sure you never miss a new episode by following us on the podcasting platform you're listening from. And if you have a science question, send us an email at shortwave at npr.org. This episode was produced by Jessica Young and Hannah Chin, and edited by our showrunner Rebecca Ramirez. Tyler Jones, check the facts. Jimmy Keely was the audio engineer. Beth Donovan is our senior director and Colin Campbell is our senior vice president of podcasting strategy. I'm Emily Kwong and I'm Burley McCoy. Thanks for listening to shortwave from NPR. Support for NPR and the following message come from the William and Flora Hulett Foundation, investing in creative thinkers and problem solvers who help people, communities, and the planet flourish. More information is available at huelett.org.