Quails lounging with bunny
On a hot day during a hot summer, the bunny gets the prime location (damp sand). If quails are in the prime location, the bunny will gently nose them away and take it. However once the bunny has its spot, (at least with some bunnies) quails are free to lounge as close as they want.
The quails had to walk over the bunny to reach the niche. During this sequence the father quail chased a roadrunner through this area - which is another good reason for a quail baby to huddle behind a bunny.
12 total, 3 males, 2? fawns
The five fruits per flower and glandular dentate Purshia leaves are distinctive of this shrub. This site occurs along the Slick Rock Trail, near Moab, Grand County, Utah.
Makes green and orange laminated mats on water surfaces ranging from 60 to 68º C.
Source:
https://microbewiki.kenyon.edu/index.php/Yellowstone_Hot_Springs
Growing on rock, underwater, at shoreline of Yellowstone Lake.
A. retrorsa growing side-by-side with A. grandiflora. The two heads could be photographed side by side without detaching them from the stem!
This observation is for the A. retrorsa. The A. grandiflora is in this obs:
Flower cluster that I believe are onions along Wooded Hill Trail, Laguna Mtns.
In granitic soil around lower north facing edge of stones. Common on Psora decipiens at this location.
Keyed to Stigmidium psorae using volume 2 of LGSDR:
Pseudothecia are immersed in upper cortex of thallus squamules, asci are broadly clavate, ascopores are mostly 1 or 2 septate with slight constriction at septal division, and have one droplet per cell.
Foragers on packed soil of hiking path in open grassy area of desert Baccharis, Malosma, Quercus shrubland. Some carried pieces of dead grass stems, and appeared to be emerging from crevices in the path.
Nuttall’s with Fasciation!
“A malformation of plant stems commonly appearing as enlargement and flattening as if several stems were fused is called fasciation.”
This is James. James tried to catch fish. James swam in circles for roughly 8 minutes attempting to do so. The fish got away. James came back empty-billed. James failed.
Observed and photographed by my colleague Mike Morrison. A rare find usually associated with deep water in the tropics. This specimen was 3 m in length, 300 mm from spine to belly and 75-100mm thick and was estimated to weigh around 50 kg.
featuring thetidepooler's flashlight lighting
Someone found in their vent and want to id
Going with iNat’s suggestion. Identification help appreciated. I suspect that the globular white bodies and the stalked pinkish-tan hot dogs are different developmental stages of the same organism. On decaying coast live oak .
I believe that this is Big Berry Manzanita. There are a lot of this here, in the boundary of the Lake Fire from 2020.
Saturated soils on gentle SE facing slope.
Originally found by @nathantay
Thanks to @spifferella for posting and showing us the location.
The original poster was @nathantay
Thanks to @spifferella for posting and showing us the location.
The original poster was @nathantay
~800' elevation.
Prolific bloom in 1998 of the Desert Lily (Hesperocallis undulata), south side of the Dumont Dunes, San Bernardino County, Mojave Desert, CA. March 28 is a tentative date until I can get access to the film images.
These images were taken with an early generation Agfa? point and shoot digital camera, therefore the lack of quality! At least it's a record.... :-)
Amazing density which extended almost from the base of the dunes well into the flats. Heights of many of the plants were up to or maybe even more than 62" tall.
There used to be signs maybe along the base of the Dunes indicating that this was an ACEC but it may've been more to the east. I don't exactly remember now. Somehow I thought the base of south side of the dunes was not open to OHV's but maybe that was wishful thinking. :-)
This was prior to the advent of the current popularity of OHV's. Dumont Dunes was quiet back then, especially the south side since access at that time was only via 4WD & there weren't all that many on or off the road.
The diversity and density of wildflowers in this area was breathtaking. I'm not sure what the OHV impact might have done to this population and the other wildflowers which were prolific there as well, but the Desert Lily really seemed unique.
With Lomatium dasycarpum, LEFT. Sanicula bipinnatifida RIGHT.
An undescribed perennial from the southern Sierra.
Neat one. Kind of resembles G. clokeyi, but that has white pollinia, and a longer corolla tube relative to the calyx.
They do not care about tourists
The ground squirrel pups seemed to frequently stretch and sometimes yawn, as this one is doing.
Just amazing! Parasitizing Ten-lined June beetle (Polyphylla decemlineata) on an open slope of sand. Insitu, already exposed when found
Strange Calochortus. Does not fit well with C. weedii weedii. Several individuals from the same area included in these photos.
Sequoia ForestKeeper Wildflower Wednesday Walks
Cyrus Canyon, Weldon
Kern County, California
11 March 2015