Not sure. Rare. Known from site
Captured in aerial trap atop Mt. Mansfield, aerial trap
Cypress swamp. Branch leaf from near base of branch 2.5 x 0.4mm (ratio 6.2:1). Branch leaf from near tip of branch 4.0 x 0.5mm (ratio 8:1). Stem leaf 1.1 x 0.5mm. Keys out to Sphagnum mississippiense but I can't tell it from S. trinitense.
Sinistral specimen (right) with normal dextral specimen (left.)
AHY; Bilateral Gynandromorph bird
Most images taken from FB post from Powdermill Nature Reserve as they were cleaner than those captured by my phone
13.5 mm. Captured in window trap on Bolton Mountain at 3240' elevation; spruce-fir forest.
diving beetle, weird water bugs, zippy with striped carapace
All photos copyright David Liittschwager, Natural History Photography. Http://OneCubicFoot.com
Q rubra incredible infestation on this tree
All photos taken from outside the restricted area.
I believe all photos show the same Spiny Softshell Turtle and most photos also include a Map Turtle. They changed sunning rocks during the time I watched. In photo #3 just the head of the Map Turtle shows above the water at the upper right.
At Colchester Pond
Riverweed (Spirogyra sp.), Ban Xang Hai, north of Luang Prabang, Mekong River, Laos. February 2023.
“river weed” is a filamentous green algae (a species of Spirogyra). It is a common food in this area. Usually dried, briefly fried and made into thin chips.
Very rare, perhaps the only one that can be seen from the road (above western Bco. de Arguineguín).
I found this deceased at the bottom of our well after we bleach shocked it. Did the bleach remove its color or is it albino?
dg: digestive gland
f: foot
g: gut
m: mantle
ot: ovotestis
Note large, pale, peripheral ovotestis.
This tiny liverwort is growing as an epiphyll on the rhododendron leaves.
Dr. Priscila Chaverri and her teaching assistant, Efraín Escudero-Leyva of the Instituto Politécnico Nacional in Mexico, were the course’s resident ascomycetologists. As this initially resembled one of the green Hypocrea/Trichoderma spp., I passed it off to them, thinking light work would be made of the ID process. After some microscopy and reference checking, Efraín returns with the name Dactylospora, a (mostly) lichenicolous genus in the Lecanorales.
This is one of the most beautiful fungi I have ever seen, and I greatly look forward to discovering the rest of its name.
UPDATE 8/28/16: Believed to be a member of the genus Abrothallus by multiple members of the “Ascomycetes of the World” Facebook group. Name updated accordingly.
Substrate: unk. foliose lichen (Observation 249900)
Habitat: Costa Rican Páramo
Ecoregion: Talamanca Montane Forests (NA0167)
Collector(s): D. Newman
Collection #: n/a
Collected for the 2016 Organization for Tropical Studies “Fungi and Fungus-Like Organisms” Course
Leucistic robin
A Wood Frog on top mistaking this Salamander for a female!
Length of entire moth was probably a little over an inch.
Small liverwort with rounded leaves, in Sphagnum lescurii (https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/152070428)
@ Lost Maples State Natural Area
~8C Cloudy Day - was disappointed at not finding any bugs to photograph, then found this moth on the window of the restrooms as we were getting ready to leave.
Not sure on the ID - I thought this was a faded Rosy Maple Moth (since this park is full of maples) but the locality makes that seem unlikely. Appreciate any input.
Attached to a duckweed stem. Freshwater or slightly brackish. Recent king tides brought some bay water into the lagoon. Interesting structure of the lorica.
Found underwater (freshwater lake), but I think that spot was just flooded and would normally be above the water table.
1 of 4 martens on 3 different trails today
orange fruit bodies of the ascomycete, biotrophic parasite, Filicupula sororia on the liverwort Frullania kunzei.
Found on kitchen wall this morning. Likely came in with new houseplants.
On a stump of Prunus serotina next to Arachnopeziza trabinelloides (orange cups).
Asci 8-spored.
Ascospores are hyaline, eguttulate aseptate.
Paraphyses are green without VBs.
Red ectal excipulum.
On Rhus typhina
NCR bioblitz
Found on dead Ulmus bark.
This hyphomycetes can be recognized as a Morrisographium by the thin dark smooth synnema produce pale conidia on the top. Conicomyces species are similar but produce conidia with long appendage.
Synnemata scattered on outer bark of Ulmus sp. reaching about 1 mm in height. Conidiophore not examined, and usually hard to observed because they are surrounded by sterile hairs.
Conidia fusiform, somewhat sigmoid with both ends bent on the opposite side. The conidia are hyaline, multiseptate with usually 11 septa, and measure (50)65-80 x (2.5)3-4(4.5).
This species should be compared with M. ulmi which is macroscopically virtually identical and grow on the same habitat. However the conidia of M. ulmi are shorter, with no more than 9 septa and only have one end of the conidia bent
to compare here is a typical M. ulmi : https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/65053383
Back in 2014 I saw this everywhere but I haven't seen it since.
Crumbled wings likely caused by OE protozoan parasite that is affecting monarch and queen butterfly populations.
Lake Simtustus
Fungus on Ash key (wing part). With the larger Diaporthe samaricola growing over the seed.