Gall on basswood. Spots on upper leaf surface, swellings on underside.
On pecan leaves, including leaflet surface and petiole
Insect on loblolly pine (camouflage or lichen mimic)
Rooted in shallow water. Course texture, pungent garlic-like odor.
Tree has been present and observed for several years. This is the first observed evidence of this variegated feature. Located along a gravel roadside. In a shaded, mixed pine-oak forest understory. No reason to suspect a chemical cause.
Found on sedge in wet ditch
observed on the same species (Rhynchospora corniculata) last year near this location. https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/56957772
Infesting Rhynchospora corniculata seed head
Nearly fledged!
Old home site
Fragrant
Twin Sisters, April Beauty, Cemetery Ladies
Naturally occurring hybrid between Narcissus poeticus and Narcissus tazetta; found initially in the West of France
INat gets a significant mention! In a giant poster in Madison Square Park in Manhattan.
Bama Rocks (closed) https://www.inaturalist.org/calendar/lincolndurey/2021/5/4
Finally it occurred to me to look at Christmas lichen with a hand lens, which I didn't have the last time I visited the swamp.
Attached to the base of a water oak. Bright orange photos are the initial observation. Brown photos are the same patch the next day.
May be young Rosa bracteata.
Several dozen examples of, Rosa foliolosa, not previously observed in this area of thick grasses. Most specimens had the galls.
woodland edge (small strip mowed less frequently than the adjacent lawn, or narrow strip along roadside); lianescent shrub
82 Aurora Terrace/1 Vesty Ave (on Vesty Ave).
Found on a leaf stem. Appeared to be made of mud.
On vertical concrete wall covered with other mosses and lichens. Some pictures were taken after spraying with water. Both dry and wet states can be seen here. Branches curve upward when dry and nearly horizontal when wet. Leaves can be ecostate, short-double costate, or long-single costate. Seta can be immersed or short-exerted.
According to Gilman, the two key features are the broad stipules and the fact that the distal portion of the stem has no (or very few) prickles. Even though iNat shows no observations for this species for Vermont (except for my two), Gilman says the species is common, with specimens from all counties. He writes, "Our most common indigenous rose, readily distinguished by its broad stipules... and often slightly glaucous, unarmed new growth (although the base of the canes is often quite prickly). The teeth of the leaves are usually quite large and rather deeply and sharply serrate" (268). All of these features match the plant in this observation.
Source: New Flora of Vermont by Arthur V. Gilman, New York Botanical Garden Press, 2015.
Study of leaf edge characteristics of Smilax. Each species is shown in the field, followed by micrographs of its leaf. The micrographs are all at 30x so they can be compared. In order, they show (1) upper edge, (2) lower edge, (3) marginal vein dissected away from blade, and (4) on-edge view, with upper surface at top. All observations in the series have the tag “Smilaxedge,” so they can be accessed as https://www.inaturalist.org/observations?place_id=any&q=Smilaxedge.
This observation: Opeining in pine flatwoods, climbing vine. At 30x: Top of leaf has slightly less pigmented zone. Margin of leaf perceptibly thicker, 0.4mm thick. Edge very smooth. Vein pulls away from leaf as a string.
Study of leaf edge characteristics of Smilax. Each species is shown in the field, followed by micrographs of its leaf. The micrographs are all at 30x so they can be compared. In order, they show (1) upper edge, (2) lower edge, (3) marginal vein dissected away from blade, and (4) on-edge view, with upper surface at top. All observations in the series have the tag “Smilaxedge,” so they can be accessed as https://www.inaturalist.org/observations?place_id=any&q=Smilaxedge.
This observation: Pine flatwoods, low climbing vine. At 30x: Clear unpigmented "cable," dissects easily. Thickness of leaf 0.2mm. Edge very smooth, with marginal prickles.
Study of leaf edge characteristics of Smilax. Each species is shown in the field, followed by micrographs of its leaf. The micrographs are all at 30x so they can be compared. In order, they show (1) upper edge, (2) lower edge, (3) marginal vein dissected away from blade, and (4) on-edge view, with upper surface at top. All observations in the series have the tag “Smilaxedge,” so they can be accessed as https://www.inaturalist.org/observations?place_id=any&q=Smilaxedge.
This observation:
Opening in pine flatwoods, climbing vine. At 30x: Top of leaf has unpigmented zone at margin; lower side edge slightly revolute, surface papillate, clear long bands at leaf margin. Thickness of leaf 0.2mm. Edge very smooth, palpable marginal vein. When dissected, a little margin plus the edge comes off.
Study of leaf edge characteristics of Smilax. Each species is shown in the field, followed by micrographs of its leaf. The micrographs are all at 30x so they can be compared. In order, they show (1) upper edge, (2) lower edge, (3) marginal vein dissected away from blade, and (4) on-edge view, with upper surface at top. All observations in the series have the tag “Smilaxedge,” so they can be accessed as https://www.inaturalist.org/observations?place_id=any&q=Smilaxedge.
This observation: Pine flatwoods, growing low to ground.. At 30x: Vein possibly buried in leaf edge, not thickened. Thickness of leaf 0.2mm. Edge with woolly hairs.
Mats of this stuff were prominent in sandy areas at Carolina Beach State Park, New Hanover County, NC (USA) on 4 November 2020. Puzzling through keys and iNaturalist observations from this area, I think it is:
Spiny Spikemoss - Selaginella acanthonota (syn. Bryodesma acanthonota)
Reference:
Weakley, Flora of the Southeastern United States (2020), pp. 72-73.
Fungus on Vaccinium sp. on a forested trail.
From Page 44 of “Diseases of Trees and Shrubs - 2nd Edition” by Wayne A. Sinclair and Howard H. Lyon:
This inconsequential disease, which affects species of Gaylusaccia and Vaccinium, is caused by Ophiodothella vaccinii and characterized by distinctive colorful lesions...The pathogen occurs widely in southeastern USA and also in Illinois and California.
Comment from @terit: "The leafmine on one of the leaves ...matches the description of leafmines created by Phyllocnistis hyperpersea. See description at https://www.inaturalist.org/taxa/860823-Phyllocnistis-hyperpersea. Although the Wikipedia entry does not name P. palustris as a host, Charley Eiseman's Leafminers of North America (1st ed., p. 502) does. This would be the first Mississippi observation of this moth on iNaturalist."
[Host plant observation at https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/47966397]
On cottonwood leaf petiole
very large/old White Oak, the only one I saw on this day's trip (no juvenile trees, etc.) 146" CBH
Adult form, recently observed feeding on trumpet vine.
Undescribed species; locally common on wet roadside
A mother calling to her young after I startled them and accidentally split them up across the trail
Leafminer evidence on Chinese tallow leaf
ID by iNat
Sandy roadside. Comparison of D. sect. angustifolia species and D. villossimum var. villosissimum.
Presumably a parasitic plant since no leaves were observed and no plants nearby.
Missed the bloom but found at coordinates SERNEC has for species. Canes to 8 feet.
Deciduous tree; shallowly ridged bark; buds shedding outer scales. One stem near ground level had two buds above each leaf scar: one smaller just above the scar and one larger above that.
Not certain of ID; this is what I keyed it to, but I was uncertain of some characteristics. Will revisit later in the year to reassess ID. LTMBF003
This large scarab showed up several times; I'm uploading examples on four different dates. Scarabaeidae, Rutelinae. Shown in Biologia Centrali-Americana Coleoptera 2-2, p. 288, pl. 16, fig. 18 as:
Heterosternus rodriguezi.
https://www.biodiversitylibrary.org/item/135502#page/306/mode/1up
https://www.biodiversitylibrary.org/item/135502#page/481/mode/1up
only in old bomb holes and natural depression marshes in this landscape, with Hypericum fasciculatum, Dichanthelium erectifolium, Proserpinaca pectinata, and Rhynchospora filifolia
We had a pair of fledglings move around the area while practicing their hunting skills.
Jekyll Island, day 3 https://www.inaturalist.org/calendar/lincolndurey/2018/9/16