First record of this species in Arlington County since 1977. Adult female found under a log in an upland area dominated by mountain laurel, similar to the habitat I’ve found this species in elsewhere in northern Virginia. This was in a park that has been extensively surveyed, yet there aren’t even any historical records of this species from this park. Absolutely amazing to find this species somewhere it has gone undetected for all this time.
Bobcat keeping proper social distancing from his kill. He neatly covered half his breakfast, although there weren't enough leaves to cover the legs.
We followed his progress from 11AM till the time he left at 5PM, after he ate most of what he had buried, only leaving behind a bit of the carcass and plenty of fur for my next door neighbour to clean up.
As seen in the last pic this was a superb learning experience for the kids, aged 3 to 10. Who said kids aren't getting enough education from staying away from school during this pandemic? They learned plenty on how the food chain works, although my 3 year old girl had some difficulty with the graphic experience. But she never got upset, despite her love for chasing after bunnies.
There are plenty of bobcat sightings in this part of town, being this close to Fish Creek provincial park. My security system often catches them walking through my yard.
I stood behind the fence for some of these shots, no more than 2.5 metres away from where he rested and he never got upset, despite the small crowd that formed to catch sight of him. Not once did he show signs of aggression, despite the shot my wife took of him with his fangs out (he was caught yawning).
We are only 60 metres from busy Canyon Meadows Drive.
A lovely, healthy-looking adult bobcat and what seems to be a large jackrabbit. What a great experience for everyone that caught a glimpse of wild nature today taking place in our backyards.
Bioluminescent Lingulodinium polyedra bloom off SIO pier. Filmed with A7S camera.
Cape Mountain Zebra, Gondwana Game Reserve, Garden Route City Nature Challenge
Beautiful match for mule's ears (Wyethia)
Vista en Guajiquiro La Paz, Camino a la comunidad de Támara .
Found this little guy on the beach❤️ A shark embryo no clue which species but he is safe under some sea grass
male of nesting pair
On a vertical intertidal rock on Elbow Cay. I only found a couple of these.
Observation and photo by Maya Lopez and Wendy Lopez, sent to nature@nhm.org.
Found in a small piece of driftwood
I'm guessing this is some kind of commensal with the innkeeper worms. Haven't dug into it yet.
Found while digging a hole in the mud / sand, along with lug worms and ghost shrimp, so could have been inhabiting the burrow (or body) of either.
Heard the kite smack into a tree branch and didn't realize what it was doing until it dropped this guy from above!
Pink dolphin following this fishing boat
Escondidas en un huicundo
Around 4 feet long, went very fast up into this bush and stared at me
Many thanks to Terry for showing this to us, as we would definitely have passed it by on our own. Jepson describes it as the "most endangered taxon in genus."
I believe this is the first time anyone's documented this species at Pillar Point on iNat. Certainly my first time finding it there.
About 14 mm long and a little more purple than is usual for this species.
New one to me! This crazy nudibranch was not teeny -- about 1" long. Cream body with brown speckling and cool yellow lines. Large foot. Rows of gills like Dendronotus? Oral tentacles flicked up and down like a cockatoo's crest. BUT THE WEIRDEST THING were these crazy long flowing 'streamers' coming from the top of each rhinophore sheath - kind of looked like worms, though clearly attached and marked like the rest of the body (cream with brown specks). Found on Tubularia. Invasive? Video: https://www.flickr.com/photos/30314434@N06/25521619833/in/dateposted/
Calling out the big guns for help: @tgosliner @mcduck @rebeccafay @sluglust @kestrel @kueda
UPDATE 5/16/2016: Here's the very nice video that the California Academy of Sciences created about this guy: https://www.facebook.com/calacademy/videos/10154157032862311/
This selfie was taken BY THE OCTOPUS, who also took a 90-second mostly-dark video of the inside of its den (with a muffled soundtrack of Alison Young and I laughing hysterically). The octopus grabbed my camera with three tentacles, and grabbed rocks with the others. After a determined tug-of-war that snapped the nylon wrist strap, it carried the camera deep into its den and started pressing buttons with its tentacles. Alison braved beak and tentacles to rescue the camera (the octo was still holding it) - is there anything she won't do for Citizen Science? Thank you Alison!
The alternate photo is the last one I took before the battle - you can see the first tentacle snaking towards the shiny camera...
Numero dos.