The photo was taken by Lisa Hatfield. Lizard survived the encounter with the young cat and was released nearby. Though it may have been injured during the encounter, and during subsequent removal.
rather comical positioning :P
Not sure what is going on but this is the fourth birder that I know of who has had a phoebe perch on their binoculars or on their person at Commons Ford.
I have a "bog barrel" (half whiskey barrel, peaty soil, no drainage) where I tried out a few Venus flytraps. One morning, I was greeted by this gently waving daddy longlegs bouquet. This curious arachnid just had to see what was in the trap. I was amazed that my little flytrap could catch something so large. (I also felt bad for the longlegs, so I carefully released it. It skittered off, hopefully having learned its lesson).
Flamingo diversity in the Corvallis area is surprising. I've seen orange, pink, and black individuals (see https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/38453080) but I've never seen one like this.
Man root on right, man on left. Found excavated by construction activity, took home to nurture, fed tea, then planted in native garden.
*2021 Update: the transplant didn't take and this sweet soul was lost to the world, buried dead as it had been buried alive.
So there I was, at Disneyland with the family, and of course my mind is on what wildlife I might be able to scrounge out of the park. The 7D Mark II and 400mm lens was too big to lug around all day, so I did the best I could with my little Sony bridge camera. Enjoy!
The ground squirrel pups seemed to frequently stretch and sometimes yawn, as this one is doing.
Observation & photo submitted by @tighephoto (Michael Tighe) via Instagram #macarthurparklake
I admit I can't personally tell A. gambelianus apart from A. didymocarpus, but Andy Sanders of the UCR Herbarium collected a plant in this area in 2008 and called it A. gambelianus.
Stebbinsoseris heterocarpa on right v. Uropappus lindleyi on left
Uropappus lindleyi on left v. Stebbinsoseris heterocarpa on right
Two Southern Alligator Lizards observed mating at the Whiting Ranch during the 2023 Botany Blitz. High-resolution photos uploaded due to interest in this observation.
Same pair recorded here: https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/155283524
No Vitis we're harmed in the making of this observation
An abundant untouched superbloom of Lupines above Temple Hill Drive. They're literally fenced off and thriving!
Disclaimer: This observation includes ALL the photographs I intended to take of this particular organism. That may NOT include images of the entire organism, all of its defining characteristics, or the general area in which it was found. I am already aware that this may reduce the likelihood of a species level identification.
Oswit Canyon Loop Trail, Oswit Canyon, Palm Springs, Coachella Valley, Riverside County, California
Oddly pale flower head and a few leaves
One of one in the area again nestled in a big bushy area. She's a survivor due to isolation withing the bigger tree out of sight.
@cwbarrows Color mutation? Does this affect the plant’s ability to photosynthesize?
@ cwbarrows Fasciation?
The coloration on the leaves of E. farinosa were interesting. Located near a dry wash.
something had a good snack
Lovely little flowers.
A feral spud at the Urban-wildland interface
This is a follow-up to the question posed by @vreinkymov in this post, about whether the roots look different for an infected plant compared to the roots of a non-infected plant:
https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/146921131
They don't appear any different. But I was surprised at how small the root system was compared to the above ground portion. That was perhaps due to extremely wet soil from 15 inches of rain so far this season.
The plants are numbered. #1 and #2 are infected. #3 and #4 are not, as far as I can see. Each photo after the first has only a single plant in it, identified by its number in the first photo.
Also, it appears that a plant can have some infected leaves and some non-infected leaves, as seen in plant #2.
These plants were all growing together, and I dug them all up with one hand-trowel scoop.
There are more infected plants in my yard now after mowing and another rain. So far I've found no infected plants in the as-yet-unmowed portion of my property, but that is consistent with chance since most of my property has been mowed. There are now something like five or six infected small areas widely scattered on my two acres.
Scent of crushed leaves reminded me of some sort of bath bar.
Wee annual succulents in sandy, low-organic soil of a roadside verge on the NW corner of S Farber Avenue and W Payson Street, Glendora, CA. Photos taken with added light from a white-colored LED lamp. Photos # 1-2 taken in near total darkness after sunset with only artificial light, for a more dramatic image than the first one I took (photo # 3). Coin used for scale is a US quarter dollar (¢25 piece), 24.26 mm, 0.955 inch in diameter. Each line on the edge of the coin is approximately 0.64 mm apart.
This, and its twin observation (here: https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/147090117), is a follow-up observation to these ones from the same locality in the previous year:
http://www.inaturalist.org/observations/109574845
http://www.inaturalist.org/observations/106206587
http://www.inaturalist.org/observations/108460450
With a Pathogen?
There’s stork’s-bill all over this property. There is about a ten foot patch in which a few of them are partially white like the one in these photos. Outside of this ten foot patch, the rest of the stork’s-bills on this property look normal. It’s like this every year. Any idea why? Is this the plant’s natural color or a fungus or what?
A Spurge growing in the crack of the pavement. It had white sap. Multiple present.