Fort DuPont is the second-largest wooded park in DC (Rock Creek Park is biggest). It has some great habitat, but it’s not on most people’s radar. There weren’t any BioBlitz activities there (it’s part of National Capital Parks East which had activities in both Kenilworth Aquatic Gardens and Piscataway Park), so I thought it could use a little post-BioBlitz iNaturalist love. I’ve only been there once before and didn’t make it very far. There were just a handful of iNaturalist observations from the park (@ahay, @athryn, and @steveramanand), so @reallifeecology (Jonathan Carpenter) and I met up on Friday to help remedy that!
Noteworthy observations:
-3 kinds of slime mold.
-Several kinds of moss with sporophytes.
-Mountain laurel in bloom.
-Recently fallen hemlock. It was the only one we saw and it was unclear why it fell. We suspected a possible lightning strike, but even that seems strange.
-Massive white oak. @reallifeecology got a photo with me in it for scale.
-The tick my husband pulled off later that night.
For anyone interested in adding more to the NPS Servicewide 2016 BioBlitz project (and therefore moving up on the leaderboard), this is NPS land! Come make some observations! You can easily see where we explored (link to map) so I encourage others in the area to check out other parts of the park as well!
Blooming
ootheca.
Earlier stage bright yellow. Saw an older, browner one later: http://www.inaturalist.org/observations/3345871
Lots of sporophytes present. Looks like hair!
I think @reallifeecology remembers this one.
Came out of the oyster mushrooms.
Empty cocoon with caterpillar exoskeleton inside.
Massive white oak. @reallifeecology got a photo with me next to it for scale.
Second photo is close up with easy macro lens.
Teeny tiny sporophytes. Final shot shows the whole patch. Everything else with easy macro.
Possibly the largest poison ivy vine that I've ever seen (in width)
In a Kalmia latifolia flower.
With tiny sporophytes!
With sporophytes.
Growing amidst mosses.
Empty pupa. Now inhabited by teeny tiny ants.
Teeny tiny (2 mm?) ants living in an empty pupa. Photographed with Easy Macro lens.
I think?
The poison ivy grew up a tree stump and created this interesting tree-like form.
This tree had recently fallen but it wasn't clear why. It broke off fairly high up. Sad since it was the only hemlock in sight.
Huge one!
Picked this up at Fort Dupont :-(
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So cool, anxious to get there myself!
Cool, Carrie! Love filling in gaps in the iNat maps... :-)
Glad to see people taking up the cause! :D
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