07 de mayo de 2014

Treasure Hunt

I was able to successfully locate these species after a good amount of hiking around. I was also unable to find some of the species I tried to relocate. I was not able to locate any sweet fennel near the top of dwight. I was also unable to find a California poppy in the area of observation 260961 or a greater periwinkle in the area of observation 236711. I wonder if the locations were incorrect, if the plants are no longer there, or if I just didn't look quite in the right place.

Publicado el mayo 7, 2014 06:47 MAÑANA por nfs nfs | 7 observaciones | 0 comentarios | Deja un comentario

21 de marzo de 2014

Natural History Story

The most interesting species I observed on my hike for homework five was the Fairy Fingers fungus (Clavaria fragilis). Although it occurs throughout the northern hemisphere, in North America it is more common east of the Rocky Mountains, so it's pretty cool that I got to see it here! It has also been found in Australia and South Africa. In Europe C. fragilis is an indicator species of old unimproved grassland. Since many of these grasslands are threatened in Europe, C. fragilis is a threatened fungi in the Netherlands and Slovenia. C. fragilis is the most common species in the Clavaria genus in North America, but there are several similar species such as C. acuta, C. atkinsoniana, and C. rubicundula.

Publicado el marzo 21, 2014 06:45 MAÑANA por nfs nfs | 1 observación | 0 comentarios | Deja un comentario

19 de marzo de 2014

Characters and Traits

Here's what I found on my hike in Strawberry canyon. The Periwinkle was one of the species we looked at in class -- it is a dicot because it has an uneven number of petals. The Scotch Broom is in the pea family because it has irregular petals. The tree with white flowers is another dicot with five petals.

Publicado el marzo 19, 2014 04:56 MAÑANA por nfs nfs | 11 observaciones | 0 comentarios | Deja un comentario

05 de marzo de 2014

Habitat Trips

I hiked the fire trail today to see what I could find in the chaparral on the south facing side of the hills and in the moist evergreen forest on the north side.

I found mushrooms in both ecosystems, although there were more in the evergreen forest. This makes sense, as mushrooms like a wet environment. I was probably only able to find them in the chaparral because of the the recent rain.

The plants I found in the chaparral had small leaves to conserve water, whereas, most of the plants had larger leaves in the moist evergreen forrest. The fern I found in the moist evergreen forest also depends on a fair amount of water in order to disperse its spores.

The salamander I found, being an amphibian, also needs water nearby, and I found it underneath a wet log. The moist evergreen forest also has lots of moist decomposing logs, which seem to be the ideal habitat for centipedes like the one I found.

Publicado el marzo 5, 2014 02:59 MAÑANA por nfs nfs | 10 observaciones | 0 comentarios | Deja un comentario

14 de febrero de 2014

Phenology Exercise

The plant that I'm pretty sure is a French broom has some yellow flowers on it, while the one with the log in the background does not have any signs of reproductive parts (bare). The plant that I took a photo of in the dark is leafed out, while the tree I found on campus has no leaves and is bare.

Publicado el febrero 14, 2014 01:04 MAÑANA por nfs nfs | 4 observaciones | 0 comentarios | Deja un comentario

05 de febrero de 2014

Geo-171-2014 Homework #2

I observed these on my walk on the fire trails and near the Clark Kerr track. They represent three of the iconic taxa. The California Towhee is a bird, and more specifically a perching bird. The bramble (waiting for confirmation that it's a Himalayan Blackberry) is a plant. I'm pretty sure that little bug is a blacklegged tick, which would make it an arachnid. In that case, I'm glad we found it because it was on my friend's leg and might have bitten him if we hadn't! If it is a confirmed blacklegged tick, it would only be the second observation of one in California on iNaturalist!

Publicado el febrero 5, 2014 04:14 MAÑANA por nfs nfs | 3 observaciones | 1 comentario | Deja un comentario

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