Found under rocks, in a glacial cirque. A first for us! 2250m
Metamorphic outcrops, 3200m
Metamorphic rock crevice. Keyed in FNA to B. peirsonii or nearby, but not sure.
A curious version of this plant, as it is noted as not having twisted fruits, but this one has conspicuously twisted fruits. Pyroxenite, north-facing rock outcrops and also in outcrops/talus in small patches on the north slopes of Chanchellula peak. 1850m or so.
New (?) Disjunction in Trinity county, along Red Mountain Creek, shaded areas along the serpentine portion of the creek, on outcrops.
One fly found, after a few hours searching along the Middle fork american river, at type locality. This individual found under a massive root overhang, hanging from a spiderweb as the paper indicates is common. Precarious to get a shot, managed a few before it spooked and took off.
Pilot peak metamorphic complex, burned in the 2013 Rim Fire. Seemingly confined to the ridge, with black oak and manzanitas. 6000 ft elevation. Appears to have bractlets which rules out L. congdonii and L. torreyi??
Collected some specimens - same species as https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/117447461.
Beat from conifers and streamside vegetation
A truly curious plant, growing on sheer cliffs above Thomes creek. Chinquapin metabasalt rock ridge. A very woody and huge plant, with a tendency to grow only on the north-facing cliffs or ledges - only one plant made it onto the south facing side of this ridge. Pressed some leaves, but plan to return when it is in bloom for a larger collection.
A few photos of the ridge with some plants on the cliffs visible from the other side of the canyon included. Shows the precipitous habitat it grows on.
I could be missing something obvious, which would save me a trip back ;). Possible it is not a buckwheat at all, but I'm drawing blanks for what else.
Male a bit smaller and the female during my observations watching the Bornean ground cuckoo (Carpococcyx radiceus).
endemic to the island of Borneo,being found in the sections belonging to Brunei, Malaysia and Indonesia. It is restricted to humid forest. It is threatened by habitat loss. It was formerly considered conspecific with the Sumatran ground cuckoo.
Santa Barbara County. Not publicly accessible.
This Moth had one of its legs "stuck" in a crease of a long narrow green leaf on the roadside; eventually it got loose and flew away, but lost the one leg in the process. Along Mormon-Emigrant Road, approximately midway between Leek Spring Ecological Area and Silver Fork Road (North to Kyburz and Highway 50). Elevation about 7,250 feet. Within area of 2021 Caldor Fire impact.
Very small one, 6mm. From Manzanita litter.
Saw this beautiful native snail thanks entirely to the kindness of @chloe_and_trevor. 16 mm across, black body. Their photos of the same individual: https://www.inaturalist.org/observations?taxon_id=231153
Location is private to protect sensitive species (including this one!) seen that day.
Metamorphic talus of Pilot ridge. 1800m, black oak woodland top of ridge.
Neat one - perhaps something in Lythraceae? Not an area with a lot of invasives but theoretically could be an established species. Dry Vernal flows out of Egg lake - only one we saw all day.
h 25, c ac 6, lf Length 18, lf width 3/4
undescribed sp first seen by @imlichentoday
found on kelp (https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/194171357)
but rearing when found, detached quickly
no wind, light to no surge, night, water temp 61 F, -0.8ft tide
On roadcut of old mining road, above Indian Flat substation. Not confined to roadcut - another population was located further up the slope about 100m, but no other populations seen in this area. Blue oak gray pine woodland, soil not especially sandy, slope about 15-30 degrees, semi-shaded.
Edge of wash. Same as https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/192418567.
A large shrub, seen on +- south facing slope, only one plant seen. Red flowers and fruits, glaucous leaves.
Along fast-flowing stream, near a large waterfall
Neat little fungus on a willow stem. Collected.
These guys typically walk on Devil's club or Thimbleberry leaves. Fairly common in this Cottonwood-Thimbleberry-Redcedar community.
The only Boreus species recorded from Vancouver Island. ID'd on Bug Guide by Ben Coulter:
https://bugguide.net/node/view/492658#3637618
Whistler bioblitz. Beat from dead conifer branches
A little story about this fly: https://dipterists.org/assets/PDF/flytimes071.pdf
Moist sandy soil oak woodland. Very near type locality of G. tenella.
18mm. Beat from Abies concolor, Abies magnifica, Pinus jeffreyi, Pinus lambertiana, Pinus monticola and some other streamside shrubs.
Near bottom of moist cliff along dry creek, most nymphs at this stage. Cliff semi-shaded but seepage is quite strong coming from above so cliff was very wet.
I'm not sure if this is the type locality or not..
Streambank river bar habitat, supports C. microglochin over C. pauciflora. Perigynia 4-5mm long.
Collected. Leaf litter, including interior live oak, manzanita, black oak, gray pine, carpenteria, bay laurel duff.
Exciting! Instantly recognizable as the new genus & species first photographed by @chloe_and_trevor & identified as that by C.R. Bartlett: https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/107311379
Some notes:
1) Collected four specimens, two in 90% alcohol. Will deposit them in a collection (e.g., UC Riverside or could send them to UDelaware if there is interest)
2) Likely host-specific on Bebbia juncea. I consistently found them on Bebbia, but not on any other plants in the area. Should make collecting these much easier...
3) The darkness of the wing band seems quite variable
4) Not sure the status of this, e.g., if a description effort is already underway. But would be great to get this described (and perhaps also to be involved)
https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/147246219
Bonny Doon Ecological Reserve
Canyon live oak and bay laurel litter, near stream. 1.2mm or so?
Really neat fly - resting on a rock in the Siquoc. Body 9mm
Definitely a new species. Entirely subterannean in habits, seemingly very restricted in range and only found on forested mountains in Marin and Sonoma county. Probably fairly sensitive to development and habitat disturbance.
Quite a surprising find - remarkable (to me) to funnel this from riparian bigleaf maple leaf litter, away from its host species. 2mm
Found on the beach. Felt like plastic, flexible to a gentle squeeze.
Cardiophorinae? 3mm, found on snowpack. I swear this had a scintillating blue sheen to it when collected, like an S. metallicus. I may be able to see some scales left still. Or perhaps I was just going crazy from the sun..
Regardless, the smallest clicker we've ever seen.
Distinct antennae for Cholevinae. Found several under a dead mole. I'm not sure if this species is known from California? https://bioone.org/journals/the-coleopterists-bulletin/volume-71/issue-2/0010-065X-71.2.211/An-Annotated-Catalog-of-the-Leiodidae-Coleoptera-of-the-Nearctic/10.1649/0010-065X-71.2.211.short lists it as being found in Oregon, but it isn't too surprising that it would turn up in similar habitats here.
Two found on bryozoans on the underside of a rock in low intertidal.
I have to admit, the Mountain Beaver is an animal I have wanted to see for many years, but chalked it up there with Spotted Bat and Pygmy Sperm Whale in that I know they are out there, but the odds of me finding one are......
So, I was more than delighted to have been able to spend a good 15 minutes watching this one at close range as it repeatedly carried mouthfuls of dry grass and green conifer twigs to its burrow under the snow.
Uncommon on south facing metamorphic shale slopes of Pilot Ridge.
4mm, redwood duff leaf litter, coastal, near sitka spruce / western hemlock as well.
Will revisit seems very interesting.
Caught in a moth trap.
Coll. #BW38
4mm, swept from vegetation.
Rare, or at least quite range-restricted; see Richards & Shepard (2017). Found 4 in 15 minutes!
Running near the tide line.
On Artemisia norvegica, not really sure what this is.
Tidepooling. Potential new species found by @chloe_and_trevor and collectively collected.
In the collection container it seemed to munch on some hydroids (photos 4-7).
Same individual as: https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/107604567
2.25mm or so, under small stones along Tyaughton creek.
Well-drained steep slopes of Tyaughton creek meadows. Rare here, seen only at two localities along the trail, which passes through a lot of this habitat. Same population as https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/89017501, from a year prior. Collected.
2 stigmas, androgynous spikes, rhizomatous. 600mm tall, peris 3.5mm, with a 1mm beak. Spikes 20-30mm long.
See also https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/89017501, which was found in the same habitat. This is a new site over what we found last summer. Collected.
4mm or thereabouts, sifted from leaf litter / duff at the edge of a bog in the Pemberton valley.
Seemed to key that way in Doyle & Stottler, at least, assuming this is even Riccia. Many growing in the drying mud to the west of Hidden Pond, seemed quite affixed to the substrate, no sign of sporophytes that I could see.
Swept from conifers, likely spruce (white/engelmann) or Abies lasiocarpa, fairly common in this area off of these conifers, and seen also one at Blackwater lake on 06/20.
Ground color black, pubescence with mixed white and orange hairs, so keys to U. granulosum, but not confident enough to be sure (not listed here: http://www.canacoll.org/Coleo/Checklist/PDF%20files/PTINIDAE.pdf).
Not sure, Gambrinus? Swept from conifers in the old-growth hemlock dominated understory.
A unique sedge in its leaf-like perigynia scales. Only two plants seen, not a common sedge in this area. In old burn with enough shrub shade cover to develop, not seen in prior years.
Running quickly (away from me) between scattered shrubs on sandy soil near base of hill south of Marietta Road, east of Teels Marsh, Mineral County, Nevada.