A female Giant Ichneumon wasp (Megarhyssa macrurus) oviposits into the side of a tree.
I was honored to have this observation selected as observation of the day for June 11, 2020, and again as observation of the week (week of June 21, 2020). It is covered in this blog post: A Trip to Texas Provides a Long Sought Photographic Opportunity - Observation of the Week, 6/21/20.
Moyenne Guinée, Guinea, Westafrica.
Apocynaceae?
Maybe a Strophantus sp. ?
At the roadside inmidst the ruderal forest mantle of semi-montane rain forest.
Help in determination is highly welcome!
Black-tailed deer killed by a bobcat. It took 13 days for the bobcat to consume the entire deer. I saw and photographed the bobcat on two occasions during that time. The blood is from the original kill, which happened on 12/4/2003. Other photos document the change in appearance of the carcass cache over the following 13 days.
Full story can be found on this page:
http://www.bear-tracker.com/bobcat.html
Southernmost documentation of coastal fisher population since Joseph Grinnel (http://publish.illinois.edu/maxallen/files/2019/01/Allen-2015-Fisher-Range-Expansion.pdf)
limestone monkeyflower, Erythranthe calcicola, California, White Mountains, Coldwater Canyon, Chalfant Valley - Owens Valley drainage, elevation 1646 m (5400 ft).
The last time I saw this annual species was when I found it in this same spot in the rainy spring of 1986, despite several intervening attempts. It was reported to be abundant in the Death Valley area during the 2017 season, and I will soon post some additional White Mountains locations that turned up for the first time the same year. Because it appears so rarely, it is probably more common than its 20 or so historical specimen records might suggest.
Nevertheless, limestone monkeyflower is a regional endemic, limited to the northern Mojave Desert and southwestern Great Basin Desert of southeast Mono and eastern Inyo counties in California, and Esmeralda, southern Nye, and western Clark counties in Nevada. As its name reflects, it seems to be found only on rocky soils and slopes with a strong carbonate component, which happen to be very common soils within its limited geographic range. The species has been found at elevations of 915-2165 meters (3000-7100 feet).
Limestone monkeyflower was recognized as a distinct species by Naomi Fraga in 2012, after having been confused with Erythranthe (=Mimulus) montioides since its earliest collections in 1937. Its closest relative actually appears to be Erythranthe rubella, from which it differs in having calyces broadly cylindric and straight while in flower (vs narrower and curved), largest flowers 5-9 mm across (vs 3-5 mm) with longitudinal maroon streaks (vs round or transverse spots), styles included (vs shortly exserted), and leaves with stalked glands (vs sessile glands) and broader on average.
Uploaded from my Flickr site: https://www.flickr.com/photos/127605180@N04/
I think...
No molars, but one of the mandibles was intact enough that I could count three incisors (red arrows in last photo), which fits the dental formula:
I 3/3, C 1/1, Pm 3/3, M 1/2 X 2 = 34.
My wife found him on the porch shivering. It flew away after this.
Bat from automated camera with infrared strobe.
Causing stem gall on poison oak.
From past files . I know this plant as Desert Olive . This was in Alameda County .
Weird new plant for me, hiding among the geraniums, which it resembles.
Almost certainly a vestige of past restoration, but nice to see all the same.
I must thank Bob Patterson for this identification, via internet discussion of the photos years ago. I wouldn't trust myself to key this plant out accurately to species, but he is an authority on the Polemoniaceae.
Pretty clearly one of the species under 11', in this key:
http://ucjeps.berkeley.edu/cgi-bin/get_IJM.pl?key=11347
But I just realized it could be C. densiflora as well as C. exserta. And apparently they hybrize anyway, according to the note at bottom of the species description here:
http://ucjeps.berkeley.edu/eflora/eflora_display.php?tid=18200
I'd love to ID this to species. Not one I've seen often.
Only saw one plant on my long walk through the park looking for wildflowers. I had never seen one before. The flowers were spectacular and the size of my fingernail. This particular species is endemic to California and supposedly uncommon. I would love to know who else has seen it in the Bay Area!
Really common in the pine forest along the Pine Ridge Trail.
One of my neighbor's garden plants (he has a beautiful native plant garden). These pods have been on the plants for months and they've only just started releasing their seeds.
Crawling on Virginia creeper. Moved to tree to photograph after it fell on ground. Huge caterpillar.
About 5 ft long found in new subdivision