-young plants
-alternating leaves
-green stem
-small black and brown flakes at bottom of the stem
-simple leaves with small lobes
-each plant contained 1-2 stems
-found in a moist area
-site previously disturbed by humans
-companion plant, Maianthemum canadense
-G.L 15
TF08: this plant are also known as fiddleheads which are grows from a rhizome (below the ground). The leaf stalks contain hairs. The veins of the leaves run along the edge of the leaf blade. Habitat: Wooland trails in a shaded area. Abundance: several hundred. Associated species: Onoclea sensibilis(Sensitive fern).
base of cedar in red maple/cedar swamp. This is the first known record of this species on PEI.
On steep, east facing side of large rock on edge of river.
(Second time I’ve seen this lichen but first time figuring out this ID - other was on Innes Brook near or in Keji)
On black spruce? 32ft up! trunk of tree I was cutting with chainsaw that had fallen over the road
With one Pannaria rubiginosa thallus
On one maple, dozen thalli? So much snow hard to tell.
in a small upland pocket swamp with ash and birch. Woods around this swamp heavily impacted.
Anaptychia also only on this tree. Nephroma. Cetrelia. Thriptophylla.
Found in the Acadia Woodland Trails and in the Harriet Irving Botanical Gardens
On the side of the trail in the Acadia Woodland Trails
by burials and canada yew here too
Balsam fir seedlings all around it indicate someone deliberately tried to kill this endangered tree with roundup a couple of years back. :( of interest as well because shows that pyr quartz likely is intrusive since ash prefer a basic soil in Mi'kma'ki - LDR
another endangered tree recently deliberately sprayed :( - LDR
hotspot - village garden feature