For more information on the habitat, vegetation, and weather in the area this specimen was found, please see the journal entry for April 2, 2012 located here on iNaturalist and in my written journal. This magnolia is one of many that I have seen on the UW Seattle campus and all over Seattle in general, especially up by Magnuson Park. They appear to be very common in this area because they were planted for their beauty. The flowers bloom in early spring and are popular with bees.
We think this is a male downy woodpecker, but it might be a hairy woodpecker.
Northern Shoveler in front of Black-bellied Whistling Ducks in first picture, Northern Shovelers in other pictures
San Diego County, California, US
another new bird for our park, ideal spot to stop in on migration, temporary pond increased by a significant rain last night. Two pairs of Blue-winged Teal joined a Mallard pair in this glorified puddle.
Upon further investigation, this appears to be a non-native species. A yellow marsh-marigold of some sort. Any ideas?
The leaves are rounded, unlike western buttercups and the flowers have at least 8 pointy petals, much like the native white marsh-marigolds.
For more information on the habitat and vegetation of the area this bee was found and on the weather the day it was found, please see the journal entry for April 18, 2012 (UW Seattle campus) here on iNaturalist. This yellow-faced bumblebee was found at first lying helplessly on the sidewalk next to the bus stop outside the Lander residence hall. It looked as if one of its wings was hurt, as it didn't fly away even when someone almost stepped on it. This bee might have even been in the last minutes of his life as it seemed incredibly weak. I got tired of seeing people almost killing it, so I got a leaf and had it crawl up onto it so I could take it over to the garden area behind the bus stop where the cherry laurel from a previous entry was located. Yellow-faced bumblebees are common all over western North America and this individual in particular was about 2 cm long, which is common in this species. Queens appear in early spring and begin nurturing their brood in underground colonies with the workers. They incubate the cluster until the adults emerge using thermoregulation, which is derived from honey, pollen, and nectar. Finally, the adult males and young queens leave the nest to mate late in spring and the old males, queens, and workers all die. The new queens overwinter and the cycle repeats itself.
Interesting because flowers right next to each other were in different stages of bloom.
The park's namesake can be found throughout the walking trail. Beautiful peeling red bark is found throughout the diverse tree species living in Madrona Park