Fotos / Sonidos
Qué
Chipe de Audubon (Setophaga coronata ssp. auduboni)Observ.
eralversonDescripción
Oregon white oak woodland.
Fotos / Sonidos
Qué
Cedro Colorado (Calocedrus decurrens)Observ.
eralversonDescripción
Cedar Island and vicinity along the lower Descutes River at river mile 31, elevation about 550 ft. Growing on the island and adjacent north-facing slope. Clearly an isolated, naturally occurring population. Possibly the northern-most natural occurrence of this species, though there are naturalized populations located further north.
Fotos / Sonidos
Qué
Trillium del Pacífico (Trillium ovatum)Observ.
eralversonDescripción
Fort Steilacoom Park
Fotos / Sonidos
Observ.
eralversonDescripción
Blue Mountain County Park. Left behind in an area formerly dominated by blackberry and scotch broom, which was masticated as part of a fuels reduction project.
Fotos / Sonidos
Observ.
eralversonDescripción
Blue Mountain County Park. Emerging from an area that had previously been covered with blackberry and scotch broom, which was masticated in December 2023 as part of a fuels management project. I think this may be true var. albidum, given the very wide petals. Most T. albidum in Lane County is intermediate between var. albidum and var. parviflorum. The non-flowering plant to the right may be T. ovatum, which also occurs here.
Fotos / Sonidos
Qué
Trillium del Pacífico (Trillium ovatum)Observ.
eralversonDescripción
Blue Mountain County Park. Emerging from an area that had previously been covered with blackberry and scotch broom, which was masticated in December 2023 as part of a fuels management project.
Fotos / Sonidos
Qué
Rata-cambalachera Patas Oscuras (Neotoma fuscipes)Observ.
eralversonDescripción
Cogswell-Foster Preserve. A cluster of about 10 large stick nests 8 to 15 ft. up in Crataegus monogyna trees adjacent to old bottomland Quercus garryana forest; one nest had fallen to the ground probably in the recent ice storm. Nests have been observed at this site for at least 15 years. No animals seen but Neotoma fuscipes appears to be the species found on the Willamette Valley floor, not Neotoma cinerea.
Fotos / Sonidos
Observ.
eralversonDescripción
This is Trillium stenosepalum, the Rocky Mountain trillium, recently elevated to species status. Waiting for the name to become available in iNat. See https://doi.org/10.3120/0024-9637-70.3.158
Qué
Carricillo (Equisetum praealtum)Observ.
eralversonDescripción
Osgood County Park along Fall Creek