photo by aidan campos
feat. me + O. lindheimeri
Common in high quality novaculite glade and woodland complex.
Wigginsia gladiata VG-1424, Arroyo Valentin Grande, Uruguay. 93m
Leaning — second black band lacking below node teeth, which Weakley suggests indicates ferrissii vs hyemale. Stems unbranched, ridges many, w/ 1 stomatal line on each side; cone apex pointed.
Golden-backed Frog
Mushroom grown on frog body
I love coming across this species. It's not frequently documented but from my wanderings it seems to be a native prairie remnant species that can exist in disturbed areas that receive regular mowing. There are fragmented remnants on the Brookhaven campus; this is a small patch
will key later. no pollen
One of the Eurasian introduced species that is part of the hidden dandelion diversity.
At base of stem and in leaf axils of Bryum argenteum. Immature. The moss host was growing on bare soil in a grass field disturbed by tire tracks.
ID Source: https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s12225-020-09917-0
Family suggestion from @aidancampos and @brandoncorder
In coastal scrub
Very divided leaves
Growing with Riccia cavernosa and algae. Female and male plants
Fall 2022 City of Lewisville Garden Ridge Blvd Native Median Conversion, Baseline Flora and Fauna Assessment. Treatment till seed plant, plot 4 south
Red dots on Zizania texana
From the deck of the Ocean Endeavour
Craneo de especie ya extinta
Very wet, saturated cool forested seep above a running creek below BETUALLE, PICRUB, RHODOMAX forest.
Check Muehl Sphen or Glyc
Seeds covered with insects that seems to be feeding on the seeds
This is my best guess. This species is naturalized in the dune lands on Brigantine and is distinct from the native O. humifusa it grows concurrently with. Compared to O. humifusa this plant strictly upright with larger, consistently round pads.
This single plant was the target of our quest today. And finding it was extremely...EXTREMELY surprising. This plant (i.e. a stem from apparently the same underground rhizome) was first discovered in about 1984 by me. At the time, I tentatively identified it as Trillium gracile, a species of southeast Texas and eastward. The ID has been debated and the remarkable occurrence of the plant at this location is very curious (long story). I had rechecked this plant probably 15 years ago and it was still present, and now--some 35 years after its first discovery, it is still putting up a flower in a lonely attempt to propagate. (There is, and has always only been, just the one plant here.) All of us, including eminent botanist Bill Carr (4th image) and Dr. George Yatskievych (U.T. Herbarium, 5th image, kneeling to photograph the plant) were just floored that we could refind the plant.
The plant is found in a mesic shaded canyon head at a permanent spring. The plant is in moist silty loam at the base of a bluff adjacent to the springhead pool, with abundant leaf litter, under mature oak-ash-elm-juniper woodland. Aside from a wealth of recent invasives (Japanese Honeysuckle, Glossy Privet, etc.), the site includes several relictual species of very local occurrence in Travis County, including:
-- Spicebush (Lindera benzoin)
-- Cross Vine (Bignonia capreolata)
-- Bristly Greenbrier (Smilax tamnoides [= S. hispida])
-- Eastern Columbine (Aquilegia canadensis)
This is the same Trillium plant discovered the previous year in the exact same spot.
https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/21600308
Remarkably, the same rootstock was still alive 35 years later when we revisited the location:
https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/21503136
This tract would later become part of the Balcones Canyonlands Preserves (Bunten tract).
Date in mid-March is estimated from context of slide roll.
Scanned from 35mm Ektachrome slide.
Here are some of my original photos of the Travis County Trillium plant. I first discovered the plant on March 22, 1984 (first two images). I came back to measure the plant on March 24 (3rd - 5th images), and over the next few days invited several botanists and friends to view and photograph the plant. The 6th image (3/25/84) shows Dr. Marshall Johnston documenting the plant. The 7th image shows a young and curious Greg Lasley wondering what all the fuss is about.
The second picture is UV flora, aka Bee vision
Hybrid of Y. arkansana and Y. pallida with Y. arkansana in background. Y. pallida nearby.
Found in the ceiling of Dillard's Department Store
Shrubby upland in Lake Arrowhead State Park