I have absolutely no idea what these are. Second photo is what it was found on on, I think Nyssa?
With a bee friend! :) This observation is for the ant though.
Ex commercial Citrullus lanatus in Woolworths Supermarket.
The geolocation given refers to the location of the store in which the observation was made, not the location of growth or the location of seed production (which are unknown).
Very sad photo that I forgot to add after our last Highland trip. Crazy Coyote Tree... Weird how people are...
Red-winged Blackbird
near Stewardson, Illinois
1 June 1989
I'm posting this record just for the general interest of a Red-winged Blackbird with one white wing. Whether a partial albino, or a partial leucistic bird, I'm not sure. A local farmer told my wife and me that this bird had been on his farm for three summers. The bird left in the fall with the other Red-wingeds and came back in the spring. I watched it for about 30 minutes. It vocalized like any other Red-winged BB and interacted with other Red-wingeds normally. It was pretty flashy to see in flight, however. Three shots posted. These images scanned from old color slides.
Data aproximada
This observation is for the moth but could anyone please suggest a possible cause for the wing deformity as well? :)
Undescribed species at base of shale barren.
An ancient beetle lineage
Identified as Omma stanleyi on Bowerbird by Matthew Connors: "This family is considered one of the oldest beetle families alive today and consists of just two genera, one from Australia and the other from South America. This genus is incredibly old and was once much more widespread, with a fossilised representative extremely similar to this one (O. daxishanense) known from the Late Jurassic of China around 160 million years ago! An exciting find to say the least"
Best guess. Desiccated, branching structure emanating from wood chips. No obvious gills on underside.
We went for a Black Water apnea session.
Swimming out into the dark and looking for critters at the surface.
With a Pathogen?
Any idea what makes these tubes of dirt? I’ve never seen them before
Quercus lyrata twigs. Seem healthy aside from being turned inside out. No idea what's going on here. Edit: have found an absolutely tiny borehole through the stem at the base of the damage. Continues on for at least three inches.
Type specimen. Photo used with permission by NHM-UK. Year of observation may not be accurate.
Deinacrida heteracantha
Colenso's giant weta
Wëtäpunga
Holotype
Collected: 1939
Collected by: W. Colenso
https://www.aucklandmuseum.com/collections-research/collections/record/am_naturalsciences-object-167523
Red admiral with unusual coloration. The forewings look like they come from a Yellow admiral. I wonder about the possibility of hybrid.
Any thoughts?
Observation of whatever is causing the red venation on this hawthorn tree
This is the second member of the Ambohitantely species that bred out today 1 March 2023. The images are of what (I suspect) is a live female Madagascar silk angel moth? The final two images are of the casing the pupal skin and the dried dead adult. Len
Red Fox, on South Beach, American Camp, San Juan Island.
My dad and I saw this fox near San Juan Island National Historic Park (South Beach). It had blonde fur and very skinny legs. In the summertime, there are giant groups of rabbits running around the grassy fields. I often see foxes in this area, and I assume they predate these rabbits.
Two leucistic juveniles ‘possums :)
I was very surprised to see a black colored White-tailed Deer fawn this evening behind my house. I have seen some very dark White-tailed Deer in this area in the past:
http://www.inaturalist.org/observations/816864
but not one like this. These are just quick shots, taken against the light and as the deer were rapidly moving away, but this black fawn can be seen in company with normally colored fawns. I will be trying to get more and better shots in the next few days.
A mutated cat with two heads at a school lab
What is this, it's driving me crazy?!
There was some kind of growling/rumbling/creaking coming from under the thick layer of leaves on the floor. It was coming from many different spots in that area, dozens of it right under that tree in the photo.
Once I found a lizard running away, but I just couldn't find anything else that would make such a sound.
Does anyone have an idea what it could be?
mated pair with one colt, Catching snakes and eating them. Caught and ate 8 snakes in under two hours.
finaly one of the two buds, which we post on 21th March was bloom. and this flower bloom at same area with the flower we post on 13th and 21
we were so proud with our new local team ( Jaya ) his lovely boy. who is want learn about nature. so rare to see and meet with kid like this, where his friends busy with they're toys and gedget
found as epibionts on a copepod.
More on this here:
http://www.plingfactory.de/Science/Atlas/KennkartenProtista/01e-protista/e-Ciliata/e-source/Trichodina%20domerguei%20megamicronuleata.html
Update on 1/27/2020:
The habitat was a wooded riparian strip along a levee adjacent to agricultural fields at the edge of the Sacramento Bypass Wildlife Area.
Three photos have been added
M047, Quabbin Hill: blueberry, huckleberry, scrub oak, Visit 1.
Came to UV light.
Symmerista female locked in copulation with a Large Aspen Tortrix (Choristoneura conflictana)! See https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/125107828.
Journal description: https://www.inaturalist.org/posts/68003-a-confused-match
Definitely a new species. Entirely subterannean in habits, seemingly very restricted in range and only found on forested mountains in Marin and Sonoma county. Probably fairly sensitive to development and habitat disturbance.
Planarian or similar....but no distinguishing features like those which I imagine to be planarians... this just looked like a completely anomalous shapeless moving blob.