Frs horizontally arranged; sepals 5, keeled, mostly closed; pericarp not separating; achenes rounded; lvs narrow-lanceolate.
Ssp: Densely branched, infls arching; upper lvs entire
I found several populations of this Baccharis that is not identifiable- it’s not any of our FL native species.
All plants across the region are less than 2ft tall, and have fleshy leaves. Occurring in coastal salt marsh, co-occurring with B. angustifolius, B. glomeruliflora, and B. halimifolia - all of which exhibit their typical height and characteristics.
Not sure if this is undescribed, or a species not know to occur in FL which isn’t representatives in our floristic keys.
Was able to remove some mother plants and a lot of smaller plants. Temporarily in my yard until they're relocated. NJ conservation got back to me and a land steward I know is picking some up. And rest to whoever wants them.
This was a cool spot, going to miss it! The silver lining is these plants seem very hardy. There were many young plants around a mother so they seem to reseed easily. There was a dense thicket of these that I didn't see the last few times I came here. These were growing in clay and another wild type in the same county I saw was growing in more sandy soil. They were growing in full sun and part shade. Was also able to make a few cuttings from some over the summer, all of them took and they root easily.
I understand the demand for warehouses, but it was hard to watch.
Gall on flower buds of Polygonella polygama. Larva is orange, visible in upper-left in first photo.
With var. dumosum on the left. Seems to have too many ray flowers to be var. gracilipes. @linaceae happen to ever come across this stuff?
Floral scales distichous; spikelets compressed, in glomerules. Didn’t collect anything for a more thorough keying.
Thanks to@margaretcurtin for ID assist. Spikelets densely pubescent, leaf blade is also but with pubescence less than a millimeter long, (for this metric, ignore the longer stiff straight hairs on the leaf margin) and the plant is fully prostrate and in very sandy open habitat almost on the ocean shore. This is a state watch-listed species and known from only Southern New England.
Leucolepis x ?? Phyllaries not right for str8 leuco and leaves wonky too. Was hoping this would end up being paludicola having seen it earlier in the year but this ain't it.
Photos 2-4 are comparison of P. susquehanae (left) with Aronia melanocarpa (right), with which it frequently intermingles and superficially resembles from afar. Note the presence of glands, absence of black dots on the midvein, and red petiole on the Prunus. The Prunus also tends to have whiter undersides (see third photo).
Marine Park/Mill Basin area, Brooklyn. Street median strip space. Same unidentified Legume plants noted before, unfortunately no reproductive parts. iN suggests Medicago, seems reasonable.
Marine Park/Mill Basin area, Brooklyn. Street median strip. Same unidentified species & population noted before, still no flowers. https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/76891773
Marine Park area, Brooklyn. Street median strip space. Apparently young plants, perhaps Trifolium?
I didn't have enough light (or patience) to attempt a photo of the leaf hairs that could be zoomed in to see how the hairs branch, but I attempted it with a digiloupe. (For once my uncooperative phone camera worked.) Velvety yellowish hairs under the leaf. Leaves shaped like water oak or laurel oak but no red oak group pointy tip. Flaky bark like a white oak. This one appeared to be embracing the pine.
I've had a pin in my Google Maps elsewhere in this tract for a couple years now. There's an herbarium record I want to follow up on. (Nothing rare; I want to compare it to the weird Monotropa uniflora I found elsewhere in Jasper County.) But I was never going this way on Highway 11 before. When an iNat observation of a lifer oak popped up in the same tract AND there was traffic on 75 encouraging me to take the alternate route to Piedmont NWR (20 to 11), I decided to finally check out this spot on my way to Piedmont.
This is a powerline ROW on a tract that three or four different maps show as Oconee National Forest, but for some reason there are private property signs along one edge (Feldspar Rd) which I only saw because I drove down to see if there was an easier place to park. (There is a place to park on Highway 11, but I was hoping to not leave my car in such a visible spot.) (I now have a dashboard sign that says NOT BROKEN DOWN. LOOKING AT FLOWERS.)
After looking at all my maps (and seeing several iNat records from different people in the tract), I concluded that here at least was Oconee NF or at least, I was very unlikely to get into trouble based on all of these maps supporting that reasonable belief. Still, I didn't go far into the ROW. This is a longwinded way of saying that there may have been more Oglethorpe oaks present, but between my anxiety about an imagined unpleasant encounter and all the flies aiming for my eyes, I didn't go very far. I also wanted to make it to Piedmont NWR.
I really want to explore this spot more. If there is an uncommon oak here (plus some cool bugs), what others treasures are here?
I'd like to go back, but not alone, and maybe after contacting the Forest Service and/or adjacent property owner (and probably some of the iNatters who have been here, too) to ease my paranoid lawyer-y anxiety about accidental trespassing.
Discoloration on leaves of harbinger-of-spring (Erigenia bulbosa). Viral? Fungal? Doesn't appear to be environmental damage.
Eggs found on underside of store bought parsley
Found in Burlington county several years ago as a garden weed.
rocky, somewhat disturbed, young woods on E facing slope
checked in key
what is this lump at the base of this beech (Fagus grandifolia) bud? a gall? a scale insect?
Underleaves large, most over half the size of lateral leaves. Free margin of lobules inrolled.
Found growing on bark in an orchid pot in the NYBG gift shop