Taste like radish and cucumber. Mildly staining blue where damaged. In a muddy hillside near a stream.
Cap turning reddish in KOH.
Specimen associated with this record is here: https://www.botanicalcollections.be/specimen/BR0000005713868
At UV Lights. Travis County TX - Near Hornsby Bend
Warm night, full moon, humid with several inches of recent rain. Light sheet set at the edge of a large field.
underground (not deep) in dense patch of Bassia scoparia on leech field (septic system)
Seen while completing plant monitoring with Steve W in the Hole-in-the-Donut, Restoration Area 1998 & 2013 in Everglades National Park. Location is accurate.
More info about this amazing area here: https://www.nps.gov/ever/learn/nature/hidprogram.htm
Project that includes most of the restoration areas: https://www.inaturalist.org/projects/everglades-national-park-hole-in-the-donut-restoration
All my observations from the HID today: https://www.inaturalist.org/observations?nelat=25.59471699636507&nelng=-79.87456997164617&on=2023-01-02&order_by=observed_on&place_id=any&subview=map&swlat=25.253636995897704&swlng=-81.32613857516179&user_id=joemdo
Purple Glory Tree or Tibouchina Grandiflora
this observation is for the plant, not the chameleon
Two very similar Codon species, Codon schenckii and Codon royenii, occur in Namibia. Codon schenckii has bright yellow flowers (not pale yellow) and the flowers are more open (less bell shaped). Codon royenii has pale yellow flowers and the flowers are quite closed or bell shaped.
There has been some speculation that a third Codon species could exist in Namibia which has open flowers with a pale yellow colour - which would make it very similar to this observation.
Nombre común: Peyote
Hay mucho que decir de esta planta, es común en las áreas desérticas de Nuevo León. Planta considerada como mágica y divina por ls pueblos nativos del norte de México y sur de EUA.
Otra mas?!... dirán Ustedes, pero no creo cansarme de mostrar la gran diversidad de plantas que tenemos aquí en Nuevo León, muchas de ellas son tan poco conocidas y hay tan poquita información al respecto.
Bueno, en esta ocasión otro miembro más de la familia de las siemprevivas (Crassulaceae), por desgracia otra niña sin nombre,¿alguien tiene una idea?, bueno podemos ve aquí algunos otros miembros de esta familia presentes en Nuevo León:
PD.- creo que esta es la única foto de esta especie en su hábitat que está disponible en internet. :D
Growing in wet, grassy soil in marshy area under conifers.
Visited a really interesting spot in Falfurrias with some deep sands and cool plants! Still have to work on the ID's on these... Several new plants for me! :)