2020年12月13日

Hypocreales in North America

Those interested in Hypocreales in North America can download this useful book for free:

Hypocreales of the Southeastern United States: An Identification Guide
Authors: Gary J. Samuels, Amy Y. Rossman, Priscila Chaverri, Barrie E. Overton and Kadri Põldmaa

At: https://wi.knaw.nl/images/publications/BiodivSeries/BIODIV_SERIES_4.pdf

由使用者 keith_seifert keith_seifert2020年12月13日 14:44 所貼文 | 2 評論 | 留下評論

2020年07月06日

My moth education

Most of the moths I’ve been photographing are on our front porch. This has been an unplanned covid-19 project. Each evening, I walk the dog, then see who is hanging around the light. The diversity has surprised me. Taking a reasonable photograph at night with the iPhone is a challenge, especially for the ones that are smaller than 1 cm.

One surprise has been that my reflex to retreat or swat at moths flapping around my face seems to have retreated. Last night, this guy (http://www.inaturalist.org/observations/52139137) was very determined to flirt with me, landing on my neck and in my hair before settling on the door to pose for a photograph.

There is also a dark fishing spider who I see ever few days, keeping his eye on the situation (http://www.inaturalist.org/observations/48871206). It’s a bit intimidating, but also rather beautiful.

For a while, Paul Hebert was using the metaphor of “turning a light on for biodiversity” in his talks. It’s fun to be doing that. It makes me want to learn more about how these creatures spend their lives.

由使用者 keith_seifert keith_seifert2020年07月06日 13:06 所貼文 | 0 評論 | 留下評論

存檔