Three seedlings under multi-stemmed adult. Botanic gardens glasshouse.
On 7 November 2002, I ran a 50 m long and 8 m wide transect out from one of the several original Archontophoenix cunninghamiana palms in St. Johns Theological College bush. At all points along the transect, the adult palm at the base of the transect was the closest A. cunninghamiana palm. All juvenile palms were recorded in this transect. I estimated a total of 7,542 seedlings in the transect, where seedlings were operationally defined as plants < 20 cm high with ≤ 3 leaves. Seedlings within 4 m of the adult were so numerous that their numbers were estimated at 7,000 from a census of one 1 square metre quadrat, shown in the photographs here, which contained 1069 seedlings. A total of 542 seedlings were counted more than 4 m away from this single adult palm along the transect. A total of 34 established juveniles were also counted, the largest of which was 3.6 m high and three of which were greater than 30 m away from the adult palm. No plants of Rhopalostylis sapida of any age were noted along this transect, although it is present in the bush.
Cultivated ex-Stewart Island. Patch there at Bragg Bay that are very big with glossy leaves. Possible hybrid C. robusta x C. lucida. SEcond photo shows the middle leaf as a possible hybrid with potential parents each side. Has the black stipule and fruits like C. robusta but the leaves look halfway between.
Found these, looks fresh, only ones found.
Does anyone know what this is? It appears to be killing the lancewood.
Audio: calls at 0:04 and 0:40. One pair were seen flying around that morning
Low growth of Tradescantia on CHF bank between and beneath invasive weeds in June 2018 was supplemented in Jan 2019 by Tradescantia removed from the CHF Bank forest canopy, and canopy margin. The mass has been piled in rows across the bank, covering cut CHF stems to help rot them and reduce fire hazard from hollow dry woody material while maintaining them as habitat.
Space between the rows for native seedlings to germinate, where tradescantia regrowth is being allowed to progress through summer drought. Run off will be assessed in autumn and the material piled suitably for decomposition without spread. The area below it is already densely infested apart from the areas this material was removed from.
COMPARISON OBS PLZ LEAVE AT GENUS LEVEL.
Comparison between:
Vespula vulgaris QUEEN.
V. vulgaris WORKER.
V. germanica WORKER.
For comparison with:
V. germanica QUEEN see:
https://inaturalist.nz/observations/35298484
For the two different QUEENS side by side see:
https://inaturalist.nz/observations/42534542
Complete set of castes germanica vs vulgaris see:
https://inaturalist.nz/observations/42536795
Complete set of germanica castes see:
https://inaturalist.nz/observations/42536794
Complete set of vulgaris castes see:
https://inaturalist.nz/observations/41663384
For ID of Vespula MALES see:
https://inaturalist.nz/observations/42040174
Also (with dissection):
https://inaturalist.nz/observations/116510663
For ID of Vespula WORKERS see:
https://inaturalist.nz/observations/41667758
And:
https://inaturalist.nz/observations/69245344
For germanica QUEEN and MALE mating see:
https://inaturalist.nz/observations/42534531
Dominant tree in regenerating indigenous forest. Images show tree canopy, trunk and bark, seedlings, distinctive glabrescent linear foliage (note bright yellow-green colour typical of this species) and branchlets - note these appear glabrous (they do have sparse, fine, patent (divergent) hairs - but these can usually only be seen using a 20× magnification hand lens when in the field). Note also the flowers which are very shortly pedicellate.
These are features of Kunzea ericoides s.s. a northern South Island endemic that was originally described from specimens collected by the French from Astrolabe Passage in what is now Abel Tasman National Park in the 1820s (probably 1826).
Track side. Flowers just opening. Kauri Pt centennial park
Roughly 7 generations growing in this spot, all self seeded since I brought three seeds here from the foothills of the Olympic Mountains 15 years ago. Thousands of plants here now. The ground is now covered with pappus hairs from this year’s seeds. As all of these plants are self-seeded it fits the iNaturalist definition of "wild", but I also thought people should know this is not part of a population that has persisted here since before European contact.
(Update 3/24 these thistles are no longer so dense here, but are still numerous.)
This species was on a list I found 21 years ago of those native species that hadn’t been recorded in Seattle in decades when I started studying how to identify them all, and just what habitats they naturally grew in, and looking for where I could find wild seed of the species on that list from sites physically and ecologically close to Seattle, to try planting in the most promising spots here.
I started with the goal of helping the recovery of butterfly species that had become rare in, or had disappeared from, Seattle, and knew thistles to be important as both butterfly nectar, and host (caterpillar food) plants, and had learned that all 4 of Seattle's native thistle species were on that list of our lost species. So I am pleased to see a bit of improved butterfly habitat in this spot where this native thistle species is thriving again!
I’ve since spent 15 years weeding this site and controlling the Artichoke Plume Moths https://www.inaturalist.org/taxa/319034-Platyptilia-carduidactylus, the best I can, as the mother plants sent their offspring to occupy the growing patch of land vacated by my weeding around them. I also have a significant problem with non-viable seed, more later in the season, than with the initial crop, which I believe is due to predation of the receptacles, where the seeds develop, by the introduced Rhinocyllus conicus - the Nodding Thistle Receptacle Weevil https://www.inaturalist.org/taxa/229899-Rhinocyllus-conicus .
One plant growing between main access way to buildings and wooden pier. Seems to fit this species better than S. nodiflorum because the calyx lobes though reflexed are broad and the mature fruits are dull rather than glossy. Flowers distinctly stellate, stamens 1-1.2 mm long.
Voucher: P.J. de Lange 14031, AK 377411
Common on stream side banks. Leaf with prominent border failing just below apex. Costa failing just before apex. Apex margin minutely serrulate. Vaginant lamina 2/3 of leaf length.
Interesting behaviour.
Killed at a site normally associated with common wasps (aphid sugar on oak). It has been cold for two or three days, the German wasps who normally hunt insects have switched to nectar. This has implications for use of protein based baits.
Street berm near primary school, at location recorded for this observation. Common in neighbourhood. Stems of two plants collected and observed individually at a nearby location
dead vine on dead karamu. Vine cut in ad hoc intervention during informal survey mid-2018. Karamu may already have been dead.
Several juvenile Tree privet to 2.5mH here had foliage reduced at that time. (Still present, see red flagging tape x2, but no longer suppressing native vegetation)
Beside plot 8.
Photo 2 clump including dirt is 45mm tall.
Common Feather-Moss (Eurhynchium praelongum) = Kindbergia praelonga
[Apr 2019: also plot 5?
Feb 2018: https://inaturalist.nz/observations/9865375]
Scale in photo - smallest division 0.5mm
Photo 1 by EB.
Native Invasion - Among The Mosses of Christchurch Bryony MacMillan
Kindbergia praelonga considered to be naturalised in NZ
http://bts.nzpcn.org.nz/bts_pdf/Cant_2004_38__25-32.pdf
such a massive ancient tree ... location beside the heaphy track but not this exact place...
Growing on a shaded rock wall beside regenerating coastal native bush behind the homestead.
After reviewing a lot of obs, I believe there was a juv kotukutuku among this Tradescantia. No longer observable in June 2018, and some yellowed carex are present in bare ground at pathside
Update...2mH juv observed leafless in mid June 19, further back from path. The foliage observed earlier thgag is no longer present may have been a low branch of this juvenile, while the rest of the plang was leafless or hidden by other foliagd or just nog recognised
Stream side on arum lily
Golden scales at base of stipe and crown. Cyathea medullaris nearby but not that, too golden. Doesn't appear planted.
?
among regen of mainly exotic herbs after mass vine/shrub weed clearance
Still c.3.5-4mH.
Pruned as high as could reach with loppers Winter 2018.
Growth slowed but as top branches are too high to reach the tree was inexpertly - and incompletely - ringbarked some months later.
It did not flower in the Spring or summer. (Maybe still juvenile?)
Regrowth was mainly on lower stem, within canopy of dense young native tree foliage, and broken off or leaf stripped and partially broken as it emerged.
Native trees alongside have closed in a bit.
NB There are 2-3 other Tree privet within a metre, being controlled in different ways, and in some photos their foliage can be confused. This specimen currently has foliage at its top, and a few slender shoots from the trunk rubbed off today.
Monitoring continues.
Sort of wooden rose coming out of a tree trunk.
a patch spreading through the native plantings in the domain. maybe the origional was planted in the camp ground next door but these are wild.
Wild bird dispersed seedling. Under natives at a holiday home. Other bird dispersed weeds pesent as usual.
Carapace from a molt. Claw found 3 m away in rock pool appears to be a match.
A comparison of V. vulgaris and V. germanica.
They drowned so they may look a litte rough.
here moving between hunting perches
Wild growing on edge of native wetland from an illegal garden dumping area that is still being used...
waist high. oith solid and brownish. stem not soft. leaf and stem similar.
Wild seedlings. Going ip in. Size and with adilt nearby shot for reference :)
harvesting kelp flies off shady coastal cliff.
Patch previously observed. This area used to be farmland, but is being turned into a retention basin. Half of this wee population is already wiped out, and I suspect the rest will go the same way.
There's 100s of these seeds in my garden but I can't locate where they've come from or what they are.
New weed in Kowhai Bush, Kaikoura.
Voucher specimen in Allan Herbarium CHR 644108
A morphologically and genetically distinct variant in the Cryptic skink group. Currently confirmed only from a small area of interconnected gullies at an elevation of 1500m asl in the North Otago mountains. Likely to be known as the "Oteake Skink".
My wild rose seedling! Growing fast. Multiflora? It turned up by itself in my garden!
Pic 1 : Comparison of five big leaves cotoneaster species
Pic 7 : And four little leaves.
Came from owaka. Trying to get it out of town. Someone wants to plant it :o
Seedlings germinated in basalt rock wall - a large plant had been growing here four years ago. Calystegia marginata appeared in this area in 2011, initially as a single plant. Its origins are unclear but it is probably indigenous to the area as I have also seen it in several sites around Auckland. The distinctive pale yellow-green, 'fish-tailed' often lobed sagitate leaves. The flowers of this species are white, and rather small (up to 20 mm long).
While recording birdsong in the evening I seem to have captured on video the flight of a bat.