Fecha añadida
18 may. 2017
a las 09:58 AM PDT
Fecha añadida
31 dic. 2022
a las 10:32 AM PST
Fecha añadida
03 dic. 2023
a las 02:52 PM PST
Fecha añadida
25 jun. 2023
a las 05:20 PM PDT
Fecha añadida
07 ago. 2023
a las 11:43 AM PDT
Fecha añadida
13 feb. 2023
a las 01:02 PM HST
Fecha añadida
06 feb. 2024
a las 06:02 AM UTC
Fecha añadida
13 jun. 2023
a las 06:57 PM PDT
Fecha añadida
24 ene. 2022
a las 09:35 PM PST
Fecha añadida
05 mar. 2024
a las 02:37 PM PST
Fecha añadida
25 ene. 2024
a las 03:12 AM UTC
Fecha añadida
25 may. 2020
a las 01:09 AM UTC
Fecha añadida
04 ago. 2016
a las 04:01 AM PDT
Fecha añadida
28 jul. 2023
a las 08:19 AM PDT
Fecha añadida
18 oct. 2023
a las 03:49 PM PDT
Fecha añadida
30 abr. 2021
a las 12:41 PM PDT
Fecha añadida
18 ene. 2023
a las 05:28 PM UTC
Fecha añadida
17 may. 2023
a las 04:30 PM UTC
Fecha añadida
17 dic. 2022
a las 09:35 AM PST
Descripción
Pretty sure this is a Summer Tanager. Seen at the Riverside-Corona Resource Conservation District's LandUse Learning Center demonstration garden. It was about 7 or 8 inches long beak to tail tip -- so too big to be a vermillion flycatcher. It was hanging around our pomegranate and toyon trees, but didn't see it eating. I even captured his call on the Merlin app. These birds are pretty rare here.
Fecha añadida
09 ago. 2020
a las 06:24 PM PDT
Fecha añadida
20 ene. 2022
a las 11:25 AM PST
Descripción
Undescribed species. In rich soil under log. Living more or less in loose colonies.
Fecha añadida
14 oct. 2023
a las 11:35 AM PDT
Fecha añadida
20 abr. 2021
a las 10:19 PM UTC
Fecha añadida
02 sep. 2023
a las 08:12 AM PDT
Fecha añadida
24 jul. 2021
a las 04:14 PM EDT
Fecha añadida
25 jul. 2022
a las 10:35 PM PDT
Descripción
These photos were stimulated by the conversation in this observation:
https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/88441502
about whether our San Jacinto plants were E. tilingii or E. corallina.
This plant was at the edge of Reeds Meadow.
Taking what I could see in my photographs, and comparing them to the Jepson eFlora and FNA treatments, this plant has five characteristics that fit E. tilingii better:
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the mostly glabrous stem fits the "glabrous or sparsely stipitate to short glandular-villous" stem of E. tilingii better than the "moderately hirsute to hirtellous" stem of E. corallina. There are some downward-pointing hairs, fitting the "deflexed" hairs of E. corallina, but there is no corresponding description of the hair aspect for E. tilingii.
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the translucent leaf hairs fits the "thick-vitreous, eglandular" hairs of E. tilingii, and not the "dull gray" leaf hairs of E. corallina.
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the clear dentate teeth on the leaf blades fit the "irregularly denticulate" teeth of E. tilingii better than the "generally crenate" leaf edge of E. corallina.
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the wedge-shaped leaf base fits the "cuneate to attenuate" leaf base of E. tilingii, and not the "truncate to shallowly cordate" base of E. corallina
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the stalked glandular hairs on the calyx fit only the "glabrous or sparsely stipitate-glandular to short glandular-villous" hairs of E. tilingii, and not the "glabrous" calyx of E. corallina (caveat: those descriptions were for the "fruiting calyx", and my pix show a flowering calyx).
The glandular hairs on the leaf margins fit neither species.
Here's a summary of what I see in my photographs in this observation:
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pedicel stalked glandular, mostly in lower part
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calyx stalked glandular in flower
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leaf widely elliptic, strongly toothed, almost lobed. 5 veined from base. base wedge-shaped, angle ~90 deg. tip rounded. blade hairs translucent, tapered to tip, stalked glandular toward edge of blade.
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stem mostly glabrous, with some retrorse hairs at base of each node.
Fecha añadida
11 jun. 2023
a las 07:02 PM PDT
Fecha añadida
25 may. 2023
a las 07:40 PM PDT
Fecha añadida
19 may. 2019
a las 03:23 PM PDT
Descripción
Dudleyas at Painted Cave.
Fecha añadida
28 abr. 2023
a las 12:28 PM PDT
Descripción
A number of iNaturalist observations have been posted of this undescribed taxon from Kelso Dunes and Soda Lake Basin sands, past collectors have placed under M. transmontana. Tasha La Doux and I in the process of compiling background information and conducting morphological and genetic research leading up to the publishing of this as a new taxon.
Fecha añadida
09 mar. 2023
a las 01:35 PM PST
Descripción
Only a single individual seen
Fecha añadida
31 oct. 2022
a las 02:45 PM PDT
Fecha añadida
16 may. 2018
a las 02:12 PM PDT
Descripción
Bromus madritensis ssp. madritensis and ssp. rubens.
Fecha añadida
16 jun. 2018
a las 04:39 PM PDT
Fecha añadida
19 ene. 2023
a las 03:26 PM PST
Fecha añadida
30 abr. 2022
a las 11:00 AM PDT
Descripción
This plant is growing on a somewhat remote sandstone peak in the Santa Monica Mountains on exposed shelves and flats amongst sandstone outcroppings; within an area of about 50 square meters. Growing in openings among Eriogonum cinereum and Salvia mellifera.
Leaves are fleshy and succulent.
Around 500 plants were noted on a single south facing exposure, other smaller sub-populations were noted to have ~50 plants.
Fecha añadida
12 abr. 2022
a las 03:30 PM PDT
Descripción
This was the only A.p. desertica we found on a survey of the Cedar Spring Trail and the PCT north of it. We found it at our turn-around point, so there may be more plants of this taxon farther north.
The first pix shows the glabrescent ovary of this taxon, very different from the many hairy ovaries of A. glandulosa on the plants farther down. The numerous leaf-like bracts in the infl are also very different from the ones in the previously-seen A. glandulosa.
Fecha añadida
23 abr. 2022
a las 11:39 PM UTC
Fecha añadida
29 mar. 2022
a las 08:36 PM PDT
Fecha añadida
12 mar. 2022
a las 10:39 AM PST
Fecha añadida
10 sep. 2017
a las 04:39 PM PDT
Descripción
Eating what appears to be a frog eye.
Fecha añadida
18 may. 2021
a las 10:05 PM CST
Fecha añadida
08 abr. 2020
a las 11:00 PM CST
Fecha añadida
16 ene. 2020
a las 09:14 PM PST
Fecha añadida
14 nov. 2016
a las 09:46 PM PST
Fecha añadida
10 oct. 2016
a las 09:37 PM PDT