First spotted by Marie-Louise Cormier and photographed by Louis-Emile Cormier. I arrived in their yard in time to see the butterfly but it disappeared before I could take my own photos. Louis-Emile asked me to post these on his behalf. The swallowtail was nectaring at Swamp Milkweed in the flower gardens in their yard.
Photos @ Louis-Emile Cormier
unsure of ID.
Strange little eggs? on a serviceberry stem. In Jackpine forest/blueberry fields.
Multiple Grasshoppers infected and summited throughout this field. First two photos are of a grasshopper far along the infection process, the other 4 are from two other grasshoppers early on in the infection process.
On Twinkie packaged in 2012. It is not a morel. Full details at https://twitter.com/colinpurrington/status/1312828867686658051?s=20.
On Hostess Twinkie from 2012. Full details: https://twitter.com/colinpurrington/status/1312828867686658051?s=20.
A growth induced by A. morbosa most likely, on a young Prunus serotina. I think there is another fungus, the one that has the white teeth, growing on top of the A. morbosa induced growth .
I believe this is a “black” snowshoe hare? A young one seen at Deer Island Point NB
Dans un champ de bleuets