With Fall just beginning this plant does not change color
I have seen these flowers many times in the Boston area and around campus. They are yellow with an orange center, and very fragile hanging onto the stem. The leaves are narrow, and the edges are smooth.
Round, symmetrical berries
The color of the berries are purple
somewhat of a pinkish/purple stem
think stem
surround by green symmetrical leaves
the berries had a sweet smell and they were soft and squishy
Long, thin plant
Many little tiny flower clusters
Pinkish color
Seaside Goldenrod found in a salt marsh. One photo shows bees landing on the flowers.
Leaves that have fallen off of the trees in my neighborhood. I photographed them up close because I couldn't reach the ones attached still.
Questionably an ash tree.
Leaves are oppositely places along stem and have ridges on their edges. They are turning yellow and orange due to the fall.
Pretty wild flowers at Harvard Forest looks like a daisy because it has multiple white petals and a very thick and lifted yellow center with multiple petals that will soon dry out and become seeds. It grew in a vegetable area, lists of surrounding grasses and trees. There was also a stream nearby which probably helped with the growth of this plant.
Yellow and white-ish flower.
It's not fully bloomed.
There are four flowered per stem.
The flower shape looks almost like a cone. Pedals very soft and thin.
Inside the flower are the tiny seeds.
The pedal covering the seeds is soft/furry inside and is a darker shade, almost yellow-orange.
There we're about 3 "seeds" inside.
Has a smell, almost sour. Strong when close to it.
Close by a river. Not next to it, but near by. Near a lot of other plants.
iNaturalist changing all specific tags for this observation to Dicots after posting. This is green ash, or fraxinus pennsylvanica.
With Fall just beginning this plant does not change color
Something like neo-home sapien via snap chat