@domivaldo je ne crois pas ça semble plutôt étre un animal
Or the fungus?
the only other large Psorophora that far north besides Ps. ciliata which would have raised scales on the legs and a yellow-gold stripe down the scutum
? @edanko, @granticadubia, @bothrops07, help fix ID?
@wongun, @tigerbb, @johnascher, can anybody help fix this ID, after a troll?
Фото сделано в ГБС РАН (Москва)
@paul_dennehy....now I am not sure? H. pertextalis? or another Herpetogramma species? May be too faded.
@opolasek Please add your id
I took it to be the same as a wasp I saw a few minutes earlier on a similar plant posted here
https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/21640603
Grupo de golondrinas que revoletean sobre una alberca frente al mar para beber agua. Vientre blanco, cola poco horquillada.
A very skinny green anole.
I was confused on the look and color, whether it was a green or brown anole. It was trapped in our shed, without bugs, and I believe was shedding, hence the tail discoloration.
distigmatosa?
@mark_smale
I am not confident enough with these to confirm
second specimen
Waited forever for a dewlap shot but no luck. I know y'all experts are laughing at me for needing that to ID! What do I know? ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
Nah, distinguishing browns and cresteds can be tough. A good character here is the dark line leading up and back from the eye. Most sagrei have it, and most crested anoles have a white eyering. And you got the ID right!
@cthawley Thanks for the helpful insight as usual! That sounds like a better field mark than "hmm, doesn't look chunky enough" ;)
Caballito del Diablo de la Familia de los Coenagrionidae (Ischnura fluviatilis).
"Published records of I. ramburii from Peru and Chile presumably refer either to I. fluviatilis of southern South America or to an undescribed species endemic to the arid Pacific lowlands of those countries (R. W. Garrison, pers. comm.), perhaps also southern Ecuador." - from now-defunct IUCN page (http://web.archive.org/web/20180504134803/http://www.iucnredlist.org/details/165059/0)
Gracias por compartir la información.
Estoy equivocado al clasificar la especie como una I. ramburii, pero al no ser una especie de tierras áridas ni bajas (fue registrada a una altura de los 950 msnm en plena cordillera de Los Andes) y en base a sus sus características, creo que corresponde a una I. fluviatilis.
Cortinarius ursus shows more reddish brown colours and doesn't show pale colours in the scales on the cap.
Has wings and a tail-like protrusion from rear
Pulmo => Mediterranean Sea
OK thanks. Do you have a reference for that split? I've looked at the World Register of Marine Species website but can't make much sense of the distribution information on the two taxa.
http://doris.ffessm.fr/ref/specie/217
There is still discussion ...
Noit entirely sure, but it looks more like texanum.
It's tricky, but I think those leaves are still filamentous to be Erodium cicutarium. The E. texanum flowers that I see are usually a bit larger too.
Produz ameixas.
Ono je to takhle neurčitelné. Poznávají se podle přízemních listů nebo listů na výběžcích. Hřeším na to, že Ch. oppositifolium v této oblasti neroste.
Photos / Sounds
What
Florida Scrub-Jay Aphelocoma coerulescensObserver
mrbryanamesDate
March 18, 2019 12:53 PM EDTPlace
Brevard County, US-FL, US (Google, OSM)What a friendly bird!
What a wonderful experience this must have been. :) These birds are well known for being curious and friendly.