Photos / Sounds

What

West Coast Ant Cricket (Myrmecophilus oregonensis)

Observer

jgatten

Date

April 15, 2024 02:12 PM PDT

Description

Tiny and active makes for bad record photos

Photos / Sounds

Observer

cherobinlee

Date

April 15, 2024 06:26 PM PDT

Photos / Sounds

What

Gossamer Worms (Genus Tomopteris)

Observer

ja_fields

Date

April 4, 2024 09:36 PM PDT

Description

Observed while nightlighting and photographed in observation cup. Maybe 2-3 cm long.

Photos / Sounds

Observer

lorraine4nature

Date

February 6, 2024 04:43 PM PST

Photos / Sounds

Observer

i_edge

Date

May 11, 2023 11:43 AM PDT

Photos / Sounds

What

Common Douglas-Fir (Pseudotsuga menziesii)

Observer

rhjackso

Date

March 26, 2024 10:47 AM PDT

Photos / Sounds

What

Sulawesi Moon Moth (Actias isis)

Observer

rockyreviko_

Date

January 2018

Photos / Sounds

What

Palmer's Amaranth (Amaranthus palmeri)

Observer

thurmanjohnson

Date

August 2023

Description

Washington's first verified detection, the 2nd in the greater PNW. Identity verified via genetic testing.

Photos / Sounds

What

Spotted Veld Antlion (Palpares speciosus)

Observer

jacquesmerwe923

Date

February 5, 2024 01:58 PM SAST

Description

Huge antlion checking out the house for a bit.

Photos / Sounds

What

Western Sweet Coltsfoot (Petasites frigidus var. palmatus)

Date

December 16, 2021 11:12 AM CST

Photos / Sounds

What

Golden Kaiser-I-Hind (Teinopalpus aureus)

Observer

raylei

Date

August 2019

Place

China (Google, OSM)

Description

金斑喙凤蝶 摄于福建中部山区

Photos / Sounds

What

Cecropia Moth (Hyalophora cecropia)

Observer

kmelville

Date

June 11, 2022 03:03 AM ADT

Description

Attracted to front porch light.

Photos / Sounds

What

Long-horned Amazon Ant (Polyergus longicornis)

Date

July 4, 2022 04:43 PM EDT

Description

So, this is a polyergus bilateral gynandromorph! ½ worker caste (red), ½ alate (black). The mandibles, eyes, single wing, and antennae are the more obvious caste traits reflected in each half of this individual. Found them shortly after leaving the colony possibly (I found one a few feet away).
See: https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/124878696
& https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/124879042

Photos / Sounds

What

Hummingbird Clearwing (Hemaris thysbe)

Observer

jemredwood

Date

July 23, 2016 11:32 AM EDT

Photos / Sounds

What

Leaf Katydids (Subfamily Phaneropterinae)

Observer

matheusmsantos

Date

April 30, 2022 10:54 PM -03

Description

Curious shot taken by my friend Vinícius Ferarezi (who's agreed with this publication) on the Kiss concert. A katydid (Phaneropterinae?) landed on the MIC hahahaha

Photos / Sounds

Observer

magazhu

Date

February 11, 2016

Photos / Sounds

Observer

sarahbethwaller

Date

August 7, 2023 01:49 PM EDT

Photos / Sounds

Observer

peptolab

Date

July 12, 2023 10:50 AM EDT

Description

Paraspathidium apofuscum Long et al 2009 from the coarse sand intertidal benthos of marine estuary Acabonac Harbor at Louse Point launching ramp. Imaged in Nomarski DIC on Olympus BH2 using SPlan 40x objective plus variable phone camera cropping on Samsung Galaxy S9+. This species is quite common in my samples taken from various sites of this estuary. I always just called it "marine spathidiid" since species identification of spathidiidae is very difficult but it seems this is quite distinctive and isn't even a haptorian (see below)!

Fully extended individuals measure from 130 up to 225 um in length but they tend to contract off and on during observation occasionally assuming a markedly contracted "bucket" shape when they stand still. They appear quite dark due to the abundant refractile cytoplasmic inclusions. I show several individuals including one with a more empty cytoplasm showing the punctate pitting of the pellicle and the posterior contractile vacuole with adjacent accessory vacuoles.

At first I thought I was dealing with the congener, P. fuscum which is the type species of the genus (4), but when I found the paper by Long et al 2009 I quickly realized I was dealing with P. apofuscum in view of the smaller size, the absence of collecting canals associated with the contractile vacuole, and the more inconspicuous dorsal brush. Like P. fuscum, L. apofuscum has a variable shape which is usually cylindrical or slightly bursiform and highly reminiscent of slender spathidiids with an anterior mouth-bearing portion distinctly widened and obliquely truncate. Also similar is the presence of innumerable highly refractive globular cytoplasmic inclusions and the punctate pitted cortex as well as two ovoid macronuclei in the center of the cell (4).

Paraspathidium apofuscum: "Diagnosis: Highly contractile Paraspathidiium 130–250 μm long in vivo; single contractile vacuole terminally located, with no distinct collecting canals; 34–43 somatic kineties; dikinetid perioral kinety not forming a closed circle. Type locality: Intertidal zone of a mesotrophic sandy beach near Qingdao (36°08′N; 120°43′E), China. Etymology: Composite of the Greek word apo- (unlike) and the known species name fuscum, meaning a ciliate different from the congener P. fuscum" (1).

"Description (see accompanying figures from (1): Size ca. 200 × 40 μm in vivo, elongate, anterior end shaped like a knife-blade, posterior end rounded (Figures 1A, 2A, D). At rest, cells usually contracted and bucket-shaped. Anterior half of body full of dark granules, giving cell “half black, half transparent” appearance under low magnifications (Figures 1A, 2A, D). Extrusomes thread-like, 8 μm long, thinner in middle portion than at either end, widely distributed in cytoplasm especially around the slit-like, apically located cytostome (Figures 1A, D, G, 2G, H, I). Two ellipsoidal macronuclei, with one micronucleus between them (Figures 1E, F, 2J). One contractile vacuole, terminally located (Figures 1A, 2B, M, N). Somatic cilia ca. 7 μm long in vivo; and oral cilia ca. 12 μm (Figure 1A).

On average, 37 somatic kineties present, each composed of monokinetids plus five to seven dikinetids in anterior portion (Figures 1B, 1H, 1I, 2C, 2E, 2F, 2I). Brush kineties composed of three parts: (1) two short dikinetid kineties; (2) four or five short monokinetid kineties; (3) ca. 20 irregularly distributed kinetosomes (Figures 1B, 1I, 2E). Buccal apparatus located at anterior end of cell. Oral opening apical and irregularly elliptical (Figure 2O). Perioral kinety, consists of ca. 50 pairs of kinetosomes, does not form a closed circle. Numerous fine fibres associated with the buccal margin. Generally inactive, often float in the water, occasionally crawling slowly among sand grains" (1).

"Hitherto, Paraspahidium was a monotypic genus, the only species being P. fuscum (Kahl, 1928) Fjeld, 1955, which was redescribed by Foissner (1997b). Our new species differs clearly from P. fuscum in the following combination of characters: (1) fewer somatic kineties (34–43 vs. 50–60); (2) the absence of conspicuous dorsal brush (vs. the presence of conspicuous, highly differentiated dorsal brush; see Figures 2L, 8D, 8E); (3) perioral kinety open (vs. closed in P. fuscum) (Figures 8D, 8E); (4) contractile vacuole without detectable collecting canals (vs. with several collecting canals extending to mid-body in P. fuscum) (Foissner 1997b)" (1).

"The genus Paraspathidium has a haptorid-like shape and suite of morphological characters (dorsal brush extrusomes, a slit-like, apically located cytostome, dikinetids around buccal field). It has been regarded as a gymnostome haptorid (Litostomatea) by Foissner (4). Nonetheless, recent SSU rRNA gene phylogenies and analysis of the secondary structures of the variable region 2 (V2) and variable region 4 (V4) of this molecule support a relationship with class Plagiopylea rather than with class Litostomatea " (2,3).

Further molecular analyses (2) of three additional genes also "reject a placement of Paraspathidium in the order Haptorida or even in the class Litostomatea. Rather, these two taxa always fall into a well-supported clade X. The predicted secondary structures of V4 regions of the SSU rRNA gene are consistent with this finding. These results, together with the earlier work using SSU rRNA data from Paraspathidium alone indicate strongly that Paraspathidium should be transferred out of the class Litostomatea. It cannot at this stage be placed in any existing order-level taxon or even class. Resolution of its higher taxonomic status should be made once the precise interrelationships between Paraspathidium, plagiopyleans, prostomateans and oligohymenophoreans are resolved, since these varied between our analyses. Improved taxon sampling in this region of the tree for multiple genes would be valuable: (2).

  1. Three marine haptorid ciliates from northern China: Paraspathidium apofuscum n. sp., Trachelotractus entzi (Kahl, 1927) Foissner, 1997 and Apotrachelotractus variabialis Long, Song and Warren, 2009 (Protozoa, Ciliophora). Hongan Long, Weibo Song, Khaled A. Al-Rasheid and Jun Gong. Journal of Natural History Vol. 43, Nos. 29–32, August 2009, 1749–1761

  2. Insights into the phylogeny of systematically controversial haptorian ciliates (Ciliophora, Litostomatea) based on multigene analyses. Qianqian Zhang, Alastair Simpson and Weibo Song. Proc. R. Soc. B (2012) 279, 2625–2635 doi:10.1098/rspb.2011.2688

  3. Zhang, Q., Yi, Z., Song, W., Al-Rasheid, K. A. S. & Warren, A. 2010 The systematic position of Paraspathidium Noland, 1937 (Ciliophora, Litostomatea?) inferred from primary SSU rRNA gene sequences and predicted secondary rRNA structure. Eur. J. Protistol. 46, 280 – 288. (doi:10.1016/j.ejop.2010.05.001)



  4. Infraciliature and Systematic Position of the Marine Interstitial Ciliates (Protozoa) Ciliophora) Lopezoterenia torpens (KahI, 1931) Nov. Gen., Nov. Comb., Discotricha papillifera Tuffrau, 1954, and Paraspathidium fuscum (Kahl, 1928) Fjeld, 1955. Wilhelm Foissner. Rev. Soc. Mex. Hist. Nat., 47:41-63 (1997).


  5. Photos / Sounds

    Observer

    barchana

    Date

    August 15, 2009

    Description

    Sleeping, early morning

    Photos / Sounds

    What

    Green-striped Grasshopper (Chortophaga viridifasciata)

    Observer

    pufferchung

    Date

    February 6, 2019 05:00 PM CST

    Description

    I am not sure what this one is.

    Photos / Sounds

    What

    Human (Homo sapiens)

    Observer

    neilgunther

    Date

    March 2021

    Place

    Private

    Description

    some art I did ❤️

    Photos / Sounds

    Date

    July 26, 2023 09:34 AM PDT

    Photos / Sounds

    What

    Southeast Asian Pill Millipedes (Family Zephroniidae)

    Observer

    frank375

    Date

    July 20, 2023 02:34 PM +08

    Photos / Sounds

    Observer

    georgemuttathil

    Date

    July 30, 2023 01:41 PM IST

    Photos / Sounds

    What

    Geometer Moths (Family Geometridae)

    Observer

    that_bug_guy

    Date

    March 2023

    Description

    Second time finding a wingless moth on this pillar. Here's the last time: https://inaturalist.ca/observations/111032251

    Photos / Sounds

    What

    Himalayan Blackberry (Rubus bifrons)

    Observer

    kimberlietx

    Date

    October 4, 2020 02:25 PM CDT

    Description

    I had identified this bramble colony as R. bifrons (first time seen in DFW) from photos after I found R. pascuus for the first time in the metroplex too. I couldn't wait to go see it for myself and tick off all 5 TX species on my life list!

    Picture descriptions and general notes:
    1 - White abaxial leaf surfaces (general pic for ID)
    STEMS
    2 - Primocane #1
    3 - Primocane #1 close up; nearly erect prickles with broad bases, pubescent
    4 - Primocane #2; retrorse prickles
    5 - Cross section of primocane #1 showing pentagonal shape
    6 - Floricane #1; retrorse prickles with broad bases, pubescent
    7 - Floricane #1 close up
    8 - Older floricanes (#2) bicolored; red on top, green on bottom
    9 - Floricane #2; features consistent with floricane #1
    10/11 - Floricane #2 prickles 5mm wide and 6mm long
    12/13 - Primocane prickles 4mm wide and 6mm long
    14 - Stems growing densely underneath leaf canopy
    LEAVES
    15 - Dense leafy growth
    16 - Terminal leaflet; shape: oval, base: rounded, margins: serrate, apex: caudate to attenuate; surface: not lustrous
    17 - Abaxial leaf surface; petioles, petiolules, and primary veins armed; secondary veins and blade unarmed
    18 - Petiole
    19 - Terminal petiolule
    20 - Primary and secondary veins
    21 - Abaxial leaf blade white tomentose
    22 - Stipules very long and narrow; Axillary bud present
    23 - New leaves appear more corrugated and shinier than older leaves which are duller, less corrugated, and wider
    24 - Several leaves with misshapen leaflets, or even a single oversized leaflet
    GROWTH/HABIT
    25 - New growth creeps along the edges, could be mistaken for vining/low habit
    26 - 5 Leaflets on creeping floricanes more consistent than shrubby sections
    27 - General growth habitat; between the bank of a creek and a concrete pathway; Full sun; This particular section was typically 4 ft high
    28 - R. bifrons growing closest to path, with Cornus drummondii closest to the creek bank; Other nearby vegetation includes Celtis laevigata, Maclura pomifera, Salix nigra, Bothriochloa ischaemum var. songarica, Paspalum dilatatum, Calyptocarpus vialis
    29 - Trying to estimate plant height using an isosceles right triangle based on the 6 foot wide path. Plants average 4-6 feet (12-18 dm)
    30 - This particular colony of R. bifrons measured 166m along the edge
    31 - Even when soil was scarce, the creeping canes would still spread thickly over the rocky ground.
    32 - Soil along creek was clay over limestone
    33 - USGS map indicates soil content: Thick clay units and thin limestone units alternating clay, marl, and limestone

    Additional observations:

    -- My first impression was this is the thickest growth, both in floricanes and leaf coverage, of any of the upright species. In heavy shade (under trees) the growth was not as thick or as tall. Probably the biggest colony of Rubus I've seen.
    -- Several leaves had misshapen lateral leaflets, or a single leaflet, (1-)3-5 leaflets overall.

    -- No prior season inflorescences seen at all. Nothing remaining on the stems or on the ground. (R. pascuus still has inflorescences attached at this time.)

    Photos / Sounds

    What

    Winged and Once-winged Insects (Subclass Pterygota)

    Observer

    jparkerdickerson

    Date

    June 20, 2023 01:00 PM EDT

    Photos / Sounds

    What

    Yellow Box (Eucalyptus melliodora)

    Date

    August 25, 2014 10:51 AM JST

    Photos / Sounds

    What

    European Hornet (Vespa crabro)

    Date

    August 26, 2020 07:58 PM ADT

    Description

    A friend from Mayne Island sent this suggesting it was a murder hornet? Thank you to this group for helping identifying it as a European hornet. Found on Mayne Island, BC apparently. See comments below. No I did not take this photo myself.

    Photos / Sounds

    What

    Navy Eighty-Eight (Diaethria astala)

    Observer

    agranados777

    Date

    July 12, 2020 10:36 AM CST

    Description

    Lepidoptera

    Photos / Sounds

    What

    Siberian Larch (Larix sibirica)

    Observer

    allaverkhozina

    Date

    November 12, 2022 04:03 PM +08

    Photos / Sounds

    What

    Scots Pine (Pinus sylvestris)

    Observer

    stepanoffandrei

    Date

    October 28, 2019 02:58 PM UTC

    Photos / Sounds

    What

    Human (Homo sapiens)

    Observer

    natforlife

    Date

    December 26, 2005 09:39 PM CET

    Description

    South Pole Station

    Photos / Sounds

    What

    Blue Pouch Fungus (Clavogaster virescens)

    Observer

    bacres

    Date

    August 30, 2005

    Description

    None

    Photos / Sounds

    What

    Rosy Aemilia (Lophocampa roseata)

    Observer

    necrobotany

    Date

    August 2022

    Photos / Sounds

    What

    Styrian Praying Lacewing (Mantispa styriaca)

    Observer

    gernotkunz

    Date

    June 30, 2022 12:46 AM CEST

    Photos / Sounds

    Observer

    alecblume

    Date

    June 8, 2021

    Photos / Sounds

    What

    Narrow-headed Marsh Fly (Helophilus fasciatus)

    Date

    August 2018

    Photos / Sounds

    What

    Mossy Rose Gall Wasp (Diplolepis rosae)

    Observer

    jamigramore

    Date

    August 18, 2018 07:47 PM PDT

    Description

    This observation is for the cause of the rose gall.

    Photos / Sounds

    What

    Western Tiger Beetle (Cicindela oregona)

    Observer

    mangoverde

    Date

    June 20, 2011 02:30 PM EDT