April 10, 2012

Location: The area near Hansee, McCarty, and McMahon residence halls extending to the UW Power Plant area. The hummingbird was found right near Hansee and the other three were found next to the Power Plant building in small garden patches.

Route: From Hansee Hall's main entrance, head left down the path and down the stairs leading to the area outside McCarty. Continue down the street past McMahon and loop around towards Hall Health and Loew. The unidentifiable plant plants, the Himalayan Blackberry, and the Spear Mint were all located behind Loew and behind the Power Plant.

Weather: It was a gorgeous day with about 10-20% cloud cover and temperatures at about 64 degrees. There was a light wind blowing all day.

For information on the habitat and vegetation of this area, please see the journal entries for March 27 and March 30, 2012 from here on iNaturalist or in the written field journal since I have explored this area many times in my last few forays for species and have documented the various aspects of it twice before.

General Comments: Because today was so nice, there were plenty of bees around looking for flowers. I want to document bees in the future if I can, though I tried today and had a lot of difficulty since they don't stay still for very long. I hope to have better luck in the future. I also want to try to get out of this small area I've been finding so many species in for the past two weeks. I hope to go looking in Magnuson Park in the future.

Species List:
Himalayan Blackberry (Rubus armeniacus)
Spear Mint (Mentha spicata spicata)
Common vetch (Vicia sativa)
Japanese Maple (Acer palmatum)
Rufous Hummingbird (Selasphorus rufus)

Publicado el 11 de abril de 2012 a las 06:23 AM por tessaf tessaf

Observaciones

Fotos / Sonidos

Qué

Balsamita Mayor (Melissa officinalis)

Autor

tessaf

Fecha

Abril 10, 2012 a las 05:57 PM PDT

Descripción

For more information on the habitat and vegetation of the area this plant was found in, please see the journal entry for March 29, 2012 here on iNaturalist and for information on the weather and other details from the day this was spotted, please see the journal for April 10, 2012 here on iNaturalist as well. Spear mint is an herb used in cooking and it has many medical purposes as well. This plant grows well in all temperate climates and in the area I found it, it was growing abundantly in small clumps. Spear mint does produce flowers, but the one I observed had not yet.

Fotos / Sonidos

Qué

Arce Palmado Japonés (Acer palmatum)

Autor

tessaf

Fecha

Abril 10, 2012 a las 05:58 PM PDT

Descripción

For more information on the habitat and vegetation of the area this plant was found in, please see the journal entry for March 29, 2012 here on iNaturalist and for information on the weather and other details from the day this was spotted, please see the journal for April 10, 2012 here on iNaturalist as well. This plant is a deciduous shrub or small tree that is not at all native to this area, but native to Asia as its name implies. It is grown all over the world because of its decorative leaves. This particular specimen was about 9-10 feet tall and its leaves were relatively small. This species prefers temperate areas. This particular tree had small pink flowers that were beginning to bloom now, in early spring.

Fotos / Sonidos

Qué

Zarzamora del Himalaya (Rubus armeniacus)

Autor

tessaf

Fecha

Abril 10, 2012 a las 05:59 PM PDT

Descripción

For more information on the habitat and vegetation of the area this plant was found in, please see the journal entry for March 29, 2012 here on iNaturalist and for information on the weather and other details from the day this was spotted, please see the journal for April 10, 2012 here on iNaturalist as well. Himalayan blackberry is considered an invasive species and it often chokes off the plants around. The flowers bloom in late spring to early summer and the berries form in late summer. The berries are not actually berries, but fruits with many drupelets. This specimen was about 2 feet tall and was poking out of a bed of English ivy. It did not have flowers yet and there were others like it throughout the bed of ivy.

Fotos / Sonidos

Qué

Algarrobilla (Vicia sativa)

Autor

tessaf

Fecha

Abril 10, 2012 a las 06:01 PM PDT

Fotos / Sonidos

Autor

tessaf

Fecha

Abril 10, 2012 a las 07:18 PM PDT

Descripción

For more information on the habitat and vegetation of the area this plant was found in, please see the journal entry for March 29, 2012 here on iNaturalist and for information on the weather and other details from the day this was spotted, please see the journal for April 10, 2012 here on iNaturalist as well. This hummingbird and a couple others like it were found flitting around a tree that was about 8ft tall near the top branches. They were small, only about 3 inches long, and made little chirping noises. The males are very brightly colored all over their bodies while females' colors are located around the throat. It was impossible to tell whether this individual was male or female as it was so far away and the lighting was poor. These birds eat insects and the nectar of flowers.

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