Green sunfish
Longear sunfish
Bluegill sunfish
Redear sunfish
I had never seen a rattlesnake along a trail before, so this was pretty cool!
On trail cam.
I attended a "Talk & Walk" on lichens at NKU's Research & Education Field Station (REFS) this evening, but the highlight of our hike was this magnificent, colorful, inch-long buprestid beetle. There were a couple of them at the base of a giant oak that we were examining for lichens. I have never seen one like this before, and I was impressed.
on cutleaf coneflower below several mature Hackberry trees.
I did my best to document the sighting but focus was really on enjoying the moment of seeing such an incredible animal right next to the boat. The content here is a combination of two photos from my DSLR and a screen grab from an iPhone video. I had hoped to try and put my GoPro underwater via an extendable monopod, but after approaching the boat twice in quick succession the shark was not seen again even with an attempt to relocate it.
The shark was found while investigating a large gathering of feeding pelagic birds and tuna.
Unnamed creek in front of school that leads to trib of Cumberland River.
94 total caught during night monitoring and released.
re-posting so I can add it to dead herps for the anole.
Captured using benthic trawl during flood stage (40ft). Trawled gravel shoreline that is exposed during base flow. Approx 6 individuals from this side class were collected
Worked on this area about four years ago. All of the yellow in the understory is spicebush. It has filled in nicely after honeysuckle removal. Ohio Buckeye and Paw Paw are common members of the understory in other areas of the same property but spicebush is the dominant understory species. It helps that the deer don’t like it.
Picked one of my favorite warblers for observation 19,000.
I was visited by a frog today.
I noticed it while I was having lunch along a creek near where I had been clearing honeysuckle all morning. When I saw it, it swam into the center of the creek from the far side. I thought this was odd because it was swimming closer to me, although also into deeper water.
I took the first picture when it was floating in the center of the creek after swimming there from the far bank opposite me. I took a few pictures and it got spooked and swam back under an overhanging rock. I tried to get a picture of it floating underneath the overhanging rock by dipping part of my iphone in the creek. You can see the lower half of the frog dangling below the surface of the water in the second picture. The picture of the dangling frog turned out really blurry so I dried off my phone and went back to eating my lunch.
While I was eating my sandwich (chicken salad), the frog swam out from under the overhanging rock, right up to where I was sitting and got out of the creek onto the rock right in front of me. I asked the frog in a full throated voice, "what the heck"? He said nothing. I took the third pic after I sat up onto my knees to pet the frog. Yah, I know, a grown man petting a frog on the side of a creek. But what was I supposed to do, just finish the sandwich? I took a couple pictures to make sure I got at least one good one. It just sat there looking at me when I stood up to leave.
I am open to any explanation of this behavior, scientific or theological. I'm somewhat agnostic and willing to entertain any theories. And also to be visited by all types of frog, bullfrog or otherwise.
I don't see bald-faced hornets visiting many flowers, but they love Late Figwort. There were two of them visiting three figwort plants at the bottom of the hill. I just noticed these plants growing there this year. I think it's the first time I've seen this type of hornet visiting a flower on my lot.
Decided to collect seeds from the Solomon’s plume this year. They require double stratification but what the heck, I’m very comfortable with failure.
What I like about this plant is that I found it in much smaller numbers, limping along 15 years ago when I first started clearing invasives like honeysuckle. The seed bank under invasives has never gotten better in southwest Ohio, only worse. This means that the natives that have managed to persist amidst this flood are particularly important. The reason for their persistence must be either geography or genetics.
If the reason is genetics, it might be more important to propagate natives from the exact places where invasives are the worst.
4th pic - what the seeds looked like after being removed from the pulp and just before the first stratification.
This was observed on a somewhat unhealthy black locust. I'm pointing out that it's somewhat unhealthy because bugguide says that larvae of this insect can be "found in tree holes among sawdust and in burrows of the Gopher Tortoise, Gopherus polyphemus".
There are box turtles in the Five Mile Creek corridor. They don't exactly burrow like a gopher tortoise but they do excavate areas for their nests. I'm still betting on the tree holes as the likely source of this individual.
I resisted the urge to stick my arm down the tree hole and sift through sawdust looking for larvae.
Larger fish cyanellus, smaller fish megalotis. Both caught on same hook concurrently. Unique situation.
Rough green snake is not a rare snake but very rare to find.
So cute and so tiny! The antennae were crazy long, about twice its body length. How is that not awkward?
I couldn't believe it stayed in place for so long, allowing me to photograph it somewhat decently.
It stood alertly, turning periodically. Idk whether it was watching for something or defending territory.
Found in the same streambed but a 100+ yds downstream of the individuals I observed in 2020
Second time I've seen one of these in the shallows this summer. Same general location. This time I at least had the iphone with me. Approximately 5' long including saw.
Attracted to exterior light.
Barely grabbed my phone in time to take this poor photo. It had just made an unsuccessful attempt to grab one of the squirrels attracted to our feeders.
We've been hearing lots of sounds just after dark and just before sunrise.
It sounds like fox cubs calling. Hard to know. Haven't seen the cubs. Only this adult. This is in the same spot where we've seen a fox the past few years...
Hoping to get pics of the cubs if there are cubs. Would love to think that removal of honeysuckle and garlic mustard over the past 10 years have lead to an increase in rabbits which resulted in this fox family living in the back. There's no way to know. It could just be that I'm able to SEE the fox because there's no honeysuckle obstructing the view into the woods.
spending daytime sleeping in flowerpot in greenhouse for over a week
Bobcat on the road in Fernald Preserve
Wet woods. Wood frogs everywhere.
I happened upon this potter's wasp pot that was actively being provisioned. I watched the female stuff a caterpillar in and then I left for an hour. Upon my return the pot had been sealed. I removed the branch and took it home, about 5 miles away. After 25 days a new adult wasp emerged. I released the new wasp."
Frog call coming from pool drain. Could not see the frogs.
Lulu, our Southern Flying Squirrel eating a Periodical cicada that made it into our screened porch. I'm guessing there will be a bunch of fat squirrels running around Anderson this year.
Colony gets bigger every year. This colony has expanded from a handful of individual plants that existed under honeysuckle that was removed several years ago. It's really gratifying to see this local native colony expand following the removal of an invasive honeysuckle over-story.
This is a colony I'm continuing to track as part of my backyard restoration project.
Individual 1.
Cincinnati OH backyard