Travis County, Wild Basin
8/10/2018
Liatris glandulosa
Unfortunately, there were only a few of these plants at Wild Basin, unlike the patches we've found in other places in the Austin area in recent days.
The species is abundant on the desert flats here but none of the plants are more than an inch tall at present. Only found this single plant in bloom. The species was blooming abundantly back towards Iraan and Eldorado along US 190.
New location. Medlin Cemetery
I took a specimen home and examined it under my dissecting microscope. The scape below the involucre is glabrous, and most of the basal leaves have a similar shape to the involucre, which is on the lower part of the scape. A third characteristic are the long hairs on the underside of the sepals.
Kendall County, Tx
around 1950 ft, sheltered, remote canyon near springs
no blooms, but interesting seed pods. Stems very red
Compare the color and crooked growth habit of the trunk of the soapberry sapling to the color and straight growth habit of the Chinese pistache sapling. Although these plants are wild, I’m going to mark them as not wild. I don’t want this to be Research Grade, because that would confuse the Computer Vision model.
This set of images of some herps is derived from a wildlife survey on a private ranch in western Palo Pinto County, downstream of Possum Kingdom Lake. The marked location is approximate. Scanned from 35mm Ektachrome slide. Date is estimated from date stamp on slides of “July 79”.
Claypan soils (Silstid). Associates included Eryngium yuccifolium, Sorghastrum nutans, Asclepias verticillata, and Silphium radula.
Only one plant visibly around
Documenting locations of Engelmann's Thistle around Ennis
Here, on hwy287 access road near Rudd Rd.
I just learned to distinguish it from Texas thistle using the key in Flora of North Central Texas:
Stem leaves (except uppermost) deeply pinnatifid, divided 1/4 to - 3/4 to midrib.
"Pinnatifid" is hard to describe, so google it or look at these pictures. I include one of the leaf for that reason.
I found I can spot those leaves up to about 30ft away.
Per key at :
C. lindheimeri:
Single main stem, robust, not branching at the base.
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@alusk, you might be interested. Near the Arboretum fence at the Great Lawn