Sensing opportunity, the Ringed Assassin Bug responded to the presence of an Eastern Yellowjacket by stalking it, but, as that Yellowjacket became aware of the threat and became defensive, the Assassin, realizing that it was over-matched, backed off to defend itself.
Specimen from UVM ZTZC, date set to the middle of the month - the label only has month and year.
Stayed on my finger for over 150 of my steps while I walked the trail.
First state record!
1000++ nests over the entire base path on a town ballfield. Photo 2 shows the area around 1st base bag. Photo 3 is a closeup of a portion of this same area. Photo 4 is home plate.
Greater number of nests observed in the clay-colored substrate on the base paths compared with the grey substrate on home plate and the pitcher's mound.
A few individuals of Nomada lehighensis were observed parasitizing the nests. See observation https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/213534760
Solar eclipse totality c. 3:25 PM
Bat foraging ......at least from 5:15 PM through 5:50 PM ... to ?
during which the bat rested on the roof a few times.
A happy bird - found a hard-boiled egg.
Forest fire and pileated woodpecker feeding holes.
*Approx dimensions of entire pellet: 3" long x 1.5" wide by 1" thick. This seemed to be the entire pellet.
*Approx. dimensions of skull: 7/8" long x 1/2" wide.
Owl pellet found along the LaPlatte river trail near the bridge by the Shelburne Bay boat launch in Shelburne. Photos later taken in Winooski VT are on white cloth. Glove photo taken onsite with pine cone segment for reference.
Eclosed today. Kept in natural conditions since discovering cocoon last fall.
mating in the clutches of a crab spider.
The story of the last catamount found in Vermont can be read here: https://vermonthistory.org/explorer/people-places/animals-farm-wild/the-last-catamount-in-vermont
Single flowering shrub in fertile, dry, hickory-oak-hornbeam glades on the flat top of Austen Hill, in Vermont, near the east shore of Lake Champlain. Leaves only partly grown; flowers past peak bloom. The exerted stamens distinguish it from our other gooseberries except Ribes hirtellum; lab measurements gave a style length of 7-8 mm, and a ratio of style length/petal length between 3 and 4. Hirtellum typically has the style 4 mm or less and the the ratio around 2. Macrophotos match pictures from Split Rock Mt., Westport, NY, about 45 miles NNW, on the west shore of Lake Champlain.
Location was taken from the Whitehall USGS quad, and is accurate +- 200 m.
In addition, hirtellum is typically a plant of fens, cold forests, and northern shores; I have never seen it in an dry-mesic oak-hickory community.
Nonflowering plants with generally similar leaves to rotundifolium (only slightly furry, some with truncate bases) were common on the top of Austen Hill. Flowering plants of Ribes cynosbati (spines on ovary, cup-shaped hypanthium, stamens barely exserted, leaves generally more furry) were common on the lower parts of the hill, below the cliffs. My experience with the species in the Champlain Valley suggests that the nonflowering plants of the two differ in pubescence, but not reliably enough for accurate identification.
Habitat on the top of Austen was typical dry-rich glades: red and chestnut oak, shagbark hickory, some pitch pine, prickly ash, a small shad in the spicata-sanguinea complex, ground layer dominated by Carex pensylvanica, with Danthonia spicata and Deschampsia flexuosa; ground layer diverse with a total of about 20 herbs and graminoids, including Hepatica (Anemone) americana, Arabis (Araabidopsis) lyrata, Helianthus divaricatus, Asplenium trichomanes.
We have known rotundifolium from rocky fertile hills on the west side of Champlain for 15 years, and have been looking for it on the east side of Champlain. This is the first record for Vermont, and perhaps the first New England records since Les Mehrhoff saw it in Connecticut in the 1980s.
Jerry Jenkins, Northern Forest Atlas Project.
A roadside plant that I have never seen before. Similar to buckwheat, but smaller and with different flowers.
My initial reaction was West Virginia White but they are rare in this county so I settled for Mustard. I would appreciate any expert opinions and reasoning.
Pieris virginiensis; West Virginia White egg stage on host Dentaria diphylla
County Road
Pownal, Vt.
Edge of a bog with no dung in sight (but clumps emerging from a sort of empty spot where a pile of scat likely once sat and humified). With regular, multicellular leaves (differentiating this species from S. pennsylvanicum)
Second VT record, both on Salix interior in the past two weeks.
general and lilac sesiid lures
Found in riparian steam bed, beneath a rock, above high water line
On Ulmus americana:
https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/199615326
Co-discovered with @pantherophis (shown in last photo) on first American Elm we inspected on a trip to Vermont.
As far as we know, this is the first observation of EZS in Vermont. Other EZS were found throughout the day and will be uploaded to iNat.
Somewhat unexpected…
No sign of A. helianthi...
at porch light. i didn't set up any black lights because I thought it would rain.
C. henrici? @kpmcfarland @bryanpfeiffer
A newly-excavated Red-bellied Woodpecker cavity has been discovered by a European Starling. The male and female Red-bellied are both visible in this photo and the male is trying to pull the Starling out of the nest by its foot.
Starting to see new life with spring just around the corner!
He started drummng two days ago.
Did not see the tail but an American Stoat has been staying around my bird feeders waiting for rodents.
one of a flock of five
Nice population found by @mirosen with several dozen plants
Found in leaf litter under a basswood tree. I compared it to some of the cocoons I raised and I think it’s a Luna moth.
Found on a vertical daylily stem after it was just cut down. Caterpillar was still just visible inside. I attached it to this red maple branch (as it finished the cocoon) and put netting around to keep a bird from pecking it. Can observe it many times a day and can remove the netting next spring at breakout time. Any other tree I should put it on after coming out?
Found dead on the sidewalk in downtown White River Junction, VT
On a fern next to a small spicebush