This individual was at a small stream with a tiny waterfall drop in the forest at about 1200m elev. Habitat photo included.
I've read the literature and it looks right for rogertaylori, though I would be interested in hearing from those experienced with the species.
On a silty marine mudflat. Might be a stunted common species(?)
On alder
on birch
with habitat shots- growing about 3m away from Holodiscus among Salal
3 individuals
On mineral soil over rock along creek channel. Richardson Mountains. RM19-11.
this one looks like P. flammea, but it is too hairy, I think
Only known location for this species in AB - patterned fen east of Horseshoe L., Caribou Mtns. Specimen collected under permit for an Alberta Parks inventory project.
Still not used to seeing this absolutely everywhere given how rare it is in Alberta.
M.J. Oldham 37879b; specimen record; replicates at ISC, NHIC# 11977; identified as B. tunux by D.R. Farrar Nov. 2019 from specimen scan ("the smaller stocky ones with rounded pinnae") (mixed collection with B. lunaria, 37879a, https://inaturalist.ca/observations/101043359); open, flat low, vegetated beach ridge near Hudson Bay coast; local; new to Ontario
Spécimen avec 2 trophophores
GPS waypoint updated
Interesting to hear why this individual is so dark.
Hairy!
on wet humus mound in bog birch and cottongrass ecosystem. 22BC006. Synoicous.
Watson Lake Bioblitz
Found under the silverberry while pruning. Sadly i grabbed it with a handful of dandelions while pulling weeds. I’ve never seen it before and truly hope there are more here.
I did this one using my table.
What gives it away for me are the measurements at the end
Last picture is most distal cauline leaf.
Arctica?
It is whorled so not ssp arctica. It does not have purple-blue flowers though.
I am pretty sure? @brucebennett
I have been looking for it for a while. It was common around location. I was pretty excited :p
https://yukon.ca/sites/yukon.ca/files/env/env-slender-gentian.pdf
Location is exact
https://yukon.ca/sites/yukon.ca/files/env/env-soldier-rockcress.pdf
Commonly occurring on location. GPS point exact :)
Even though petals are white the scape is densely pubescent with white hairs and flowers are less than 2 cm in diameter
This one fits better with Aphragmus, fruits seem still very young. No flowers found but definitely bracteate.
Again found it very common along the slims river.
It has linear leaves somewhat clasping stems but most importantly phyllaries that are densely glandular and villous
Seems to be commonly occurring restricted to this location. Most of them are not flowering at the moment (we just saw one) but I did try to map the east side of the slims river until the glacier for @brucebennett
Right?
I have been looking for it.
Large population. Commonly occurring from the top of Mount Abraham until Mount Distincta
Female Wood duck? She seems a bit lost up this far north.
In dry upland vegetated sand dune with Achillea millefolium, Lupinus littoralis, Holcus lanatus.
Maybe? these things confuse me. In a shady understory along a trailside
It seems it could be Aphragmus eschscholtzianus. By rivulet. Location is accurate if it is.
Stem with simple. Siliques with very few sparsed simple hairs. 1 cauline leave with entire margins but a what i interpret as a small deformity on one single side, with simple hairs (same with basal leaves- simple hairs both sides) . there are a few trifid hairs too. This one only fits, in my amateur opinion, with D. Kluanei
hilltopping in 40 Mile caribou herd summer range
Blades firm and somewhat stiff with 2 lower divisions about half as long as terminal one. Densely glandular.
Found by Divide Lake in moist situation.
Stem leaves narrowly elliptic to oblanceolate.
Found on Glissade Pass going from Divide to Trailhead.
Petioles are clearly not glabrous and should be long wrinkly pale rusty hairs.
Pedicularis x rouyana : hybrid of P. tuberosa and P. cenisia
Another new seep, possibly a new subpopulation. Sample collected, pending confirmation from the RAM.
Found on rocky-gravelly open slope.
Cody 2nd edition- Native species, leaves pubescent, stems curved. . Petals sulphur yellow, scape (stalk) with sparse and soft spreading hairs (pubescence).
For subspecies the FNA key for Subspecies kluanense(http://www.efloras.org/florataxon.aspx?flora_id=1&taxon_id=233500854) says: Scapes hispid with light-colored trichomes; capsules with light to dark brown trichomes.
Dry slope.
Gradient: 25-30 degrees
Elevation: 735 meters.
Height: young, up to 2.8 cm.
Leaves: up to 9 mm long.
Stalk finally hairy.
Inflorescence:
Corolla: petals up to 2.5 mm long.
Calyx: septals 3-3.5 mm long.