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Raptor Wednesday
10/A pursued by a Fury, or at least, a Common Grackle. This one was way up there, but if you look hard you can see the wide tail band and the dark edges to the wings: Broad-winged Hawk in migration north.
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The Weavers
May 8th The beginnings of a Baltimore Oriole woven nest in a London Plane. I’ve noticed that the nests here in Green-Wood are often made up of human-made materials—plastics, ribbons, fibers—and that they don’t break down over the winter—indeed, even several winters—like ones made out of plant materials would. Here, judging by his nearby presence,…
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Le Rouge et le Noir
It is the breeding time of year, when smaller birds dare to go after the much bigger, sometimes in teams, other times solo as in this case.
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A rough day for the fishes
Opening wide before partially submerging, this Double-crested Cormorant snagged breakfast as a swallow zoomed by in the foreground. On the second of two plunges into Prospect Park Lake, this Osprey came up with prey Within one minute along Sylvan Water in Green-Wood, this Great Egret caught one two Bluegills.
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Cherry Petal Scenery
*** A reminder that I also write for JSTOR Daily, where recent topics have included possums, rocket sex cults, anointing of kings named Charles, and the strange posthumous career of Albert Einstein’s brain.
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Deer Vomit & Honeybees Again
The cutting down of this mature Sycamore Maple resulted in a plethora of sap, which in turn feeds a slime flux of incredible colors. This is a fungus, or rather several fungi, including yeasts, and probably some bacterias. (Deer Vomit is the common name for Fusicolla merismoides, which may be a species complex, but there…
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Insects
Brown-belted in Blueberry. One of the numerous Nomada bees. Dark red with dandelion yellow markings are distinctive looking, but members of this genus are quite hard to identity. There are at least 288 species on the genus in North America north of Mexico. Speaking of things hard to ID. Less than 20% of sawfly larvae…
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Case Bearer
While scouting for my first Bugging Out insect walk at Green-Wood Cemetery this year yesterday, I tried to photograph these tiny encased caterpillars dangling from silk lines from a Japanese Larch. When I brought the group by, there weren’t as many visible, and a couple of the attendees spotted them before me. They’re about 5-6mm…