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Raptor Wednesday
In the space of a long minute, two Bald Eagles… … an American Kestrel… …an Osprey… … and a Northern Harrier were spotted overhead at Marine Park Nature Center. Then, there were plenty of Osprey sightings. Hard to say how many individuals, however. A minimum of two, certainly.
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Odes of Fall
And suddenly, Odonata season is almost over. Familiar Bluet/Enallagma civile. Orange Bluet/Enallagma signatum. Rambur’s Forktail/Ischnura ramburii. Fragile Forktail/Ischnura posita. The usual suspects around d the edge of Sylvan Water. Common Green Darner/Anax junius, one of the last dragonfly species to be seen in the year. (This is a female.) We still have a few weeks…
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Monarch Monday
Every picture shows a different individual. Or, in the case of the first image: three individuals, one of whom is also seen with another Monarch in the second picture. So, there were four on those Mexican Sunflowers.
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Organ Pipes
If you look for it, there’s ample evidence of Organ-pipe Mud-dauber/Trypoxylon politum activity. The female wasps build these long chambered tubes, stuffing them with spider prey for their young. Most are vertical, but there re some horizontal ones, too. They sometimes follow the topography of the terrain, as it were. I am assuming these entire…
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Slug Fact
Snails and slugs are both gastropod mollusks. The big difference of course is the shell. Snails live inside their shells. Most slugs you’re likely to run into live around their shell. It’s internal. (There are three families of slugs that don’t have shells at all.) This decomposing slug shows off the calcareous, plate-like form, eroded…
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Caterpillars
One of the “armyworms.” Dogbane Saucrobotys Moth/Saucrobotys futilalis Salt Marsh Moth/Estigmene acrea. Ailanthus Webworm Moth/Atteva aurea Oh no, an early instar of Monarch that didn’t make it. A geometer family caterpillar, I guess, on goldenrod. There are a lot of small difficul-to-ID caterpillars out there. Here’s another one: Happy Fall! ( A day late.)
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Marine Park
The US Army Corps of Engineers spent millions on restoration at Marine Park Nature Center, but without maintenance, the usual bane, it’s largely gone back to phragmites and mugwort. Still, there are some scraps of habitat. This was actually most unusual: the first iNaturalist observations of Myzinum maculatum.
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Raptor Wednesday
This Red-tailed Hawk is Class of ’23. The red tail feathers won’t come in until next spring/summer.
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Little Blue
The Little Blue Heron/Egretta caerulea is white during its first months. The slaty blue starts coming in in the spring. Jamaica Bay is generally the place to see them within the confines of NYC, but this one has been hanging around Green-Wood and Prospect Park lately. There is already some darkening around the shoulder. This…