Next after 71

After unit 71, we headed to a second location.

Here the Arkansas Yucca (Yucca arkansana) was in a nice green color! Notice the fire ant mound at the base? Did you know that we have native fire ants. I have been told that most of the fire ants you see in a native prairie are native. I am not quite sure (yet) how to tell the different in the field.
Some of the Two-flowered Milkvine (Matelea biflora) seed pods still have their fluff. The bumpy pod tells me it is the Two-flowered Milkvine (Matelea biflora) and not a milkweed pod.
When you are walking out on limestone barrens, look down. Often you will find the ground covered with a brown lichen called Earthscale (Clavascidium lacinulatum). These scales are important for holding soils.
Another lichen on the barrens you might find is the brighter Psora decipiens! Also it can be found directly on the soil.

And at this location we found over 200 individual plants of the Cymopterus (Vesper macrorhizus)!

It was a great day in the field!

What Happens to a Tree That Dies in a Forest?

Caught On Drone: Narwhals Stun Prey and Play With Their Tusks

Keep looking!

The more you know, the more you see and the more you see, the more you know

6 Comments

  1. Great info on deadwood – brown rot, white rot and melanin’s dark tracery – now I have a name for all those different decomposers!

  2. Are you sure about the “native” fireants? I have grown up in this area 70 years and never encountered fireants until they were imported from South America.

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