24 de octubre de 2023

500 species!

It's that time of year to look at blooming rabbitbrush and upload your photos. More than 3,000 observations from 600 naturalists have contributed and there's still more biodiversity to document. Cheers!

Publicado el 24 de octubre de 2023 a las 10:40 PM por egordon88 egordon88 | 0 comentarios | Deja un comentario

07 de mayo de 2023

400 species!

Well done, everyone. 2,700 observations are now part of this project and I see a huge range of arthropod observations showing the ecological importance of rabbitbrush.

Publicado el 07 de mayo de 2023 a las 06:24 PM por egordon88 egordon88 | 1 comentario | Deja un comentario

27 de octubre de 2022

Project Milestones

2,000 observations
300 species
and 500 participants

Good work, everyone!

Publicado el 27 de octubre de 2022 a las 03:16 AM por egordon88 egordon88 | 0 comentarios | Deja un comentario

02 de octubre de 2022

General comments

The rabbitbrush is flowering again in the Albuquerque area, and I was able to get out to go nature hunting for the first time in several weeks. The most common species I saw on rabbitbrush were Painted Lady and Chauliognathus lewisi, with the latter being quite abundant and gregarious on certain individual plants. Lots of similar observations from NM are being added to the project, which is great to see. A big thanks to @egordon88 for his work in adding lots of observations to this project!

Publicado el 02 de octubre de 2022 a las 06:42 AM por joshuacde joshuacde | 1 comentario | Deja un comentario

17 de febrero de 2022

Why Rabbitbrush?

First, thanks to Joshua for starting this project. I hope we will get lots of participation this year.

I think this is a great plant to appreciate for many reasons. Widespread, prolific bloomer, and smells nice (opinions vary).

Some animal highlights are ...

Diptera: On gallformers.org, 24 species are listed for Ericameria and 7 for Chrysothamnus. Almost any Syrphid fly will visit for nectar.

Lepidoptera: Chamisa is one of the best places to hunt for Noctuidae on summer and fall evenings. The specialist moth, Schinia unimacula, is found all over the western US (http://mothphotographersgroup.msstate.edu/species.php?hodges=11188).

Hymenoptera: I have seen a variety of wasps hunting and nectaring, especially Braconids like Lytopylus. Bees adore it, including 93 pollen specialist species (https://jarrodfowler.com/pollen_specialist.html) and potentially hundreds of generalists and other Asteraceae specialists.

Coleoptera: Beetles love flowers too, especially Checkered Melon beetles and Soldier beetles.

Publicado el 17 de febrero de 2022 a las 01:15 AM por egordon88 egordon88 | 1 comentario | Deja un comentario

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