The ants were busy feasting on the nectar
Tiny greenish white flowers with four sepals (no petals) along the stem, which extends a good distance above the basal leaves. It’s a smartweed / member of the buckwheat family. The leaves are ovate and quite large. The upper surface is quite hairy and scabrous/rough (see closeup photos), although I’ve seen some sources describing the leaves as glabrous to short-pubescent. At the bases of the petioles one finds hairy sheaths called “ochrea.” The ants seen in the photo are not pollinators - they’re simply harvesting the nectar. The ripe seedpods can jump several feet. I’m hoping to observe that in late summer.
Growing as a weed in garden bed, in shady soil under planted Rosa carolina thicket.
Growing with the non-native subspecies, (subsp. australis). This observation indicates how to distinguish these two subspecies:
https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/32894320
Both subsp. americanus (native to North America) and subsp. australis (introduced to North America) are found at this site, sometimes growing intermixed. In the photos the former is indicated with an “N” and the latter with an “I”. On the date I visited this site, 16 September 2019, these are the differences I observed with living stems between the two subspecies:
•Relative stem height: subsp. americanus usually shorter, subsp. australis usually taller.
•Relative stem spacing: subsp. americanus usually more dispersed, subsp. australis usually denser (rarely solitary).
•Stem breaking: subsp. americanus fibrous and hard to break off, subsp. australis often breaks off easily.
•Stem color (lower/older internodes): subsp. americanus red and often shiny, subsp. australis yellow-green and not shiny.
•Stem texture (lower/older internodes): subsp. americanus smooth, subsp. australis minutely ridged.
•Stem & leaf sheath dots: subsp. americanus often present, subsp. australis absent.
•Leaf condition: subsp. americanus has lots of senescence, subsp. australis generally are healthy.
•Margins of upper leaves near panicle: subsp. americanus finely serrated, subsp. australis coarsely serrated.
•Sterile stems more abundant than fertile: subsp. americanus yes, subsp. australis no.
•Panicle branches for panicles of similar length: subsp. americanus fewer, subsp. australis more.
•Panicle branch spacing: subsp. americanus farther, subsp. australis closer.
•Flowering status: subsp. americanus finished flowering, subsp. australis flowering.
There probably are other characteristics I overlooked that distinguish these two subspecies from each other. Perhaps these characteristics listed above hold up at other sites in North America. I don’t use leaf color to tell them apart because although some clones of subsp. australis are strongly blue-green, some clones of that subspecies are more green or yellow-green. See this observation for an illustration: https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/30610594
Observation of P. australis subsp. americanus from this location: https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/32878566
Observation of P. australis subsp. australis from this location: https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/32888630
28 Aug 2020.
Buckingham Springs, Bucks Co, PA.
Found next to a stream.
sea grapes with White-crowned Pigeon
Invasiva infestante lungo le rive del torrente
This lols to be an escape form somewhere as the marks are too brilliant
This is the largest groundsel tree I have ever seen.
Methodically feeding on jumpseed flowers.
This tiny caterpillar was eating the leaves of jumpseed.
On jumpseed
ID basics (for class)
herb, simple, alternate, entire, stipules fused into sheath (ocrea)
flowers in fascicles in raceme-like cluster; tepals free, radial; ovary superior
motif: dicot & Polygonaceae
ID basics (for class)
herb, simple, alternate, toothed, stipules seemingly present or absent
monoecious, flowers radial, ovary superior; note the petiolar glands & the stellate hairs
motif: dicot & spurge (Euphorbiaceae)
Feeding on Persicaria virginiana.
Nectaring on Persicaria virginiana on the banks of Hook Creek just upstream from its confluence with Bogus Run. To me, they look closest to genus Empis, partly because of the very long proboscis -- but this one generally seemed to rest with its wings spread a bit. These photos all depict the same individual.
12 Jun 2019.
Buckingham Springs, Bucks Co, PA.
Found on Persicaria virginiana in a woods.
Sawfly larva feeding on Persicaria virginiana, underside of leaves
Exotic purple flowered Corydalis. New to Tennessee?