August 9, 2021

California Wild Women

In 2020, five of us iNatters banded together to form California Wild Women, a team that competed in the International Biodiversity Championship 2020. We enjoyed our teamwork, deepened our friendships and stayed together. When The Ecological Society of America announced the 2021 edition of the championship, our team of five, @kimssight, @naturephotosuze, @scubabruin, @redrovertracy and I, decided to participate again, covering a similar footprint of Southern California and the High Sierras.

The most striking difference between 2020 and 2021 was the state of our wildlife areas. Right now, 19.99% of Los Angeles County is in Exceptional Drought, the highest level, the rest in Extreme Drought condition, per Drought.gov. The same area was drought free in 2020.

Example Newton Canyon: Climbing down this steep canyon along the Backbone Trail, I was expecting to hear a small waterfall and the gurgling of the creek, accompanied by bird song, grasshoppers taking off, the sound of bees feeding on flowers. But in 2021, the area was eerily quiet. The creek had dried up long ago, birds and insects had either moved on or had died.

I was hoping to find Seep Paintbrushes, but they hadn’t made it. In 2020, they were flowering well into September, https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/59218717. I was hoping to find a Red Rock Skimmer, Wilson’s Warbler, Lorquin’s Admiral, Tree Frog, all easy to spot in any other summer, but there were none in 2021.

The most memorable sighting at Newton Canyon was an interesting rose gall, https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/89695772, possibly https://www.inaturalist.org/taxa/466790-Diplolepis-bassetti, which “needs more digging to figure out what it actually is,” per @mileszhang. The galls had many long, hairy spikes, and were clustered on a wilted leaf. Since I examine many leaves during each of my outings, anything that points to the fascinating parasitic symbioses of insects and plants is a highlight. I’m inspired by @nancyasquith and her https://www.inaturalist.org/projects/california-plants-with-mystery-galls/journal/39523-california-galls-a-host-plant-list-with-links, a list I highly recommend and have bookmarked.

Two days later, I found Spined Turban Gall Wasp galls on the leaf of a Valley Oak, at Paramount Ranch, https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/89972251, by far the most colorful and juicy looking find in the parched landscape.

My best day was day two which I spent in Ventura County, first exploring the Ventura Harbor Preserve, then Ormond Beach and Wetlands. Reason number one: no triple digits (38C and above), just pleasant 70s. Most organisms suffer in excessive, relentless heat, and that includes me.

Among my life list firsts in Ventura:
About a dozen Single-banded Plushback flies, https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/89857052
A Yellow-crowned Night-Heron, https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/89843125
Male (https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/89900586) and female (https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/89899037) Toltec Scoliid Wasps
The light and nearly transparent shell of a Flat Spoonclam, https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/89932459

My last observation of the day, of a Northern Harrier, was the day’s best photo, especially as I was already in the car when I saw the harrier, and scrambled to get the camera out. The harrier was flying low over the dry salt marsh, with our power equipment in the background that’s nearly iconic for the area, https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/89938819.

During the time of the championship, I made my 10,000th observation (and counting) in the Santa Monica Mountains, https://www.inaturalist.org/projects/wildlife-of-santa-monica-mountains. Most of these observations are from the S/W quadrant of the mountains, a small area I’ve come to know quite well over the last three years This is helpful during such a competitive bioblitz, as I know who lives where and can cover species efficiently and strategically, including wilted plants well past their prime.

My jaws were really hurting during the bioblitz. At first I thought I was grinding teeth in my sleep, but then realized I was gritting my teeth during the day, while I was iNatting. It was literally painful to document the state of our nature. Most of the sages were brown skeletons because they hadn’t flowered this year and seemed dead. Even Laurel Sumac and Sagebrush were browning. I found just one new berry on a Coffeeberry that’s well established and usually very productive.

One of the many plants that have become old friends of mine is a Woolly Bluecurls in a rarely visited part of the King Gillette Ranch area. I documented it for the 2020 edition of the championship, and again end of September 2020, after an all-time record breaking heat wave (121F/49C in Woodland Hills):

Woolly Bluecurls 2020: https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/55446179 and on 2020/09/27: https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/61038739

August 2021: https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/90049559

This was what made me grit my teeth.

But this was also where a team like California Wild Women comes in: shared worries and concerns about our natural areas, shared pain, but also shared highlights and above all, shared love for all things wild, and that includes each of us.

During the three and a half days of the championship, we covered the usual suspects for our area, but also took the time for detailed snapshots of the life we found in certain spots.
Take a look at the 10 Odonata species found by @kimssight: https://tinyurl.com/4tw8zt4w, and check out her second observation of an Alligator Gar in Long Beach, https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/89712681.
Take a look at the wide variety of bees @naturephotosuze found wherever there were flowers: https://tinyurl.com/m34v7uv4. Susan made a total of 195 insect observations, more than anyone else in our team.
@scubabruin rocked it with insects as well, and found 87 species. Laura had installed a blacklight in her yard and found 14 moth species alone, including the introduced Choreutis emplecta, https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/58907386, a moth Laura was among the first to discover in Los Angeles County, and had sent in specimens for identification and research.
Both Laura and @redrovertracy took overnight trips to cover areas other than Los Angeles or Ventura Counties. Laura trekked to Mammoth and added plenty of unique species to our total. Tracy braved the desert heat and roamed Imperial and Riverside Counties. Among her highlights are two observations of Burrowing Owls, https://tinyurl.com/3vpbzp7a, and many other birds she was the only one of us to get: https://tinyurl.com/89xs5767.

By the third day of the championship, Team Russia (https://www.inaturalist.org/projects/team-russia) and our team (https://www.inaturalist.org/projects/california-wild-women-2021) were in a fierce head to head race on species count, but we pulled ahead and won the grand prize. Yay to the team, and congrats to the Russians to make more observations than us. All in all, 17 teams on three continents made AND posted 11,200 observations in 85 hours.

See https://www.inaturalist.org/projects/2021-international-biodiversity-championship for the leaderboard of all competing teams.

Posted on August 9, 2021 04:00 PM by andreacala andreacala | 2 comments | Leave a comment

December 19, 2020

The Streak

Today marks the one year anniversary of a consecutive observation days “streak” I started on December 19th, 2019. I had been looking for something that would help me fight my iNat winter blues, the time of the year when observing wildlife in the Santa Monica Mountains becomes challenging, as it seems to be hibernating, waiting for rain to arrive. What I was missing above all was observing insects, after an excellent spring and summer especially for butterflies and bees that made every outing so interesting and rewarding.

Inspired by https://www.inaturalist.org/blog/29540-year-in-review-2019, and @jmaughn’s amazing streak of to date 2,823 consecutive observation days (starting in 2013), this was the personal challenge I was looking for, to help me hang in there and dig deep: Lichens, fungi, mosses, galls, the earliest flower buds… Observations while waiting for an appointment, while shopping… Stopping to take pictures of roadkill… Adding sound recordings, feathers and tracks/signs to my tools …

When Covid-19 arrived, and our lives radically changed more or less from one day to the next, keeping the streak going helped me fight so much more than winter blues. Forcing myself out of the house to observe wildlife on roadsides (when the trails and beaches were closed), in my backyard and immediate neighborhood, no matter how depressed, scared, tired, stressed or angry I felt, became my daily sanity routine. And connecting to the iNat community made me miss friends, family, and travel so much less.

I think iNatters are mostly quite rational people, interested or immersed in science, in reality, both feet on the ground. iNatters tend to be interested in research, in evidence. In a year full of conspiracy theories, political agendas, denials, in a year where one plus one didn’t add up to two for about half of the United States, iNat was my home, my sanctuary.

I participated in a few Socially Distant Bioblitzes (https://www.inaturalist.org/projects/socially-distant-bioblitz-series) and my first team competition (https://www.inaturalist.org/projects/california-wild-women), made new friends, and saw so much wildlife that it often featured in my dreams.

The bulk of my 8,490 observations to date is from that year of streaking: 6,119, on average around 500 per month, with 1,355 species observed, in a really limited radius of no more than 10-20 miles around my house, with the exception of one memorable excursion to Long Beach (60 miles) and a handful of trips to Oxnard (40 miles). Mostly I went to the same (safe, unpopulated) places over and over and over again, saw organisms come and go, followed the progress of breeding birds, of bees and their underground nest sites, of plants from flower bud to fruit…

My plan is to keep the streak going for a bit longer, possibly much longer, depending on so many things that may or may not happen. Who can really make plans right now?

===

I wanted to add a few highlights of the year, as curated / faved by fellow iNatters:
https://www.inaturalist.org/observations?d1=2019-12-19&order=asc&order_by=observed_on&place_id=any&popular&subview=grid&user_id=andreacala&verifiable=any

I faved these: https://www.inaturalist.org/faves/andreacala

Posted on December 19, 2020 04:42 PM by andreacala andreacala | 14 comments | Leave a comment

October 25, 2020

October 23rd

On Friday, 10/23, I wanted to have a special outing to an area I’d never been before, looking for a bird I had never seen in person. I asked @kimssight for suggestions, and she made a great list of destinations in the area she is roaming.

My first stop was the El Dorado Nature Park in Long Beach. I’m happy I briefly visited this popular, well designed park that offers a variety of habitats in a compact way. It’s a bit like a zoo without cages, and especially suitable for families with children in strollers, and seniors who need a clean, even, clearly marked path to walk safely. For Covid, the park made all its trails one-way, which works well to keep people distanced. However, whenever I stopped to look for a bird, I was an obstacle in the flow as there’s no space to step off the trail to let people pass safely.
Coming from the Santa Monica Mountains, the contrast was incredible. Not only is the South Bay much greener and lusher than the late summer mountains, it is also home to so very many more people, freeways, businesses… and was really noisy to my spoiled ears. But the pockets of wilderness in between all this human development are very intriguing. El Dorado is tamed, presented wilderness, but educational, and hopefully inspiring. I took one of the loops, then walked along Spring Street to the San Gabriel “river,” a small stream of water in a concrete channel.
Highlight: a banded Green Heron, https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/63429490, and a tiny, wild growing sage with striking colors, Autumn Sage, https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/63429180.

Then I drove to the West San Gabriel River Parkway Nature Trail, at Monte Verde Park, in Lakewood. This is an in and out trail in a strip of green between a residential area and the river, lined with mature Sycamores, Cottonwoods, Blue Elders, Toyon, Sages and Matilija Poppies that were cut down for the winter. It was an interesting mix of “weeds” and deliberately placed plants that attract birds and pollinators, not too manicured, but also not neglected. I had a wonderful time exploring this pocket, and among the highlights was running into Kim in person, and seeing several groups of Scaly-breasted Munias for the first time, https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/63350411. Fun to watch were also two Scrub-Jays mobbing a Kestrel, https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/63509360. Although it was a cold, overcast day, I saw several Hover Flies, and the tiniest bee yet, but I couldn’t find the Genus Pellaea Stink Bug someone had sighted in Lakewood.

I then made two quick stops at Colorado Lagoon and Mother’s Beach, but found them deserted (or didn’t know where to look), but was also quite tired, hungry, in need of a bathroom, and called it a day, and went onto the freeway for the 75 minutes drive back.

Thanks Kim for the suggestions! I’ll be back!

Posted on October 25, 2020 08:25 PM by andreacala andreacala | 8 observations | 3 comments | Leave a comment

August 19, 2020

Rock Pool Fire, Malibu Creek State Park

I was just ready to upload my observations for the Socially Distant Bioblitz on August 16th (https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/56674788), when I got an alert on my phone that a fire had broken out in my neighborhood -- the Rock Pool Fire in Malibu Creek State Park. It consumed an area of only 92.8 acres thanks to swift action by the fire department. 21 months earlier, the area had been devastated by the Woolsey Fire, which consumed 96,949 acres and took 14 days to contain... Our wildlife can handle fires every 30 to 50 years. But back to back wildfires are catastrophic.

On the next day, Mulholland Hwy was still blocked, but I looked around from a safe distance... See the text and "b-roll" context pictures to the four observations below.

More here: https://www.theacorn.com/articles/brush-fire-scare-at-malibu-creek-state-park/

Posted on August 19, 2020 03:09 PM by andreacala andreacala | 4 observations | 1 comment | Leave a comment

August 2, 2020

California Wild Women

Hey iNat friends,

@bbunny, @kimssight, @naturephotosuze, @scubabruin and I banded together to form California Wild Women, a team competing in the International Biodiversity Championship of 2020, https://www.inaturalist.org/projects/california-wild-women. If you can, please keep an eye on our observations during the competition, 08/03 to 08/06, 2020, and help with IDs and gender annotations. Top identifiers will be honored!!

More on the championship: https://www.inaturalist.org/projects/international-biodiversity-championship-2020.

Many thanks for your help!!

Posted on August 2, 2020 03:54 PM by andreacala andreacala | 2 comments | Leave a comment

November 19, 2019

Winter 2019/2020

Detailed recap and outlook on weather patterns, fires, and the impact of climate change on Southern California:
https://www.wunderground.com/cat6/Fiery-Weather-Could-Plague-California-December-Hints-El-Nio-Modoki-Popping

Posted on November 19, 2019 03:54 PM by andreacala andreacala | 0 comments | Leave a comment

November 14, 2019

2000 Observations

On 2019-11-05, I posted my 2000th observations, of a Shaggy Mane mushroom I found at Lagarde d’Apt in the French Provence, Alpes Cote d’Azur, on October 30th.
I put in a geek hour and ran the stats on the second batch of a thousand, just as when I had posted my first 1,000 observations (https://www.inaturalist.org/journal/andreacala/25683-1000-observations-some-stats).

The big differences:

  1. Time spent on iNat:
    0001-1000: 447 days / 64 weeks / nearly 15 months.
    1001-2000: 134 days / 19 weeks / 4 months and a week.

  2. Focus on insects and their relationships with plants:
    0001-1000: Insects - 109 obs of 71 species; Plants - 98 obs of 90 species.
    1001-2000: Insects - 391 obs of 169 species; Plants - 227 obs of 174 species.

  3. Butterflies! 2019 was a great year for that.
    0001-1000: 36 observations of 19 butterfly species.
    1001-2000: 184 observations of 36 butterfly species.

In my first year on iNat, I focused on wildlife I can observe around my house and also spent a lot of time in the King Gillette Ranch area. In the second year I was nearly exclusively exploring the burn scar of the Woolsey Fire, which was the first fire I had experienced first hand, including evacuation etc. I contributed nearly 800 observations to https://www.inaturalist.org/projects/woolsey-fire-wildlife-and-plants, a 365 days project to document losses and recovery from the fire. But this had a slow start for me: For about three months after the fire, I was holed up at home, and had to deal with the trauma, stress, sadness, and fear I had experienced. But as soon as I was able to face the devastation around me, I started to explore how nature dealt with it.

Comparing the first and second 1000 obs, percentages of Research Grade observations of the various kinds of wildlife are pretty similar. Birds, Mammals, Reptiles fared really well, Spiders, Funghi, Plants and Insects could use more identifiers and/or are much less suitable for identification via photographs.


1001-2000 Species All obs RG obs % 0001-1000
RG percentage
Birds 110 248 246 99% 157 species / 644 obs 100%
Amphibians 4 9 9 100% 3 / 8 100%
Reptiles 5 11 11 100% 6 / 20 95%
Mammals 14 35 33 94% 15 / 68 97%
Fishes 8
11 10 90% 7 / 7 57%
Mollusks 8 8 8 100% 7 / 7 85%
Arachnids 13 22 13 59% 5 / 10 60%
Insects 169 391 328 84% 71 / 109
83%
Plants 174 227 164 72% 90 / 98 71%
Funghi 19 28 17 61% 2 / 2 50%
protozoans 0 0
unknown 0 0
Overall 434 1000 846 85% 380 species / 1000 obs 933 obs / 93%



Some more data points:
331 identifiers, and counting.

105 observations of 71 invasive species
24 observations of 13 threatened species

775 observations of 407 species in L.A. County
84 observations of 73 species in Ventura County
106 observations of 77 species in Germany
35 observations of 33 species in France

Europe: 141 obs / 107 species / need ID: 15 obs - 11%
USA: 859 obs / 431 species / need ID: 137 obs - 16%

(The Western European iNat community is very responsive and helpful, which makes iNatting while traveling there a blast. Thank you, Danke and Merci to all.)

Most observed:
16 Northern White-Skipper
13 Orange Sulphur and Acmon Blue
12 Common Buckeye and Lorquin’s Admiral
10 Gray Hairstreak and Cabbage White
9 Monarch and Checkered White
8 RT Hawk

212 Butterflies and Moths observations of 55 species
184 Butterflies observations of 36 species - 3 need ID
15 Bumble Bees observations of 9 species

1 banded bird (a W Gull who I reported to USGS who were able to trace it).

19 popular observations, most popular with two stars of a Western Fence Lizard on a burned tree trunk.
Update: Meanwhile, the observation of a Common Merganser catching a Chub, in Munich, Germany, received five votes and has become the most popular obs of the batch, https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/34861833.

Posted on November 14, 2019 04:22 PM by andreacala andreacala | 1 observation | 3 comments | Leave a comment

September 26, 2019

Woolsey Fire

NPS page on the fire
https://www.nps.gov/samo/learn/management/2018-woolsey-fire.htm

Story Map of the fire
https://nifc.maps.arcgis.com/apps/MapJournal/index.html?appid=c2a85f0e9bb2446b986d3eaa80a8cfc6

===
08/22/2019
“Fire Fact Forum: The Science of Fire”
https://messengermountainnews.com/news/fire-fact-forum-presents-the-science-of-fire/
http://lvhf.org/2019/08/fire-fact-forum-success/

===
07/25/2019
LAT story about about the hardship of California Red-legged Frogs (https://www.inaturalist.org/taxa/67016-Rana-draytonii) before and after the fire.
[The fire] showed little mercy for the California red-legged frogs, savaging the reintroduction sites.
Mark Mendelsohn, a vegetation and wildlife biologist with the Park Service, had worked for Delaney on the reintroduction project before becoming the park’s botanist. He was the first to see the sites after the fire. “It was awful,” he said. “Just thinking about the frogs it looked awful. It was just ... a moonscape.”
The rains that followed the fire also wreaked destruction. Streams were filled with burned debris and ash, poisoning the water. Pools that had once been deep and clear filled with mud. At three of the four sites, Delaney said, “the habitat just got completely blown out.”
Then, days before Christmas last year, the U.S. government partially shut down and Park Service employees like Delaney were not allowed to work for 35 days.
Eventually, the team surveyed the Simi Hills source of all the frogs. They found 90 frogs. But when they returned for another visit weeks later, the frogs were noticeably skinnier. In February, with more rainfall coming, Delaney asked the Santa Barbara Zoo to shelter masses of frog eggs from the Simi Hills source. Those eggs ended up hatching tadpoles, which ended up being placed at two of the Santa Monica Mountains locations.
The frogs at the Simi Hills site have since recovered and are healthier and “breeding like crazy,” Delaney said. And at the fourth reintroduction site — the one not completely blown out — the frogs survived and have resumed breeding. “Those are my champion frogs,” Delaney said.

https://www.latimes.com/california/story/2019-07-24/woolsey-fire-red-legged-frog

Also on the California Red-legged Frog: https://www.fws.gov/cno/newsroom/highlights/2018/all_is_not_lost/

===
07/13/2019
https://roadtrippers.com/magazine/post-woolsey-fire-malibu/

===
05/08/2019
Fire and Rain Spell Trouble for Parks in the Santa Monica Mountains Area
The Woolsey Fire was bad enough, but the heavy rains that followed caused additional problems. Most notably: A huge crop of invasive weeds is turning into kindling.

http://www.malibutimes.com/news/article_d3d6e1a4-71ef-11e9-af8d-8bbd8099d947.html

===
05/04/2019
KCLU interview with Dr. Seth Riley, a wildlife ecologist with the National Park Service, and branch chief of wildlife at the Santa Monica Mountains National Recreation Area.
RILEY: Yeah, so one thing about the Woolsey Fire that was really impressive was just the sheer size of it - three times larger than the biggest fire to affect the Santa Monicas ever before. And it burned over 40% of the natural area within the Santa Monica Mountains. So it really - it really had a huge effect, and we're continuing to see those effects even six months later. For example, we've been following mountain lions in the park for 17 years or so, and we're continuing to see they - as soon as the fire occurred, we saw them stay largely out of that area. They would pass through it still once in a while, but, even six months later, they are mostly not using it.

https://www.npr.org/2019/05/04/720221926/how-last-years-massive-woolsey-fire-in-southern-california-impacted-wildlife

===
02/28/2019
https://calmatters.org/environment/2019/02/californias-charred-hills-bloom-again-not-all-good/

===
02/14/2019 - UCLA
After the Woolsey fire burned more than 150 square miles in November in the Santa Monica Mountains, two of the most important questions became how long it would take plants and animals to recover, and which ones will thrive or die out after the mountains’ worst fire ever recorded.
Now, a UCLA-led research project has begun a months-long study in more than 50 burn areas to closely monitor the recovery of native plants, invasive grasses, insects, slugs, snails and more. Those flora and fauna are important in their own right and also key food resources. With nearly 90 percent of the National Park Service’s land in the Santa Monica Mountains burned, a slow recovery of those smaller species could spell trouble for small mammals and reptiles that escaped the flames, said lead researcher Brad Shaffer, a distinguished professor of ecology and evolutionary biology and a member of UCLA’s Institute of the Environment and Sustainability.

http://newsroom.ucla.edu/stories/ucla-researchers-studying-how-the-woolsey-fire-affects-plant-and-animal-recovery

===
12/20/2018
County Releases Damage Info—21,500 Trees on Public Land Lost to Fire
http://www.malibutimes.com/news/article_a9195ca8-03d1-11e9-a387-ffe163d4e62d.html

===
12/04/2018
https://www.nationalparkstraveler.org/2018/12/plants-are-sprouting-burned-areas-santa-monica-mountains-thats-good-and-bad

===

Also:

https://calmatters.org/category/environment/california-wildfires/

https://laist.com/2018/11/30/feeding_wildlife_after_woolsey_fire.php

People Who Aren't Biologists Are Fighting With Biologists About Feeding Wildlife In The Woolsey Fire Zone

https://laist.com/2018/12/06/santa_monica_mountains_recovery_after_woolsey_fire.php
How Will The Santa Monica Mountains Recover From The Woolsey Fire? We Asked A Scientist

Posted on September 26, 2019 02:24 PM by andreacala andreacala | 0 comments | Leave a comment

July 2, 2019

Image 6116

Saturday, June 29, at Leo Carillo State Beach
Image 6116, as far as I know, could very well be the very last photograph I ever took with my beloved Canon EOS 60D, of a Blueband Hermit Crab (https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/28074989) and a piece of Kelp with eggs. First I thought these eggs could be the beginning of whatever the fatal problem was, but for whatever it's worth, they are also in image 6115.

My next picture was meant to be another one of a Striped Shore Crab who had lost the tip of its left claw (https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/28074812), but the camera didn't focus. I checked the lens to see if it was on manual focus, then saw on the monitor a blinking "Err 80." I switched off the camera, switched it back on, nothing. I put in a full battery, nothing. I tried a few more times, then drove home, feeling very anxious. I tried trouble-shooting by removing lens, battery, SDHC card, then holding down the shutter release for 30 seconds, and inserting battery, card and lens step but step, but got nothing. I drove to a camera shop in the neighborhood, they put in their own battery, nothing. It never came to life.

I had bought the camera on November 28, 2010, at Samy's Camera in Los Angeles, and had paid $1,399.95. There was not a single issue over the eight and a half years I had this camera. I took tens of thousands of pictures with it, some of them very dear to my heart.

I called Samy's last night and spoke with a repairs person. He shared my love for this sturdy camera and said he is using it to this day to compare settings at other cameras, and understood my reluctance to give up on it. But he also said the camera is obsolete, and repair will cost upwards from $275. He said, "I want you to write this down: EOS Rebel T6, which is the successor of the 60D. Same settings, same protocols, but lighter, faster, much more advanced. You will kick yourself for not switching to the T6 earlier." Samy's is not even selling that model, so he wasn't looking for my money, he wanted to help me out. I spent a bit of time researching, but when I found a steep discount at B&H that was to expire in 6 hours, I ordered the T6, for $399. It comes in a kit with two lenses, but I will be able to continue using my fantastic 300mm zoom lens that's actually more expensive than the new camera plus kit. The T6 should be in my hands Tuesday morning.

In all this tech trouble anxiousness, I tried to download the pictures I took that day, but the card had no pictures whatsoever on it. I was desperate! Camera bust, and all the images gone? I called my computer guy who had rescued data for me, and he said he will try his best, on Monday. I was close to tears... Waiting until Monday seemed torturous, so I tried to keep my cool and analyze this. Maybe the reader is kaput? I inserted my second card... and that showed over 1,000 pictures. Sometimes I expect Murphy's Law and create it.

I had spent the day in the burn scar of the Woolsey Fire, at the bottom of Mulholland Hwy at PCH, where the fire jumped PCH and burned all the way down to the ocean. It's still very gloomy, mood-wise, even though there's lots of new life, and reassuring evidence that our native plants can deal with fire. It's beautiful if it weren't so eerie and depressing. There were many many Funereal Duskywings flitting about, reinforcing the spookiness. And then a fatal camera crash... not too good a day.

Tuesday, July 2nd: The new camera arrived and I'm charging the battery... Meanwhile, I posted some of my observations of the day, among them my first of a Common Yellowthroat (https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/28009424), and this year's first of a Wrentit (https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/28067177) and WB Nuthatch (https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/28009336). The last day with the EOS 60D wasn't so bad after all.

Posted on July 2, 2019 07:30 PM by andreacala andreacala | 14 observations | 0 comments | Leave a comment

June 24, 2019

1000 Observations - some stats

I just posted my observation #1000, of American Goldfinches at the L.A. River (my first obs of the species), and looked at the stats so far via the filter. (Stats updated on 02/04/2020.)

1000 Observations - 378 species (update: 379 species).
Observations which need an ID: 90 (9%) (update: 62 = 6.2%).

157 Bird species - 157 RG
89 Plants - 60 RG (update: 65 species with RG)
70 Insects - 54 RG (60)
15 Mammals - 15 RG
7 Fishes - 3 RG (4)
7 Mollusks - 4 RG (5)
6 Reptiles - 5 RG (number 6 was a snake skin)
5 Spiders - 3 RG
3 Amphibians - 3 RG
2 Fungi - 1 RG
0 Protozoans
0 Unknowns

17 Species didn't show up via the filter (above adds up to 361 species)

Most observed species

  1. RT Hawk (23)
  2. Phainopepla (16)
  3. GB Heron (15)
  4. Osprey (14)
  5. Hooded Oriole, Acorn WP, LeGo, CA Scrub-Jay (11)

Most observed Mammals:
CA Mule Deer (10), Bottlenose Dolphin (8) and Coyote (8).

50 "popular" observations, 5% (update: 55)
48 invasive/introduced species (update: 50)
15 threatened species (update: 17)
8 observations /7 species of banded/tagged birds (also reported to USGS etc.)

950 observation of 341 Species in L.A. County - 88 in need of an ID (update: 53 need ID)
50 observations of 44 species in Germany - 2 in need of an ID

Time on iNat: 447 days / 64 weeks / nearly 15 months

I ID-ed 961 observations for others so far, most of them in my year two on iNat as I'm getting a bit more experienced.

My observations were ID-ed by 398 identifiers (update: 416). Top of the list, with 96 IDs, texaskingbird. Biohexx1: 60; finatic: 47, kimssight: 36; johnascher: 34; alexis-orion: 33 (who is in Germany and all of 13 years old, and VERY knowledgeable); psweet: 30; idacosta: 24; kgarrett: 21 (always very helpful); and graysquirrel with 21. Thank you all!!

Observation with the most comments (14): https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/27476417 (of a piece of fur - as yet unresolved).
Most popular (3 ***): https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/14270674 (of a Greater Roadrunner eating a Whiptail lizzie). (Update: one more star, total 4.)

Posted on June 24, 2019 03:43 PM by andreacala andreacala | 1 observation | 0 comments | Leave a comment