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Norfolk Hawker - Anaciaeschna isoceles

 

Habitat

 

The optimum conditions for breeding appear to be unspoilt grazing marsh dyke systems with clean, non-saline water, rushy margins, preferably with an abundance of water soldier as well as other aquatic plants.

Threats

 

Conversion of grazing marsh to arable farming.

Inappropriate ditch management.

Nutrients enrichment.

Pollution.

The impact of global climate change and fluctuations in water levels.

 

Status & Distribution

 

The Norfolk Hawker is currently restricted to the fens and grazing marshes that are relatively isolated from polluted water in the Broadlands of Norfolk and Northeast Suffolk. A Local Biodiversity Action Plan (LBAP) for the Norfolk Hawker has been drafted for Norfolk.

Similar Species

 

Brown Hawker

 

Brown wings.

Blue-brown eyes.

Blue and yellow markings.

 

Management

 

Norfolk Hawker Management Profile

 

General management principles include maintaining grazing marshes, controlling saline intrusion, controlling nutrient enrichment. There are also best practice guidelines for managing inhabited sites, particularly the dyke vegetation and the surrounding terrestrial habitats.

Case Study

 

Work is underway to restore habitats for this species in Norfolk.

I let Azizi clamber over some very new, very hard cherry tomatoes (room temp) to show how tiny he is. He's supposed to eat fruit but like most Tenrec owners, they are faddy so any fruit and veg has to be fed via the bugs! It's called gut loading and it ensures that my 6 quilled wonders get all the nutrients they need.

Fly agaric (Amanita muscaria) 🍄🍄 Famous, enchanting and highly toxic. Fly agaric is the home of fairies and magical creatures and a lover of birch woodland, where it helps trees by transferring nutrients into their roots, but if eaten can cause hallucinations and psychotic reactions.

 

Thanks for all the nice comments, it is much appreciated

Please don't use this image on websites, blogs or other media without my explicit written permission.copyright all rights reserved.

 

Regards, Bram van Broekhoven (BraCom)

 

My Website | Facebook | Instagram

 

Have a nice and wonderful new week

A close up shot of the Sundew plant showing the sticky globules that attracts insects. By absorbing insects the plant can obtain additional minerals and nutrients which are lacking in the acid wetland soils.

Norfolk Hawker - Anaciaeschna isoceles (M)

 

Habitat

 

The optimum conditions for breeding appear to be unspoilt grazing marsh dyke systems with clean, non-saline water, rushy margins, preferably with an abundance of water soldier as well as other aquatic plants.

Threats

 

Conversion of grazing marsh to arable farming.

Inappropriate ditch management.

Nutrients enrichment.

Pollution.

The impact of global climate change and fluctuations in water levels.

 

Status & Distribution

 

The Norfolk Hawker is currently restricted to the fens and grazing marshes that are relatively isolated from polluted water in the Broadlands of Norfolk and Northeast Suffolk. A Local Biodiversity Action Plan (LBAP) for the Norfolk Hawker has been drafted for Norfolk.

Similar Species

 

Brown Hawker

 

Brown wings.

Blue-brown eyes.

Blue and yellow markings.

 

Management

 

Norfolk Hawker Management Profile

 

General management principles include maintaining grazing marshes, controlling saline intrusion, controlling nutrient enrichment. There are also best practice guidelines for managing inhabited sites, particularly the dyke vegetation and the surrounding terrestrial habitats.

Case Study

 

Work is underway to restore habitats for this species in Norfolk.

Phalaenopsis Orchids Are Nicknamed ‘Moth orchids’

You may have heard Phalaenopsis orchids called “moth orchids” before. While it might seem like the nickname originated from the appearance of the blooms — which do look like a pretty moth taking flight — the actual reason for the nickname goes much deeper. “Phalaenopsis” comes from the Latin word “phal,” which translates to “moth.” Of course, this isn’t a coincidence: Carl Ludwig Blume, who gave Phalaenopsis orchids their name, supposedly chose it due to the moth resemblance.

 

The Phalaenopsis Fragrance Is Most Pronounced at Sunrise

If you’ve ever woken up in the morning to the sweet smell of orchids and wondered why your nose was so keen to the scent in the early morning, it turns out there’s actually a reason for that. The lightly sweet smell of a flowering orchid is actually most pronounced at sunrise.

 

Phalaenopsis Orchids Grow Naturally in Trees

Even though we’re so conditioned to see them in pots, Phalaenopsis orchids actually naturally grow in trees. However, while they like to use trees as their grounding place, orchids don’t actually extract nutrients from their host tree. They have aerial roots that curl around tree trunks and branches, rather than burrow into soil.

 

Phalaenopsis Orchids can get Sunburned

You likely already know that you shouldn’t put your orchid in direct sunlight, but did you know that doing so can actually cause your plant to develop a sunburn? Rather than turning red, a sunburned orchid will have withered, yellowed leaves or develop brown and white splotches. If this happens, move your orchid to a shadier spot immediately and do your best to keep your plant hydrated.

 

Phalaenopsis Orchids are Native to Southeast Asia

If you’ve ever wondered where your orchids originate from, here’s your answer: Southeast Asia. However, you’ll also find Phals native to the Philippines and Australia.

 

Phalaenopsis Orchids Can Take Up to a Year To Flower

Most Phalaenopsis take their sweet time to flower. Luckily, unless you’re an orchid grower, most plant owners don’t have to wait through this process. By the time you purchase your orchid, it should either already be in a blooming cycle or have buds ready to burst.

Purple dead-nettle is a low annual, unpleasant-smelling, fast-growing dead-nettle that blooms from March to October.

www.wildebloemen.info/pages%20bloemen/P/paarse%20dovenete...

  

It can bloom even in mild winters.

It grows to a height of 10 to 30 cm and is very common throughout the Netherlands.

It grows on open, moist, very nutrient-rich soil in fields and vegetable gardens, on dikes and on roadsides, also in the dunes and under coppice wood. In a short time the plant can form entire carpets.

Trees share water and nutrients through the networks, and also use them to communicate. They send distress signals about drought and disease, for example, or insect attacks, and other trees alter their behavior when they receive these messages. Scientists call these mycorrhizal networks. I think they have a special language when they run into each other trying to reach the sky or is it some kind of competition between them?

Approaching Sylvan Pass from Yellowstone National Park's east entrance, I encountered this snag forest in the Absaroka Range.

 

Snag forests are actually quite beneficial to the ecosystem, providing nutrient rich resources to the various fora and fauna inhabiting the area. This forest is a result of lightning caused wildfires in 2007.

There must have been a lot of nutrient blown ashore to fertilize the wildflowers at the shore of Lake St. Clair (Michigan). The pink flowers in the foreground are Common Milkweed, a favorite of Monarch Butterflies. Behind are Blue Vervain, and the wild snakelike whips with yellow clusters of flowers are Black Mustard.

 

The tallest of the flowers was taller than me! 5'11" (180cm)

  

The small milkweed bug is a species of seed bug in the family Lygaeidae.

 

It is found in north temperate regions of North America and is not a migratory insect. Only adults overwinter and they do not begin reproduction until the following April. Females are receptive to males in all seasons. The eggs are laid on milkweed in the spring.

 

Small milkweed bugs' primary sources of nutrients are flower nectar and milkweed seeds. If these food sources are limited, they may feed on other insects. (Wikipedia)

------------------

Although there was plenty of milkweed in the area, there were few flowers, so this Milkweed Bug is feasting on Pearly Everlasting flowers instead.

 

Pinhey Dunes, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada. August 2022.

Even this seed pod looks happy on a summer day and who doesn't? It doesn't matter if people consider it an aggressive annual weed.

 

Velvetleaf (Abutilon theophrasti) wreak havoc in crops, roadsides, disturbed areas, and pastures. The plant thrives in nutrient-rich soils and competes aggressively with crops for nutrients. Velvetleaf seeds can persist for decades, so preventing seed set is important for this species.

 

Thank you very much for your kind comments and visit, much appreciated! © All rights reserved.

Los girasoles, aún la mayoría sin abrir la flor, excepto este ejemplar que por acción de los nutrientes ha desarrollado su flor antes que los demás. ¡Enhorabuena chaval!

El ISO fue un olvido, pero aún así, ningún ruido en la fotografía, para que después hablen mal de las micro 4/3,

 

Sunflowers, most of them still without opening the flower, except for this specimen that, due to the action of nutrients, has developed its flower before the others. Congratulations lad!

The ISO was forgotten, but even so, no noise in the photograph, so that later they speak ill of the micro 4/3,

Especie de Ave #143 subido a Flickr

 

Visita mi segunda cuenta de flickr con menos calidad:

www.flickr.com/photos/155364995@N05/

 

www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=1259536601

 

My Instagram; emmhpsv

 

El colibri Garganta Verde una especie de altura que le gusta el habitat de montaña y nebuloso apropiado encontrarlo en El Area Protegida Cerro Verde al occidente de la Ciudad de San Salvador El Salvador.

 

como todos los colibri se alimentan de nectar de flores en especial de color rojas y amarillas pero para conseguir mas nutrientes en ocaciones buscan diminutos insectos de donde obtienen algunas proteinas importantes para su salud.

Sumakh ("vinegar tree")

This small tree or tall shrub has an exotic appearance and looks attractive all year round. Most representatives of the Sumac genus grow in warmer climates and the only representative that has acclimatized in the middle zone is the deer-horned sumac (Rhus typhina).

Why autumn leaves are so diverse and differ in many shades, not everyone knows. Most of the year, pigments are masked by a large amount of green chlorophyll. But in autumn, due to a decrease in the length of daylight hours and a decrease in temperature, active metabolic processes in the leaves stop, nutrients move from the foliage to the branches, trunk and root system, chlorophyll breaks down. Pigments of yellow and orange become visible, which gives the leaves their autumn splendor.

Unfortunately, we cannot independently influence the brightness of the color of the leaves, and in gloomy rainy weather sometimes we are left without a golden autumn parade. The only thing that can be done is to plant plants with decorative fall foliage in the sunniest places, since in partial shade the bright color may not appear or be less intense.

Nepenthes, also called tropical pitcher plant or monkey cup,

The pitcher plant is a type of plant that eats insects, also called a carnivorous plant. They are rare and unique. Typical plants consume nutrients from the soil, but carnivorous plants are found in nutrient-poor soil. They get their nutrition from insects they "catch," after converting them into a form they can digest or absorb.

 

The pitcher plant is a carnivorous type of plant that includes several species. It attracts insects to it using the scents of nectar and already-captured dead insects, and once inside, insects cannot escape and drown in a pool of water at the bottom. Instead of getting nutrients from the soil, the pitcher plant uses enzymes to digest the insects for its nutrition. It is located along the east coast of North America, in bogs and other wet locations with acidic soil.

 

Carnivorous plants have a variety of methods to get prey: pitfall traps (like the pitcher plant), snap traps (like venus flytraps) and flypaper traps (like sundews) are just a few. In North America there are 10 known species in the genus Sarracenia, the pitcher plants. Sarracenia purpurea is probably the most common.

 

According to the International Carnivorous Plant Society, pitcher plants of the genus Sarracenia are located in the eastern United States, from the southeast and along the coastline up through British Columbia.

 

Pitcher plants are mostly found in bogs, often in the wettest sections. Although they don't require acidic soil, they are well-adapted to nutrient-poor and acidic dirt. They live in areas that are prone to fires, and can survive fire under some circumstances.

 

Pitcher plants resemble their name: they look like pitchers. Inside the elongated structure is a pool of water. Decaying insects that have been trapped inside, along with nectar from the "lid," attract flies, beetles, butterflies and other insects to the plant. The plant's flowers are the color of raw meat, which further serves to attract flies.

 

Once inside, many insects find it difficult to exit the structure, so they eventually drown in the liquid. The interior walls are waxy and slippery, and there are hairs toward the top that aid in keeping prey trapped. The plant's enzymes digest the meal and the plant is then able to absorb the nutrients.

 

While pitcher plants are popular houseplants, it is not a good idea to harvest them from the wild because some species have become extinct this way. Instead, obtain them through a nursery. They are best-suited to bog gardens and indoor terrariums, and they require sunlight and mildly acidic soil.

 

Some insects and animals live harmoniously with pitcher plants. Some predators, like spiders, use the lid to hide under, and some insect larvae, like mosquitoes, live inside the pitcher plant itself. Ants that die inside the plant are used for their decaying scent to attract other prey. Sometimes small frogs will hide in pitcher plants, eating flies that are attracted to the plant.

C'è sempre un sottile mistero che aleggia sul battente dell'onda. Sull'esile frontiera tra le sconfinate superfici e le buie profondità marine e le luminose distese sabbiose della terra emersa. L'onda si spande e si ritira, perennemente, trascinando nutrienti e alimentano minuscoli organismi, che l'evoluzione non ha ancora assegnato all'una o all'altra realtà ..... ..

Llegó el tiempo de salir del letargo invernal para todo ser vivo y los bulbos comienzan a florecer..

Las freesias siempre son las primeras.Debo aclarar que en el caso de las freesias, no son bulbos, sino “cormos”, tallos engrosados subterráneos, de base hinchada y crecimiento vertical que contiene nudos y abultamientos de los que salen yemas; los cuales cumplen la función de órgano reservante de nutrientes. En su base produce pequeños cormos nuevos para nuevas plantas.

Hay quince variedades de freesia , originaria del continente africano …La popular "freesia" de los jardines y de flor cortada para la venta, es Freesia hybrida, basada en varias hibridaciones del género, que dieron como resultado las que todos conocemos con buen tamaño y colores bien brillantes, cultivares comerciales modernos , con menos perfume que los que ofrece la naturaleza.

Hoy subo esta Freesia Laxa. Se utiliza como planta para hacer bordes porque resulta muy ornamental

Las pequeñas flores de 2cm son de color rojo , con marcada intensidad en los tres sépalos inferiores, también hay de flor blanca o azul claro, pero solo tengo de este color y bien feliz que estoy con ella..

 

Male common blues have violet-blue upper wings with grey-beige undersides. However, females vary from those with predominantly brown upper wings and orange crescents, usually more common in the south, to those with more blue, found farther north and west.

This butterfly is common throughout the UK. There are often two broods, with eggs laid in June, then August and September. Common blue caterpillars hibernate and pupate in April and May giving rise to adults in May and June.

The caterpillars are short, green and furry. They feed on the underside of young leaves, leaving the upper leaf epidermis intact. This creates silvery blotches on the leaves that are easy to spot.

The caterpillars secrete nutrient-containing substances that attract ants. In turn, the ants protect the caterpillar from predators. Ants probably tend the chrysalis too.

Adults drink nectar from flat-headed flowers. Caterpillars eat wild, leguminous plants such as bird's-foot trefoil, rest harrow and white clover.

I saw this Leonard's Skipper on the path sipping nutrients from the soil. I cautiously approached and discovered that some dirt and small pebbles were preventing me from getting a decent shot. I bent down and started clearing the dirt away and to my surprise this little skipper flew up and landed on my finger. It must have been some mighty tasty dirt because it stayed on my finger for quite some time. It was a wonderful experience to see a Leonard's Skipper this close up.

 

Baltimore County, Maryland

Hawthorn berries are tiny fruits that grow on trees and shrubs belonging to the Crataegus genus.

 

The genus includes hundreds of species commonly found in Europe, North America, and Asia.

 

These nutrient-rich berries have a tart, tangy taste and mild sweetness. They range in color from yellow to dark red (1Trusted Source).

 

For hundreds of years, people have used hawthorn berry as an herbal remedy for digestive problems, heart issues, and high blood pressure. In fact, the berry has been a key part of traditional Chinese medicine since at least 659 A.D. (1Trusted Source).

Dead or dying trees don’t always need to be removed, if they are located in a forested area or away from people and structures. These trees can serve as a home and refuge for woodpeckers and other wildlife. In addition, its nutrients enrich the soil near decaying wood, helping new plants to grow and keeping living ones healthy as the nutrients are reabsorbed.

 

I saw this tree in the park last year and felt so sad. No signs of life, it was rotting and full of fungi. Trees are my favorite gifts from nature.

This damselfly is sitting on a seed bud when it opens, you can seet the seed here.

 

When a seed comes to rest in conditions suited to its germination, it breaks open and the embryo inside starts to grow.

 

Roots grow down to anchor the plant in the ground. Roots also take up water and nutrients and store food.

 

A shoot grows skyward and develops into a stem that carries water and nutrients from the roots to the rest of the plant. The stem also supports leaves so they can collect sunlight.

 

Leaves capture sunlight to make food for the plant through the process of photosynthesis.

Closeup view of a Mexican Sunflower from the bottom.

""Purple Morning Star (Tragopogon porrifolius) is a biennial plant that was established in the 18th century and cultivated for its ornamental flower and edible root. The species is part of the Asteraceae family. Purple morning star is native to the Mediterranean region. The plant only blooms in the months of May to July and can reach a height of 100 cm. It grows preferably in sunny, warm places and on moist, moderately nutrient-rich to nutrient-rich soil.""

Info - internet

  

Wishing you all a very happy week ahead , I'll be off for a few days ;-))

Brisk wind, cloudy day, and only 7 C... But there I was with Olymp looking at two pretty Weeping Willows next to the Canon-Pond. Some insects were out as well seeking nutrients.

Here's a Mining Bee (thanks to Bernhard Jacobi) braving the cold. He seems to be savoring nectar and not collecting pollen.

A tiny mushroom finds nutrients in the rotting end of an old wooden fence post.

 

For Looking Close on Friday theme 'Texture in Flora'.

 

The title is taken from the famous line used by Jeff Goldblum in the 1993 film Jurassic Park

The stone pine is also known as the "Queen of the Alps". This very old stone pine tree lost its crown probably when it was still young. Nevertheless, it managed to survive in these difficult conditions at 2016 m above sea level with metres of snow in winter. It grows on a rock without much soil underneath its roots. In order to get a good hold an enough water and nutrients from the soil, it has developed an enormous root system Even though it looks like it is growing on a poor site, it has chosen to grow on the most beautiful spot on this mountain lake 💕

 

The mountainlake "Obersee" is located on the border East Tyrol (Austria) with South Tyrol (Italy).

 

Sony Alpha 7III; Canon EF 16-35 mm f2.8 L II USM

Center focus on a Spot Swordtail in a sea of mud=puddling butterflies.

 

Wikipedia: Graphium nomius, the spot swordtail, is a butterfly found in South and Southeast Asia that belongs to the swallowtail family. The spot swordtail gets its name from the line of distinct white spots along the margin of its wings. It is known from southern and eastern India (including Sikkim and Assam), Sri Lanka, Nepal, Bangladesh, Myanmar, Thailand, Vietnam, Laos and Kampuchea.

 

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Graphium_nomius

 

Mud-puddling, or simply puddling, is a behavior most conspicuous in butterflies, but occurs in other animals as well, mainly insects; they seek out nutrients in certain moist substances such as rotting plant matter, mud and carrion and they suck up the fluid. Where the conditions are suitable, conspicuous insects such as butterflies commonly form aggregations on wet soil, dung or carrion. From the fluids they obtain salts and amino acids that play various roles in their physiology, ethology and ecology. This behavior also has been seen in some other insects, notably the leafhoppers, e.g. the potato leafhopper, Empoasca fabae.

 

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mud-puddling

Arroyo

... el torrente corria fuerte por el bosque, regando las riveras de agua cristalina y rica en nutrientes minerales, los arboles, la vegetacion, los musgos , liquenes, helechos... sigue su camino dibujando bellas y refrescantes imagenes ...

-----------------------------------------

stream

... the torrent ran strong through the forest, watering the banks of crystalline water rich in mineral nutrients, the trees, the vegetation, the mosses, lichens, ferns ... it continues on its way drawing beautiful and refreshing images ...

Algae become over-abundant when the water has too much of the nutrients that algae need for growth, a process called nutrient enrichment or eutrophication. Just as nutrient-rich fertilizers help plants grow in our farms and gardens, nutrients in the water cause algae to grow. Nutrients can come from non-point sources, such as fertilizers, sediment, and natural organic matter in stormwater runoff, or from point sources such as wastewater treatment plant effluent.

@Stoever's Dam Park-Lebanon, PA

 

(Best in Large)

Cistanche is a worldwide genus of holoparasitic desert plants in the family Orobanchaceae. They lack chlorophyll and obtain nutrients and water from the host plants whose roots they parasitize. (Wikipedia)

 

Merzouga, Morocco. March 2019.

Stanislaus National Forest, CA

The snow plant is a rare beauty, protected from collection and destruction by California law. It is bright red and fleshy. It gets water and nutrients from fungi connected to tree roots.

Rothschild's swordtail (left) and other butterfly eating minerals on river bank in Manu National Park.

Mud-puddling, or simply puddling, is a behaviour most conspicuous in butterflies, but occurs in other animals as well, mainly insects; they seek out nutrients in certain moist substances such as rotting plant matter, mud and carrion and they suck up the fluid. Where the conditions are suitable, conspicuous insects such as butterflies commonly form aggregations on wet soil, dung or carrion. From the fluids they obtain salts and amino acids that play various roles in their physiology, ethology and ecology.

Protesilaus earis, the Rothschild's swordtail, is a species of butterfly found in the Neotropical realm.

 

Peruvian Amazon Rainforest, Manú National Park

 

Please don't use my images without my permission. All images © Aivar Mikko.

At the moment I am living and breathing fungi. Actually we are all inhaling about 10 fungal spores with every breath. That shows how ubiquitous fungi are. I feel a sense of wonder when I find another beautiful mushroom. Sometimes they are quite small and you have to get close to appreciate their beauty. The cap of the Golden-scruffy Collybia in the photo is no more than 2.5 cm (1 inch) across. Like many fungi it grows on fallen trees and helps to return vital nutrients to the soil. Cyptotrama asprata is widely distributed in tropical regions of the world. It is absent from Europe and Northwestern North America.

This female has been laying her eggs on the Milkweeds all week

some of her first eggs have hatched.

A fern (Polypodiopsida or Polypodiophyta) is a member of a group of vascular plants (plants with xylem and phloem) that reproduce via spores and have neither seeds nor flowers. They differ from mosses by being vascular, i.e., having specialized tissues that conduct water and nutrients and in having life cycles in which the sporophyte is the dominant phase. Ferns have complex leaves called megaphylls, that are more complex than the microphylls of clubmosses. Most ferns are leptosporangiate ferns, sometimes referred to as true ferns. They produce coiled fiddleheads that uncoil and expand into fronds. The group includes about 10,560 known extant species. Ferns are defined here in the broad sense, being all of the Polypodiopsida, comprising both the leptosporangiate (Polypodiidae) and eusporangiate ferns, the latter itself comprising ferns other than those denominated true ferns, including horsetails or scouring rushes, whisk ferns, marattioid ferns, and ophioglossoid ferns. Ferns are not of major economic importance, but some are used for food, medicine, as biofertilizer, as ornamental plants and for remediating contaminated soil. 29578

I got lucky on a trip to Fermyn Woods, Northants, this morning, finding this spectacular butterfly on the ground, taking salts and nutrients from.... some dog poo.

Parque Nacional Tierra del Fuego - Ushuaia - Provincia de Tierra del Fuego, Antártida e Islas del Atlántico Sur - ARGENTINA

_ _ _

 

CUANDO NO SE MIDEN LAS CONSECUENCIAS... LA NATURALEZA ES LA QUE SE PERJUDICA

En 1946 se introdujeron en Tierra del Fuego 25 parejas de castores con fines peleteros, intento de producción nunca alcanzado.

Sin predadores, que los combatieran, ni competidores naturales y en un ambiente similar al propio, la especie colonizó exitosamente el ecosistema fueguino.

Hoy ocupan casi todas las cuencas del Archipiélago Fueguino en Argentina y Chile.

 

IMPACTOS GENERADOS POR LA ACTIVIDAD DEL CASTOR SOBRE EL ECOSISTEMA

Los castores cortan árboles para alimentarse de sus hojas y cortezas; para gastar sus dientes de crecimiento continuo; y para construir los diques, que al retener sedimentos, materia orgánica y agua, modifican la dinámica natural de los ríos y arroyos y el ciclo de nutrientes, produciendo la desaparición de extensas áreas boscosas.

 

VULNERABILIDAD DE LOS BOSQUES EN TIERRA DEL FUEGO

Los árboles de los bosques fueguinos, a diferencia de los que conviven con el castor en su lugar de origen, no pueden rebrotar una vez que han sido cortados ni están adaptados a sobrevivir en ambientes inundados, por lo cual, una vez formado el embalse, mueren los ejemplares que quedan dentro.

A solitary pansy ekes out an existence in a narrow crack between the paving stones where ants have disturbed the soil below allowing it to find enough nutrients to survive.

Paepalanthus actinocephaloides.

 

Plant known as "Sempre Viva", inhabits the rocky fields above 1000 meters in shallow soil, acidic, low in nutrients and low water retention.

 

"Sempre Vivas" National Park, Conceição do Mato Dentro, Minas Gerais, Brazil.

*

* EXPLORE, Marzo 2023.

 

* Las Islas Cíes, Ría de Vigo. Provincia de Pontevedra. Galicia. España.

 

* Las Islas Cíes forman un Paraíso natural en la Ría de Vigo. Habitualmente las aguas que rodean las Cíes son visitadas por delfines, ballenas y tortugas marinas.

El sistema de circulación de aguas que entran y salen de las rías gallegas y la mezcla de agua dulce y salada favorecen la concentración de nutrientes y microorganismos que suponen fuente de alimento al resto de las especies marinas.

Se puede observar también en estos fondos marinos restos arqueológicos

  

* Continúo trayendo a mi memoria los versos lindos del Premio Nóbel, Juan Ramón Jiménez de su corpus poético “El amor en el mar”

 

No

 

El mar dice un momento

que sí, pasando yo.

No, ¡no!, ¡¡non!!, ¡¡¡no!!!, cada vez más

fuerte, con la noche…

Se van uniendo

las negaciones suyas, como olas,

— ¡no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no!—

y, pasado, todo él, allá hacia el este,

es un inmenso, negro, duro y frío

¡no!

 

(JUAN RAMÓN JIMÉNEZ. El amor en el mar.)

 

Seaweed ( kelp ) taken during our road trip to Robe, South Australia.

 

Seaweeds grow in abundance in the oceans, many of which are edible and safe for human consumption.

 

They have been documented to contain many of the essential nutrients such as omega-3 fatty acids, amino acids, vitamins, minerals, and bioactive compounds.

 

For many years, seaweeds have also been cultivated and utilized directly as food for humans or as feed to produce food for human consumption.

 

Since seaweeds grow in many climatic conditions globally, their cultivation has minimal impact on the environment.

 

Seaweeds are increasingly recognized as a sustainable food source with the potential to play a major role in providing food security worldwide.

 

Although seaweeds are part of the diet in many Asian countries and some European nations, there are some challenges in terms of their incorporation into the general diet in many places globally.

 

Innovation in food technology and culinology can help make seaweeds desirable organoleptically to increase their consumption.

 

Abstract from a book..Seaweeds: a sustainable food source.

 

Many thanks for your visit, comments, invites and faves...it is always appreciated..

 

Peaceful MBT

Limenitis populi (Linnaeus, 1758)

Papilionoidea▸Nymphalidae▸Limenitidinae▸Limenitidini

 

Poplar admiral (EN), Großer Eisvogel (DE)

 

While not very appetizing for us humans, many species of butterflies enjoy the nutrients contained within animal waste.

 

Photo captured in the wild, under natural light, in Austria.

The waratah is a flower of the Telopea species. This red flowering tree belongs in the Proteaceae plant family – meaning they have special ‘proteid’ root systems designed to survive in nutrient-deficient soil. In spring, they produce their signature bright red flowers (although some cultivars bloom in while, pink, or yellow) – or clusters of flowers, actually! Each ‘conflorescence’ is made up of tens to hundreds more flowers, all arranged around a centre.

Criaderos de mejillones o "muscleres" típicas del Delta del Ebro, enclavadas en mitad de la Bahía dels Alfacs que gracias a la mezcla de aguas dulces y saladas están cargadas de nutrientes, estas construcciones marítimas albergan criaderos de mejillones y de ostras.

 

Mussel farms or "muscleres" typical of the Ebro Delta, nestled in the middle of Bahía dels Alfacs which, thanks to the mixture of fresh and salt waters are loaded with nutrients, these maritime constructions are home to mussel and oyster farms.

 

Sant Carles de la Ràpita (Tarragona/ Catalunya/ Spain)

A male Downy Woodpecker (Picoides pubescens) discovered a treasure trove of nutrients likely stored by another bird in a cavity in the rough bark of the aspen poplar in the woods east of Edmonton, Alberta, Canada.

 

29 December, 2022.

 

Slide # GWB_20221229_1778.CR2

 

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After a heavy storm the day before with winds reaching 80mph on the Isle of Wight just across the solent, the beach at Lepe was piled high with seaweed, invertebrates and nutrient rich treasure thrown up by the sea. It was a delight watching Turnstone and a solitary Sanderling explore the rich pickings as they busily scuttled and searched along the shoreline. A close look at the rear foot of this Sanderling shows the diagnostic lack of a hind toe with this species.

Sarracenia leucophylla, also known as the Crimson Pitcherplant, Purple Trumpet-leaf or White Pitcherplant, is a carnivorous plant in the genus Sarracenia. Like all the Sarracenia, it is native to North America and this species is endemic to the southeastern United States.

 

It inhabits moist and low-nutrient longleaf pine (Pinus palustris) savannas, primarily along the Gulf Coast, and generally west of the Apalachicola River on the Florida Panhandle.

 

This magnificent specimen was seen at the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew.

Lianas are a principal physiognomic component of tropical and subtropical forests and are typically considered to be parasites of trees. In contrast, the substantial contribution of lianas to rainforest leaf litter production (up to 40%) suggests that they play important roles in nutrient cycles and may benefit their host trees. Lianas contribute disproportionately to total forest litter production at least partially because lianas invest relatively little in support structures and proportionately much more to leaf production when compared with trees.

 

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