Thursday, December 27, 2012

The First Flower!

At last a flowering plant and decent fruit already as well....
This post will need a quick taxonomy edit by Steve but it looks to me to be a mustard although the leaves are missing the typical lobes. Whatever it may be (new or previously collected) sure is nice to see something flowering in the greenhouse in the middle of winter!
Flower and Buds

Developing Fruit

Leaves

Looking more like a Cholla by the day
Carrots growing like a weed and will hopefully be the next to flower!
Liverworts have come to life all over the trays from what seemed like lifeless dirt. 
The moss covers some trays like a green shag carpet...It's amazing what water can bring to life in the desert soils
Some plants have gone from seedlings to looking more like the real thing,spring flowers may be just around the corner in the greenhouse!

Wednesday, December 5, 2012

Identification Part 2

Steve Jones was by the greenhouse this weekend and was able to give another batch of seedlings their proper names! Here's what we found with descriptions by Steve.
Gilia sp., most likely G. flavocincta (lesser yellowthroat gilia)  
Lotus sp.  I suspect L. humistratus,  L. salsuginosus, or hopefully L. strigosus, which we don't have on the checklist yet.
Another one for the Bean family TBD
Opuntia or Cylindropuntia (jointed cacti - prickly pear or cholla), way too early to tell which

 The wiry blue-green leaves are a Mexican poppy (Eschscholzia californica ssp. mexicana); the wide leaves with it are hairy bowlesia (Bowlesia incana)

 Think this might be canyon bursage, Ambrosia ambrosioides
 Encelia farinosa, brittlebush.
 Claytonia perfoliata, miner's lettuce 
Most likely Stylocline micropoides
Columnar cactus - could be anything from a fishhook cactus to a saguaro
The rest are yet to be ID'd but are certainly different from we have seen thus far. Stay tuned for more nomenclature as told by Steve!
   

Saturday, December 1, 2012

Time to mow the brome!

With germination rates rising it was time  to cut back some of the most abundant and already collected species to make room for the new! Red Brome had some trays completely filled and needed serious mowing. Fiddleneck, Filaree and Encelia were among the other species to be removed because they were simply getting too large. Once the forests were cleared Steve and I could see new seedlings yet to be identified and also two cacti seedlings that had popped up!
 Proof for the doubters that Cacti have leaves!


The first mushrooms to emerge, anyone have a guess to their ID? 

 A new curly grass emerging in a few of the sites trays.
Mexican Poppy in the Marcus landslide trays.


Coming soon, Steve's identification part 2!