I know, you're just the first person I think of when I want to tell someone about "nature geek" stuff.Swift wrote:I don't find it annoying.
I don't know if that's really cool or kind of gross.Swift wrote:All over the little marsh were balls of toads rolling around. The males just swarm the females and it will look like a warty brown tennis ball rolling around. Every once in a while a new male will pile on, and the ball will roll over to one side.
The Netherlands
I have seen glow worms in the Amsterdamse Bos ("Amsterdam Forest") for at least the past five years (but never reported before, not knowing this site). Initially I thought they were at some (darker) locations only – but my current line of thinking is they are everywhere, just slightly harder to see in the lighter locations. They do seem to appear in the sections with broad-leaved trees however (I haven't really seen them in the sections with conifers yet).
The Amsterdam Forest has no artificial lighting, not on its foot or bicycle paths either, however it is surrounded by oceans of light; Schiphol Airport and its runways, the many greenhouses (roses and other flowers) and the sports grounds (hockey/football fields). The Forest seems to be large enough for this glow worm population not to be disturbed by these surrounding lights?
The glow worms are easiest to be seen in the darker sections, especially when there are no clouds, no moon, and in the sections covered by the tree tops. Once there, you can find yourself suddenly and literally surrounded by them - it happened to me (once again), yesterday (8th Oct 2010) – Petra
Swift wrote:Well, the fireflies are finally rolling around here.
Swift wrote:Now that spring is rolling around again through the Northern hemisphere, I figured I'd dig up this thread.
We did our first amphibian hike March 10; the similar hike last year was April 2, so it shows how much warmer things are this year. And the warm-up was more gradual this year, so it wasn't the huge numbers of animals we saw last year, like everyone woke up at once. But we did see a very good variety: peepers, wood frogs, red backed salamanders, spotted salamanders, a couple of Eastern newts, one Jefferson.
Seen turkey vultures for a couple of weeks. Only a couple of great blue herons so far, and when we checked the rookery near us a couple of weeks ago, none were nesting yet. Have been seeing and hearing red-wing blackbirds, think it is just the males so far (they come up first).
Saw skunk cabbage back in December (that is very early) and some more in February (that's normal). Seen some coltsfoot (which I just learned is not native, but not considered bad or invasive). Seen trout lily leaves, and a few cut-leaf toothwort leaves, but no flowers.
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