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Mystery Seed of the Week 233

What can I say? It was a cloudy and windy day.

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Since the photograph did not turn out, here is a public domain image of the same kind of seeds.

mystery-seed-233-USDA(Photograph credits for this public domain photograph will be given in the answer).

Do you recognize what plant these seeds are from? If you choose to, please leave a comment with your ideas.

Mystery seed answers and new Mystery seeds are posted on Tuesdays.

Edit:  The answer with the public domain photo credit is now posted.

Seed of the Week: Common Teasel

Would you have been able to identify our mystery seeds last week if I included a photograph of the seed head like this one?

teasel-winterYes, our mystery seeds came from a common teasel, Dipsacus fullonum.

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Like the white campion last week, the common teasel originally came from Europe and western Asia. It grows abundantly in the Northeast, where it may be a weed.

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Common teasels are biennial plants, producing a cluster of leaves or “rosette” in the first year and then flowering in the second year. This general life cycle may be shortened or lengthened depending on environmental conditions.

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Also like the white campion, the leaves grow in opposite pairs around the stem. Water gathers in a cup-like depression that forms at the stem, and recent studies have suggested that the teasel may obtain nutrition from insects that become trapped in these cups (Shaw, P. J. A., Shackleton, K. (2011). “Carnivory in the teasel Dipsacus fullonum — the effect of experimental feeding on growth and seed set”. PLoS ONE 6 (3): e17935. ) Cool!

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The teasel flowers in bands. It starts flowering in the center,

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and then continues to the top and bottom. As you can see, the flowers produce nectar for bees and butterflies. The seeds are also food for several kinds of songbirds.

Although I don’t have  photograph, teasels always remind me of winter because the dried stalks are often standing tall even when other plants are covered with snow.

Do teasels grow where you live? What do you think of them?

 

Bug of the Week: Favorite Photographs of 2014

What better way to ring out 2014 than with some photographs of insects?

boxelder-bugs-group

Looking back over the last twelve months, I found I haven’t taken as many photographs of insects as in years past. I did, however, take quite a few of true bugs this year, like these boxelder bugs.

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Not the best shot, but I thought these milkweed bugs were amusing.

 

orange-fly-on-nasturtium-closer

Maybe it was color that caught my eye, as with this orange on orange composition.

covered-with-pollen-bee

Bees are always fun, although they are usually in motion. Check out this leafcutter bee collecting pollen.

bee-with-pollen-full

She has filled her scopa (hairs on the underside of the abdomen)!

bee-in-cactus-flower-close

This one is reminding us that bees feed on nectar as well as collect pollen.

parasitoid-wasp-crop

Parasitic wasps can be colorful.

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Paper wasps sometimes take a break to do some cleaning.

ladybug-in-queen-annes-lace

What year is complete without a ladybug?

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But the butterflies always give the brightest displays. This is a paper kite.

White Peacock Anartia jatrophae

Here is a white peacock catching some rays.

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You can get some beautiful close-ups in butterfly exhibits.

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The unexpected shots in your own back yard, however, are always the most treasured.

Do you have a post of your favorite nature photographs, too? Feel free to leave a link in the comments.

Happy New Year!

 

 

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