Friday, June 25, 2021

Some Critters Around The Neighborhood in June

 Tiny jumping spider came to visit back porch. About 6mm long.  Tutelina elegans.  I need a REAL camera.  those black and white stripes on it's head are cool eyebrows.

backyard bunny chillin'  Every evening.



Caviar on a leaf?  I think it's a fungus.  I think it's a fancy Birch tree.  I think the fungus is not mature yet.  will wait a few weeks for it to grow reproductive structures.  also I have to take thinner sections of the leaf it's growing on to see if it is growing INSIDE the leaf tissue.



The little pink blobs are about a 1/2 a millimeter high on the surface of the half a millimeter thick leaf.

Little hollow trumpets with pink blobs at the top.  What will they grow into?  dunno!  I can't tell if the fungal tissue is growing INSIDE the leaf.  can't see leaf cells niether!  need thinner section.  don't see any cells in the fungus either!  maybe is NOT a fungus.  Time will tell.

I could see hints of vascular tissue (tubes for water and nutrients, the plant's circulatory system) in the cross section tho.  each tube is one cell thick.



I think the large circles are cross sections of Xylem, the tubes that ship up water from the roots.  The Phloem, the tubes that the leaf sends food back down to the plant in, should be below.  


ok, update!  These are NOT fungus.  

What i thought was a fungus on the tree leaves, turns out to be the leaves reacting to being fed on by an Eriophyrid mite! Mites are related to ticks. some, you have seen, like these cute velvety red ones: about a millimeter long. u see them crawling everywhere even under water.
 
from
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Trombidium.spec.1706.jpg

 

most, you don't see as they are much less than a millimeter and hide, like hair follicle mites, house dust mites or plant gall mites. 4000 kinds of those. feed on plants and the plants get annoyed and make Galls around them.
 
 
Anyway, i've been told that my purple/salmon blob 'fungus' on (probly) Downy Birch leaves is the leaves being disturbed by 1/5th of a millimeter long mites, Acalitus longisetosus
I will have to look at the leaves closely and find the mites! tho maybe they are only active spring and fall!
 
 


 

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