Brewer's Blackbird
The joy of spring
Moose, with a bad case of ticks
Beautiful Hellebore
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Blossom
Canada Buffaloberry / Shepherdia canadensis
Common Grackle / Quiscalus quiscula
Signs of spring
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Lesser Scaup male
Little red barn on Mother's Day
Female (?) Sharp-tailed Grouse
Blossom - pretty in pink
Red-necked Grebe
Pasqueflower / Pulsatilla vulgaris
Feed me
Double Bloodroot / Sanguinaria canadensis f. multi…
Letting his presence be known
Pika, up close
Caragana - invasive beauty
A time to reflect
Swainson's Hawk
A welcome splash of red
Sharp-tailed Grouse
American Avocet
A good start to yesterday
Wild Gooseberry
Black-necked Stilt
On golden pond
Baby Larch cone
Invasion of the Midges!
Look, Mom, I can fly!
Catkins
Classic beauty - 53 Buick
Button-eyes
Fields of golden stubble
Ruddy Duck in choppy waters
Yellow, glassy eyes
Monkeyflower / Mimulus
The art of building a nest
Malachite butterfly on blue
Curious Mule Deer
Northern Pygmy-owl from January
A touch of blue
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Old Puffballs


This photo was taken at the Reader Rock Garden yesterday, 6 May 2015, when I called in after a volunteer shift. Despite the fact that they are old ones from last year, it still felt good to finally see some kind of fungus.
"A puffball is a member of any of several groups of fungi in the division Basidiomycota. The puffballs were previously treated as a taxonomic group called the Gasteromycetes or Gasteromycetidae, but they are now known to be a polyphyletic assemblage. The distinguishing feature of all puffballs is that they do not have an open cap with spore-bearing gills. Instead, spores are produced internally, in a spheroidal fruitbody called a gasterothecium (gasteroid ('stomach-like') basidiocarp). As the spores mature, they form a mass called a gleba in the centre of the fruitbody that is often of a distinctive color and texture. The basidiocarp remains closed until after the spores have been released from the basidia. Eventually, it develops an aperture, or dries, becomes brittle, and splits, and the spores escape. The spores of puffballs are statismospores rather than ballistospores, meaning they are not actively shot off the basidium. The fungi are called puffballs because clouds of brown dust-like spores are emitted when the mature fruitbody bursts, or in response to impacts such as those of falling raindrops." From Wikipedia.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Puffball
"A puffball is a member of any of several groups of fungi in the division Basidiomycota. The puffballs were previously treated as a taxonomic group called the Gasteromycetes or Gasteromycetidae, but they are now known to be a polyphyletic assemblage. The distinguishing feature of all puffballs is that they do not have an open cap with spore-bearing gills. Instead, spores are produced internally, in a spheroidal fruitbody called a gasterothecium (gasteroid ('stomach-like') basidiocarp). As the spores mature, they form a mass called a gleba in the centre of the fruitbody that is often of a distinctive color and texture. The basidiocarp remains closed until after the spores have been released from the basidia. Eventually, it develops an aperture, or dries, becomes brittle, and splits, and the spores escape. The spores of puffballs are statismospores rather than ballistospores, meaning they are not actively shot off the basidium. The fungi are called puffballs because clouds of brown dust-like spores are emitted when the mature fruitbody bursts, or in response to impacts such as those of falling raindrops." From Wikipedia.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Puffball
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