Saturday, December 30, 2023

Local Ponds

Joubert's Diggings 12-25-23

Joubert's Diggings

There are three local ponds that I check on when I have the time. The one pictured above is right off the road on my regular weekly drive to get groceries, so I check it often.  Last winter it was empty of waterfowl except for some Canada Geese. To my delight, this year, there are Buffleheads, Geese, and Hooded Mergansers residing there!!!

Male ducks molt and acquire their colorful mating feathers twice a year, at the end of summer and in the beginning of spring. Female ducks molt once a year, usually when they have nestlings to take care of. Most birds molt a few feathers at a time, but ducks shed all of their outer feathers when they molt, including their wing feathers. For a few weeks, they become flightless, and are more vulnerable to predation. Right now the males have molted their summer plumage and are in their beautiful mating colors.

Late fall, or early to mid-winter, is when most waterfowl establish their pair bonds, usually while on their wintering grounds.  This bond will only last through one breeding season, which is generally from March to the end of May.

It's the female waterfowl, not the males, that choose their mates. To attract females, males perform elaborate courtship rituals including postures and subtle gestures. The female will pick a drake that has the best mating display, as well as the best plumage for a mate!

Hooded Mergansers - Lophodytes cucullatus

This stunning pair of Hooded Mergansers will spend the winter here.  In the Spring they will migrate north to the western or coastal areas of Oregon, Washington and Canada to breed. They eat small fish, aquatic insects, amphibians, small mammals, plants, and crustaceans.  How lucky we are to have them as winter visitors!

Hooded Mergansers - Lophodytes cucullatus

In the photo above, both ducks have their "hoods" upright and in full-on display!  Hooded Mergansers are diving ducks. They have serrated bills to hold slippery prey, and special, clear, nictitating membrane on their eyes that enable them to see underwater. The following information on diving ducks is from the website ducks.org/conservation/waterfowl-research-science/diving-ducks-into-the-deep. I find it fascinating!

"The body of a diving duck is much more compact and fusiform (wider in the middle and tapering toward the end) than that of a dabbler. Divers' wings are also more compact, which allows them to be compressed tightly against the body for greater diving efficiency. In addition, divers' legs are set much farther back on their body, and their feet are much larger and have a lobed hind toe. These adaptations help propel the birds while they are underwater.

In general, most birds are lighter than water. But diving ducks typically have higher body densities than other waterfowl. Just before they dive, the birds compress their feathers against their body, squeezing out air, which further reduces buoyancy. Next, with a single thrust of their powerful legs and feet, diving ducks arch their bodies upward and dive headlong, quickly disappearing beneath the water's surface.

Once underwater, the birds use their feet and wings to propel themselves downward in search of food. They steer during descent largely by shifting their head and tail positions. Once near the bottom, diving ducks use their feet to maintain a hovering position while they forage for aquatic insects, small mollusks, seeds, vegetation, roots, tubers, and other food. Diving ducks will actively forage at all times of day or night.

Not surprisingly, the duration of each dive increases with foraging depth. A typical dive takes 10-30 seconds, but diving ducks may remain underwater for a minute or more."

Buffleheads - Bucephala albeola
 
There are two pairs of Buffleheads on the ponds pictured above. The males have the bright-white bodies and "wedges" on their heads. The females have a white bar behind their eyes. These diving ducks feed on aquatic insects, amphipods, snails, clams, seeds, and bulrushes. They are the smallest diving duck in North America, measuring 13.5" in length. 

 Buffleheads mainly breed in Canada and Alaska, but since 1996 a small percentage of them have been found in small mountain lakes in the northern Sierra Nevada. Every summer I come across several female Buffleheads with their ducklings in the Lakes Basin. Usually it's only one female and her ducklings that occupy a pond or small lake! Perhaps the ones pictured above have recently come down from the Lakes Basin!

Canada Geese - Branta canadensis

There are almost always some Canada Geese on these ponds.  Sometimes as few as two, or as many as twelve! Although most Canada Geese in other parts of the US migrate up to Canada and the arctic to breed, here in California many of them live year-round. They feed primarily on plants and cultivated grains, in water and on land.

Pine Siskins - Pinus spinus

While I was observing the ducks at Joubert's Diggins, a flock of Pine Siskins landed in the top of a Pine tree, that was at eye-level! How cool!  I haven't seen a flock of these tiny little birds for a year or more!!! They were busy eating something that was on the scaly bare branches of the tree!  

Pine Siskins are named for their preference for pine and other conifer seeds. They will hang from the tips of branches to glean seeds from the cones. They also feed on the ground for a wide variety of grass and shrub seeds, garden vegetable leaves and stems, and insects. Sap in tree trunk holes, that Sapsuckers have made, can also be part of their diet! They will also ingest minerals along the sides of roads! They range widely and erratically in response to seed crops. Their main food in winter is cone seeds and tree buds.

When food is plentiful they will store lots of seeds in their crop, which gets them through cold winter nights. Unlike hummingbirds, that go into a state of torpor overnight, Pine Siskins ramp up their metabolic rate to stay warm at night! They also put on a layer of fat for winter! I love watching these little birds and hearing their busy chatter as they forage and perch in the trees! They travel in small to large flocks all year.

Charles Marsh Pond 12-23-23

Charles Marsh Pond

The Charles Marsh Pond is in a rural neighborhood with a surrounding forest.  A few days ago I revisited it, in hopes of possibly seeing a Hooded Merganser! To my absolute delight there were 4 females and 3 males on the pond! Wow! How lucky to see them! 

Hooded Merganser (female) - Lophodytes cucullatus

I have seen male Hooded Mergansers in the company of 3-4 female Hooded Mergansers, but apparently they are monogamous, having only one mate per breeding season. Maybe another male will show up soon! 

Hooded Mergansers (male) - Lophodytes cucullatus

The males are SO striking with their golden eyes and their 
rust, black, and white plumage! Such beauty! In contrast, 
the females are quite camouflaged!

California Towhee (adult) - Lophodytes cucullatus
 
In the alders, cattails, and willows along the shore there were a variety of singing, chirping birds! Most of them moved too fast to photograph, but I did get a photo of this lovely California Towhee, with its apricot-colored under-bum and front of its head. They live ONLY in California and Baja year round.  In California they are found along the coast, in the coastal range, in California's Central Valley, and in the the foothills!  84% of their diet is seeds, but will also eat some insects and some fruits. I love their pastel color with a hint of apricot!

View toward the North Yuba River Canyon below Bullard's Bar Reservoir

Yuba Rim Trail in Rice's Crossing Preserve

This week, my husband and I decided to hike the Yuba Rim Trail. We hadn't been there in several years. We are happy to report that the trail looks better than ever! They have burned all the huge piles of brush and branches, and have re-routed part of the trail so that it has the above view of the river canyon within the first mile! It is a forest that's totally different from our neighborhood.  It's also different from the Blue Oak Woodlands of the foothills that we frequent. The elevation is around 2,200' and there are Madrones, Black Oaks, Tank Oaks, and Big-leaf Maple, and Ponderosa Pines! It was fascinating!

Tanoak trunk, leaves, and acorns with their spikey cups

Tanoaks are not oaks even though they produce acorns! They are in their own genus of Lithocarpus. There were lots of youngish tanoaks in the forest that had smooth, gray bark, along with old, mature trees that had dark-gray fissured bark. Mature trees grow 50'-90' tall, with a diameter of 1'-3', and be 300-400 years old.  In shaded or harsh areas they can also be mulit-branched shrubs rather than trees. In some areas the ground was covered with their fallen leaves and dropped acorns. The cups of the acorns have many bristly spikes. I've seen tanoaks on one other trail that I hike fairly often, the Canyon Creek Trail near our home. They don't grow down in Bridgeport State Park or Daugherty Hill Wildlife Area, that I know of.

Pacific Madrone - Arbutus menziesii

Pacific Madrone trees were scattered throughout the forest as well. Mature trees can grow 25'-130' tall, with a diameter of 1'-3', and live to be 400-500 years old! Most of the trees we saw were small in diameter. They all had bark that was peeling off the trunk, revealing a super smooth inner bark. The bright orange berries can be numerous, hanging in clusters on the ends of branches. The usually shiny, green leaves were turning a variety of fall colors within one leaf. They looked like small abstract paintings!

California Black Oak - Quercus kelloggii

California Black Oaks are true Oaks in the genus Quercus. They weren't as numerous as the Tanoaks, but we did come across some large, old ones.  Mature Black Oaks can be 30'-89' tall, with a diameter of 1'-4', and attain an age of 500 years old!  In infertile areas they can also grow as shrubs! Like the Tanoaks, there were areas where their fallen leaves blanketed the forest floor, along with their acorns. The acorn caps are not spiky, and are covered with small overlapping scales.

Big-leaf Maple - Acer macrophyllum

There were also Big-leaf Maple trees scattered in the woods.  Mature Big-leaf Maples can be 100' tall, up to 3'-8' in diameter, and live to be 300 years old!
Their winged seeds are dropped in late summer, but I didn't see any on the forest floor, just lots and lots of leaves. There weren't a lot of moss-covered trunks in this forest, as it gets pretty hot here in the summer.  I thought the tree above was just gorgeous in it's winter coat of rain-revived green moss.

Ponderosa Pine, needles, and cone - Pinus ponderosa

Ponderosa Pine was the dominant pine in the forest, and their dead needles were hanging on all the shrubs, and covered the forest floor.  Mature Ponderosa Pines can be 100'-180' tall, with a diameter of 3'-4', and can live to be 600 years old!  The bracts on the cones protrude outward and are quite prickly to hold. The seeds are eaten by squirrels, rodents, and birds.

Unknown fungi growing in Dendroalsia Moss

Forest Fungi!

There were lots and lots of mushrooms in the forest, due to the recent half inch of rain a few days before. Once again, I am unable to identify them all for you, but I love looking at them! They are little treasures in the woods! 

a cluster of unknown fungi 

Coral fungi - Ramaria sp.

Rosy Russula - Russula rosaceae

These mushrooms were a lovely salmon-pink in color, and were a striking contrast to the brown leaves that covered the forest floor.

Turkey Tail - Trametes versicolor

These lovely, layered, shelf-like mushrooms are striped in browns, rusts, and ambers and are almost velvety to the touch.

Coyote Brush - Baccharis pilularis

Shrubs!

Out in the sunny areas, away from the shady forest, two shrubs dominated the landscape, Toyon and Coyote Brush. The Toyon was in full, glorious, "berry"!  We didn't see any Western Bluebird feasting on them, so perhaps they weren't ripe yet. They were lovely to see! There was also a lot of Coyote Brush that was going to  seed. The hairy seedheads glowed in the late afternoon sun!

 Toyon - Coyote Brush 
Heteromeles arbutifolia - Baccharis pilularis

There were many other shrubs in the area, but I'll have to go back again and take an inventory when I have more time!

The distant Sierra Buttes from the Yuba Rim Trail!

The trail wasn't rocky at all, was blanketed in pine needles, and flat for the first 3/4 of a mile.  Perfect for my husband who has Parkinson's Disease!  It then has a series of gradual uphill switchbacks to the top of the ridge where there's a lovely view of the far away Sierra Buttes. The trail keeps going to an overlook of the North Yuba River below Bullard's Bard Dam, but we didn't get that far, maybe next time. In the meantime, I'd recommend this trail for low-elevation winter hiking.  It was so fun to see new species of trees, shrubs, and fungi!  We loved it!


What's happening down in Daugherty Hill?

What's happening in my neighborhood?

Check back next week for the answers to these questions and more.

Your comments and questions are greatly appreciated,
please email me at northyubanaturalist@gmail.com.

Friday, December 22, 2023

Another Year!

Sierra Buttes 3/15/23

Although we had an above average snowy winter, and spring came several months later than usual, I had another incredible year out in nature this year!  The additional precipitation turned Sierra Valley into a small ocean in the Spring, caused wildflowers to bloom profusely in the foothills, and diminished the occurrence of wildfires and smoke in California. Quite noticeably it also changed the nesting habits of some local birds, as well as the populations of some resident mammals.  

Every day I spent outside was full of discovery and adventure and I relished every moment! Below are photo-composites of my most memorable sightings for the year! Enjoy, and thank you for your continued interest in my blog!


North Yuba River
Sierra Buttes - Fir Cap
Winter Forest -Falling snow obscures Forest
Grizzly Peak
It's Snowing! - Clouds darken the Sun
Sunny morning & Grizzly Peak - Saddleback
Morning sun and Mist
 
Landscapes: Howard Meadow was a delight to visit every time I went up to the Lakes Basin! The succession of blooms was fascinating and always surprising! Sierra Valley was always a welcome sight to see! Water and clouds always make me joyful! I never tire of seeing the Sierra Buttes in any kind of weather! Table Mountain is and incredible wonder of wildflowers! I am so grateful for all the beauty that surrounds me every day!


 Howard Meadow
Sierra Valley early Spring
Aspen Grove at Grassy Lake
Fall dusting of snow on the Sierra Buttes
Table Mountain in Bloom
Clouds and Rocky Ridge
North end of Howard Meadow

Birds: Bird watching is one of my favorite things to do! This year I was delighted to see a Yellow-rumped Warbler with nesting material in its beak, for the first time ever!  I also lucked out and saw a few uncommon birds, including one Sooty Grouse along the highway, and several Clark's Nutcrackers in the higher elevations!  I also watched a pair of American Dippers build a nest in 7 days, which I had never observed before! New to me this year were several Nuttall's Woodpeckers, as well as a flock of Pine Siskins and Common Goldfinches feeding together! Wonders never cease!


 Yellow-rumped Warbler with Nesting Material
Clark's Nutcracker - Sooty Grouse
Yellow-headed Blackbird - Red-winged Blackbird
American Dipper in partially built Nest
Western Tanager - Rudy Duck
Nuttall's Woodpecker - Lewis's Woodpecker
Lesser Goldfinch - Pine Siskin

Mammals: Large mammals are not nearly as common as our local birds. Although we didn't see any Pronghorns this year, I was privileged to watch a big Black Bear eat wild domestic cherries, 50' up a tree, for an hour and a half right behind our home!!! It's strength was amazing to see as it climbed the tree, as well as its delicate eating of each individual cherry! What an incredible sighting! I was also lucky to briefly see two does with fawns in the Spring. The fawns in one pair were quite little! The most unusual sighting happened when I watched a Chickaree carry three different young chickarees to a new nest site down the road from our garden! Wow! It was also a rare treat to see River Otters on the North Yuba River in January, as well as in Gray Lodge in February.


 Black Bear
California Mule Deer & Columbian Black-tailed Deer with Fawns
Yellow-headed Blackbird - Red-winged Blackbird
Chipmunk - California Ground Squirrel - Golden-mantled Ground Squirrel
River Otter at Gray Lodge
River Otters in the North Yuba River
Adult Chickaree transporting three different young Chickarees
Gray Fox

Wildflowers: It was an absolutely spectacular year for Wildflowers at all elevations!  In Sierra Valley I saw three new beautiful species, Bulbed Woodland Stars, Beckwith's Clover, and  Bach's Downingia. Table Mountain was blanketed with a rainbow of flowers, including Blue Dicks, Bitterroots, and Goldfields. In the Lakes Basin it was a record year for blooming Corn Lilies (pictured in the top photo of the Landscapes composite) more than I've ever seen! Luckily, I also came across some uncommon, blooming, Drummond's Anemones, and for the first time ever, Dwarf Hesperochiron!


Blue Dicks & Gold Fields with Foothill Poppies in the background
Bulbed Woodland Stars - Beckwith's Clover
Bach's Downingia - Porterella
Bitterroot
Dwarf Hesperochiron - Drummond's Anemone
Roundtooth Ookow - Harvest Brodiaea
Sky Lupine and Goldfields

Insects: Due to the abundance of flowering plants this year, there was quite an increase in some insect populations.  This year I saw more Clearwing Hummingbird/Snowberry Moths and Sphinx Moths than ever before, and they stayed around in our garden for months!  The Swallowtail Butterflies were also more numerous and were here almost the entire summer! New to me this year were the Bowl and Doily Spiders, the Crystalline Gall Wasp Gall, and the Underwing Moth!


Clearwing Hummingbird/Snowberry Moth
Bowl & Doily Spiderwebs - Western Tiger Swallwotail Butterfly
Crystalline Gall Wasp Gall - Sierra Tiger Beetle
Non-biting Midges
Underwing Moth
Orb Weaver Spider - Monarch Butterfly
Sphinx Moth

Trees: This year I explored several Old Growth Forests in the Tahoe National Forest.  The trees were astonishingly HUGE and majestic! I have since learned that they range in age from 300-750 years old!!!  I also spent time in several different Blue Oak Woodlands in the foothills during the winter.  The oaks were gorgeous, and I loved exploring and learning about their environment.  Up in the Lakes Basin I saw more and more dead trees in the forest. Their death is from a variety of factors including drought, fire, over-crowding, fungus, and insects.  However, there are still lots of healthy trees in the woods.


Mountain Hemlock - Beetle Killed Ponderosa Pines - Morning Mist
Fall Black Oak - Spring Blue Oak - Old Growth Sugar Pine
Old Growth Red Fir - Quaking Aspens - Bigleaf Maple
Lodepole Pines - Blue Oak Leaves - Dwarf Bilberry & Lodgepoles


Seven years ago, on December 23, 2016, I published the first post of my North Yuba Naturalist blog! 378 posts later, I still love sharing my natural history observations and photographs with "the world"! This year, 14,392 people from 51 different countries visited my blog! WOW!!! Thank YOU!!!


What's happening with the local ferns, mosses, and lichens?

What's happening in the foothills?

Check back next week for the answers to these questions and more.

Your comments and questions are greatly appreciated,
please email me at northyubanaturalist@gmail.com.

Friday, December 15, 2023

Under the Weather!


Sorry about not posting a blog last weekend, but my husband and I BOTH had COVID!  It's the first time we've had it, and it kind of put us out of circulation for a while.  Fortunately, we're currently on the mend and feeling better every day.  Additionally, our internet connection was out for the past six days, so I couldn't post anything at all.  We got it up and running today, and we'll be back to normal soon.  I won't be posting a blog this coming weekend, but the following weekend I will.  Check back then for the latest natural history news from our neighborhood!
Till then, stay healthy!

 

Friday, December 1, 2023

Neighborhood News

North Yuba River - 11/29/23

The weather has gotten a lot colder, down to 27° at night and in the low 50's during the day, and it's been quite blustery this week. Just a few trees and shrubs still have some fall color, but most of the leaves have dropped off. We got .10" of rain on Thursday night, and more is predicted for this weekend. Up in the Lakes Basin there are patches of new snow in the woods, and icy snow on part of the Gold Lake Road! Winter is definitely here!  

Howard Meadow - 11/25/23

My husband and I drove out to Howard Meadow last Saturday and it was freezing!  The wind was blasting, the puddles in the road were totally frozen, and there was a slippery inch of icy snow on the road!  It was still lovely to be there and see the "winterized" meadow!  We also, tried to drive up the Gold Lake Road to the trailheads, but long sections were covered in an inch or so of packed icy snow, so we turned around and headed back home.  That might be our last visit to the Lakes Basin for a while!

Rainbow Trout - Onchorhynchus mykiss irideus

Since the cold weather kept us at home, I walked a lot in my neighborhood this week. Three days in a row I saw several large Rainbow Trout in the river below our bridge! They looked like they were 15"-18" in length! Wow! I haven't noticed any big fish in the river all summer. Maybe they're showing up now that the Common Mergansers (major fish eaters) are almost all gone! It takes about 1 year for a trout to reach a length of about 6 or 7 inches. At about 2-3 years of age they will have grown to around 18 to 20 inches in length and have become mature adults, ready to reproduce.

Rainbow Trout - Onchorhynchus mykiss irideus

The most common fish in the North Yuba River are Coastal Rainbow Trout, which are native to California, but have been planted locally. There are also non-native German Brown Trout, that swim up to spawn from Bullard's Bar Reservoir. Occasionally you might also find a non-native Brook Trout that has flowed out from a higher elevation lake, during the high water of Spring.

Rainbow Trout - Onchorhynchus mykiss irideus

Right now the river is a chilly 42 degrees! Being coldblooded, trout become less active when the the water temperature drops below 40 degrees. Their metabolism and respiratory rates slow down. Adult trout usually stay in deep pools during fall and winter. To keep from being eaten, young trout stay away from adult trout! They tend to spend the winter in shallower pools near the shore, where overhanging branches provide cover.

Common Merganser - Mergus merganser

Local Birds!

There weren't many Common Mergansers on the river this year. Due to the high water last Spring, there weren't many females that successfully raised their young. I did see two different females that had 7 and 8 ducklings. Unfortunately most of the young ducks didn't survive.  I've only seen two juveniles on the river with their mother, for the past two months.  Lately I've only seen one lone adult (possibly a juvenile) on the River, that will probably leave for lower elevations soon. Common Mergansers do not stay here for the winter, they migrate down to the rivers, ponds, and lakes in California's Central Valley.

American Dipper - Cinclus mexicanus

American Dippers live here year-round. They hunt for aquatic insects and their larvae, small fish, and snails, in fast moving rivers and streams. A dense layer of downy feathers keeps them warm in the cold water. They also waterproof their outer feathers with oil. Using their tails as rudders, they swim with their wings! They do not have webbed feet, but have long, sharp toes for gripping slippery rocks! At night Dippers sleep in trees with dense foliage, with their bills tucked under their wings.

Canada Geese - Branta canadensis

The Canada Geese in our neighborhood didn't have any goslings this year!  Not even one!  They nest way earlier than the Common Mergansers and the river water was too fast, cold, and high last Spring.  The adults, that may have been born here, stuck around all summer feeding on aquatic plants!  Lately, they've formed largish groups of 9-12 adults, on the river.  If the winter weather this year isn't too snowy, some of them may stay for the winter, or they may all head down to California's Central Valley.

Red-tailed Hawk - Buteo jamaicensis

Just yesterday I spotted a Red-tailed Hawk perched on a dead tree along the river corridor!  I haven't seen one in our neighborhood for quite a while! They usually hunt in meadows and fields for small mammals, snakes, lizards, and other birds. They use the perch-and-wait method of hunting. Once prey is sighted they will drop from their perch, flap-and-glide downward, thrust their legs forward when about 3m from prey, and grab prey with their feet. 

Red-tailed Hawks are classified as "buteos" which are medium to large, stout bodied hawks, with broad wings and fan shaped tails. Many species have a variety of color phases. Red-tailed Hawks are large birds with a wingspan of 49", a length of 19", and a weight of 2.4lbs. They are one of the most common buteos seen in North America.

Peregrin Falcon - Falco peregrinus

One late afternoon this week I spotted a Peregrin Falcon perched in a dead tree that borders the river canyon in our neighborhood!  WOW!!!  I haven't seen one of these amazing falcons in a few years!  The prominent dark "mustache", below its eye, is a distinguishing feature!  It was quite a distance away, and the light was fading, so I didn't get a great photo, but it was thrilling to watch it!  I stayed for about 15 minutes until it took off! What a gift! Such beauty!

Peregrin Falcons have speed and extraordinary vision on their side. They are the fastest animal on earth! Their top diving speed can reach 238 mph! WOW!!! For this speed they need to start their dive at at least 3,280' off the ground, and the dive must be vertical! Most of their dives, or stoops, start at 705' to 1049' off the ground. If their dives aren't vertical, their diving speed is typically 66-86 mph. As they dive they spiral down to their prey, rather than turn their head!

Peregrin Falcons are formidable predators! The following quote from the Cornell website birdsna.org explains their hunting methods in detail. "They have several methods of attack, including stooping (diving), ringing up, direct pursuit, contour-hugging, shepherding, running or hopping, and flapping on the ground. Most often stooping falcon pulls out of dive some meters behind escaping prey and shoots forward at great speed to grab or strike prey, or repeatedly stoops to force it down into water or onto open ground where it can be grabbed. Sometimes stoops directly down on prey, striking it in head, wing, or back, killing it or breaking a wing. They usually grab prey with their feet and bite into the neck. Sometimes prey is killed by strike of impact, but usually they are only stunned. Captures mainly by grabbing prey with feet (binding) but rarely kills small prey by forcing talons into body as accipiters do. Instead, falcon bites into neck, disarticulating cervical vertebrae and severing nerve cord; even with prey killed in stoop, falcon bites into neck before feeding begins." 

Mountain Chickadee - Ruby-crowned Kinglet 
Poecile gambeli - Regulus calendula

Over the past two weeks small flocks of little birds have arrived in our neighborhood! Some of them have come down from the colder, higher elevations and will spend the winter here. Others are passing through on their way further south, or down to the foothills. This happens every fall, and I rejoice every time they arrive!

I've been seeing small flocks of Mountain Chickadees in our neighborhood lately! They live up in the higher elevations most of the year. During winter they sometimes migrate down to our neighborhood, but not every year.  I don't think they've been here for several years. They do not migrate outside of the U.S. They eat scale insects and conifer seeds in the winter. I love to see and hear these lovely little birds!

Ruby-crowned Kinglets are named for the bright scarlet "crown patch" the male exhibits when excited or antagonized. Most of the time the crown isn't visible. These tiny birds mainly inhabit the snow-free foothills during winter. In Spring they move up to the Lodgepole/Hemlock forests to breed, around 9000' in elevation. They have been coming to our neighborhood every winter for years! Their fluffy, thick plumage keeps them warm at night. For food, they glean small insects off of twigs and branches.

Dark-eyed Junco (male) - Junco hyemalis

The Dark-eyed Juncos have just come down from the Lakes Basin, where they breed in the Spring. They will spend the winter here in our neighborhood.  There are six subspecies of Dark-eyed Juncos in North America. The ones we have locally are the "Oregon" subspecies. Males have black hoods. Females have gray hoods. They are common and widespread across the U.S. in winter. Seeds are their preferred food. 

 Coral Mushroom - unknown genus/species

Local Mushrooms!

Mushrooms have been popping up everywhere since we got some rain. As usual I haven't learned to identify many of them yet, just too busy, but here are photos of the most recent "uprisals"!

unknown fungi 

Questionable Stropharia - Stropharia ambigua

unknown fungi 

Hawk Wing - Sarcodon imbricatum

My friend Diane found these mushrooms near her home In Pike and took these photos!  I've never seen this kind before! They are quite beautifully marked!  They are also a large "toothed" fungi! What a find!

To reproduce, mushrooms produce spores. Basidia are the microscopic, club-shaped, spore-bearing structures in mushrooms. There are three main structures in mushrooms that contain the basidia; gills, pores and teeth! Most people are familiar with the gill structure pictured below left. Pores are found on Bolete fungi and others, and are the small holes (actually tubes) on the smooth underside of the mushroom cap, pictured below center. Teeth are found on Lion's Mane fungi as well as others, and look like tiny hanging icicles, pictured below right. Thousands and thousands of basidia are arranged along the outside edges of the gills, along the insides of the tubes that end in pores, and on the outside of the teeth!

 Mushroom gills, pores, and teeth

 Western Polypody Fern - Polypodium hesperium

What's happening with the local ferns, mosses, and lichens?

What's happening in the foothills?

Check back next week for the answers to these questions and more.

Your comments and questions are greatly appreciated, 
please email me at northyubanaturalist@gmail.com.