So excited to have found the Spatulate-leaved sundew (Drosera intermedia) on our lake recently. I had only noticed the Round-leaved sundew (Drosera rotundiflora) around our wetlands till now, and was ecstatic to find this one thriving here as well.
Vignettes:
Ponderings, Pics, Poems from my life
Sunday, September 8, 2024
New Sundew
Both types are common in the Northeast, but as you can see, their leaf shapes are a little different. They are very slow growers in nutrient poor habitats.
Saturday, September 7, 2024
Aquatic Bloom
This flower has the common name large purple bladderwort (Utricularia purpurea), but it's hard to capture the color in bold sunlight - it seems to sap the color from the petals.
The messy-looking mass of brown vegetation floating beneath the flower are its leaves, stems and bladders
The plant puts up a long flower stalk that can rise above the water
Friday, September 6, 2024
AAA
AAA today stands for Amazingly Abundant Agalinis! The delicate flowers are strongly pink.
They're annuals - I have never seen them so prolific and dramatic as they are this year. How wonderfully cheery they look by the water's edge!
They are a false foxglove native to eastern North America and Canada.
Thursday, September 5, 2024
Perfection
This exquisitely delicate and unique flower belongs to our native little floating bladderwort (Utricularia radiata). The white spokes that hold up the flower are regarded as specialized "leaves," and may also be referred to as stolons. There is a second flower forming beside the mature one - they first appear completely underwater, and slowly rise to the surface as the floats become more air-filled and buoyant.
This is how it appears in its habitat. The spatterdock leaves around it give some idea of scale and how small this plant is. The little spots you see around the base and floating in the water beneath it are the traps/bladders that catch zooplankton in the water - a magnificent carnivorous aquatic plant.
I LOVE this plant - ingenious!
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