Tag Archives: silver maple

New Year, New Pictures

Well after a bit of a break due to holidays and inclement weather, happy 2014! I took a trip down home to Delaware for the weekend and snapped some shots around the house. I also took a trip to the Prime Hook National Wildlife Refuge for which I’ll do a separate post.

Here’s to an exciting new year of nature photos!


Year in Nature Photography โ€“ Day 78

So a lot of times you’ll see me give my best guess for species that I’m photographing and include sp? for species unknown. Our system of naming things in the natural world originates from work by Carl Linnaeus (1707-1778), who is known as the father of taxonomy. Taxonomy: the branch of science concerned with classification, esp. of organisms; systematics. (from the dictionary). If you learned “kingdom, phylum, class, order, family, genus, species” in biology you learned the system based on his work. Since the advent of modern genetics though, they’ve added domains and things have shifted around quite a bit. We now have sub-families, sub-orders, etc. as well. Also we have renamed the science to Systematics, which uses genetics and genetic relationships to organize organisms.

While some things are fairly easy to identify, such as most birds, insects and many plants are another story. Consider that flies, which are the family diptera (di=two ptera=wings) consist of over 150,000 different species identified by scientists. To figure out individual species often involves a microscope and counting the veins on the wings! Plants can be a little easier but with hybridization (which is when two species blend and how we get many ornamentals) they can also be difficult to identify without a microscope. Add to the fact that species are being renamed based on genetics and you’ll see why many times I just have to guess. I’ll save the whole definition of a species debate for another post.

Identification from a picture isn’t always possible as you often need to look at the organism as a whole and then down at smaller parts. In the case of animals, they aren’t always “co-operative” enough to get a good reference shot. For instance, the ladybug in my picture, I didn’t get to count the spots, but some times you just have to take the shot and run with it. A lot can be narrowed down by region, even if there are 300 different species only 10 of them may exist in the eastern US.

In the case of plants, the parts that actually differentiate species don’t always make for a nice picture. Flowers are often the primary way to identify and thus you have a narrow window in which to catch the flower. Even then often you can only get down to family or genus. So once the wild carrot flowers, I’ll know for sure I ID’d it correctly.

I have a few books and most of what I figure out is helped by the internet and past experience. I have three leaves here, red maple, silver maple, and scarlet oak. Trees are best identified by their leaves and branches. This involves looking at how the branches branch, the shape and edges of leaves, as well as number of leaves. Here’s a link to arborday.org that you can use to try your hand at identifying trees in your own yard or town.

So identification is a whole field of study in and of itself, but it can be a lot of fun (more than a bit nerdy) to learn a bit about what the names mean and to be able to identify things for your friends.


Year in Nature Photography โ€“ Day 77

So it turns out that the tree I was calling a red maple for a long time is actually a silver maple. This proves that it is indeed easier to identify trees once they leaf out compared to winter time (more on that later). I snapped a picture of the whole azalea bush that has different color blooms on the same plant. There were some nice puffy clouds and the clover comes right back after being mowed.


Year in Nature Photography โ€“ Day 46

No video yet, was distracted by applying for jobs and schools ๐Ÿ™‚ Today’s set of pictures include a house sparrow’s (Passer domesticus) nest which I removed from one of our bird houses. While this seems like a horrible thing to do, the reality is that house sparrows are invasive birds brought over from Europe that will steal native songbird’s nests. Additionally, this was a problem we as humans created and it is in part our responsibility to manage it. In this case, this was the birdhouse from which I have pictures of a male and female bluebird building a nest (Year in Nature Photography โ€“ Dayย 38). House sparrows are highly territorial and will actually kill other songbirds and take their nests, fortunately I haven’t found a dead bluebird, but they haven’t been back either. Check out “The trouble with house sparrows” article to learn more.

Additionally it appears that the red maple (Acer rubrum) I’ve identified in past posts may actually be a silver mapleย (Acer saccharinum) or a hybrid of red and silver maples. As the leaves fully mature I’ll attempt to solve this puzzle and re-label my pictures as well as make a post about identifying maples ๐Ÿ™‚

Beyond that I have another cardinal, squirrel, dogwood flower and a new bird a white-throated sparrow for your viewing pleasure.