Female Hairy Woodpecker and a nestling almost ready to fledge.
Thanks, Luis. This was the first time I saw the caterpillar, too. So interesting to see the caterpillar form and then the butterfly.
Very likely Oxalis stricta, Yellow Woodsorrel.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oxalis_stricta
See what you think.
As the leaves fill in more on the trees in my backyard, it's getting harder to get my camera to focus on the RSH nest in my backyard. Despite the cover, I am seeing lots more blurry white movements in the nest and can tell it's getting bigger. I still can't tell if there's more than one nestling as I never see more than one little eyeball peeping at me through the pine needles in the nest at any given time.
During todays trip we found a greater celandine which was perfect suitable for the mission: Antwerp's Alphabet of Genera. Spotted with: NielsVanPutte and Aciinonyx
Mapping Nature on Your Smartphone
For the developers at New York start-up Networked Organisms, smartphones are the butterfly nets of the 21st Century. Their tool, Project Noah, lets people upload photos of plants and wildlife around them, creating a map of the natural world and contributing to scientific research in the process.
What kind of beetle? This app knows
Bespectacled scientists of yore would carry around hefty field guides, made up of hundreds of pages of text and photos. But these days, smartphone owners have a lighter option: an app called Project Noah, which aims to help people identify plants and animals as well as collect data from "citizen scientists" about where certain species are located.
Designing ecosystems for talent development
Project Noah enables us to be part of a more focused online community where we can learn more about wildlife around us and contribute to scientific research. It pulls participants into deeper, more meaningful engagement by enabling people to go on “missions” to collectively map changes based on sightings.
A smart way to save wildlife
A modern invention that may also hold the key to saving species in the future. Project Noah is a global study that encourages nature lovers to document the wildlife they encounter, using a purpose built phone app and web community. In addition to the virtual "collection" of species, Project Noah encourages citizen science by linking up with existing surveys including the International Spider Survey and the Global Coral Reef Monitoring Network.
Dial-a-Class
New mobile applications include a tool called NOAH that lets you take cellphone pictures of bugs and trees and then sends back an identification of the exact type in as little as 24 hours.


