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Dec. 27th, 2012 12:35 pmSediment forming sandbars at mouth of Elwha River.
The effects of dam removal in some positive cases are happening faster than expected.
Mirrored from Nature Intrudes. Please comment over there.
Sediment forming sandbars at mouth of Elwha River.
The effects of dam removal in some positive cases are happening faster than expected.
Mirrored from Nature Intrudes. Please comment over there.
And now some of the tidepool life we saw at Salt Creek this year.
We (my wife and I) like tidepools because they’re so full of tiny creatures. Every square inch might be taken up with something: anemones, sponges, corals, seaweeds and grasses, sculpins, mussels, bivalves, crabs, shrimp, limpets, and on and on. The tidepools at Salt Creek, being on a very rocky shore, are fun to explore on their own. There are dozens and dozens of little enclaves of life, in many different nooks and crannies, some being washed by the waves no matter how low the tide, some covered in only the highest tides.
Tidepools make me think how profligate life is, how every nook and cranny will be filled with something, and how nothing is wasted. It’s also very colorful: either the exuberant coloration of a poisonous or unpalatable life form, or the dramatic mottling of something trying to camouflage itself against a chaotic background.
Goose neck barnacles (Pollicipes polymerus)
I remember thinking “sometimes, all you want is a straightforward, simple picture of goose-neck barnacles.” I should take this approach more often, as I want my photography to be more documentary or objective.
Ripples
But sometimes it’s hard to avoid the artistic.
Purple Shore Crab (Hemigrapsus nudus)
We watched this little guy eat for a while. It would reach into the mussel shell, struggle for a second or two, and then pull out a tiny little chunk of the mussel meat. A barely visible (to me) portion at any one time, but the crab didn’t have to go anywhere and the mussel certainly wasn’t going to run away. On the other side of the mussel (not photographable due to sun glare) was a much smaller shore crab, like a child or younger sibling.
This is a good example of the density of life in a tide pool, the area you’re looking at is only a couple square inches.
Pink-tipped Green Anemone (Anthopleura elegantissima)
Even though the pink-tipped anemone is the subject of this photo, there are hermit crabs, limpets, algae, encrusting corals or sponges, and other life forms in the field of view, if not necessarily visible in the photo.
Also, I like the word “elegantissima.” The “ti” should be heavily accented, and the “ss” very sibilant. Ell – ehh – gan – TI – ss – ih – mah.
Here is the complete set of photos from Salt Creek this year. Here is a collection of tidepool and tideland photographs from other trips.
Mirrored from Nature Intrudes. Please comment over there.
Here are some photos of plant life from Salt Creek, in Clallam County, WA.
Oceanspray (Holodiscus discolor)
I think oceanspray would make a nice landscaping bush. I love its flowers, and the density of them on a bush. I also like the seeds they form, and how the seeds remain on the bush for so long. Last year’s seeds still hung on this bush. I see it all over in Clallam County, not so much in Seattle.
The wood is very strong, and was used to make harpoons, digging sticks, bows, arrow shafts, and even (lately) knitting needles by nearly all Coastal Salish people. Oceanspray pegs were used in construction before nails.
Maidenhair Fern (Adiantum pedatum)
I fell in love with this fern as soon as I saw it on the Striped Peak trail. Unfortunately, the trail was narrow, so I couldn’t get back far enough to get a picture of the whole plant or group of plants. It was used in basketweaving by some Washington groups, the shiny, dark stems being used to good effect.
According to Pojar, maidenhair fern is also known as A. aleuticum. So much for scientific names being unambiguous (they’re less ambiguous, but they still change, especially as DNA analysis is used to determine speciation.)
I haven’t seen this in any Seattle park, but I’m sure it’s around. There are numerous places it would work in North Beach or Carkeek Parks.
Here is the complete set of photos from Salt Creek this year. Here is a set of photos of Native Plants of Washington.
Note: This post uses information from Wild Plants of Greater Seattle by Arthur Lee Jacobson, and Plants of the Pacific Northwest Coast (revised) by Jim Pojar and Andy MacKinnon.
Mirrored from Nature Intrudes. Please comment over there.
Working from least populous to most populous set. ;>
I get fascinated by the flow and texture of the weathering.
This is one of those subjects that you just have to say to yourself, “I know this is a cliche, but today it’s MY cliche, dammit.” ;>
Mirrored from Nature Intrudes. Please comment over there.
Nothing too distinguished but here you go.
Beach Pea (Lathyrus japonicus)
The flowers looked a little past their prime, but I liked the tendrils and seed pods. According to Plants of the Pacfic Northwest Coast, the Haida called beach pea “Raven’s canoe” because of the shape of its seed pods, which are black when ripe.
Mirrored from Nature Intrudes. Please comment over there.