urbpan: (dandelion)
 photo IMG_1924_zpsf7aa8ebf.jpg
This past Sunday we had an Urban Nature Walk in the Bussey Brook Meadow Urban Wild. This little chunk of land connects the Forest Hills rapid transit stop to the Arnold Arboretum, making it very easy for any car-free Bostonian to get there. As it happens, two of us came by car, two by bicycle. This photo is from the end of the walk, when we emerged from an Arboretum gate to find an abundance of black raspberries!

eleven more )
See other pics from the walk from [livejournal.com profile] lizziebelle here: http://lizziebelle.livejournal.com/846229.html
And from Ajay here:
http://sicloot.com/blog/2013/07/urban-nature-walk-bussey-meadow/
urbpan: (morel)

Photos by [livejournal.com profile] urbpan. Location: ornamental hawthorn tree on Parkway Road, Brookline.

Urban species #210: Quince rust Gymnosporangium clavipes

"Rusts" are fungi that infect plants, reproducing with galls that often produce orange spores, resembling iron oxide. Many different cultivated plants are infected with rusts, keeping agricultural researchers busy with controls and preventative measures. Quince rust is a close relative to the more well known cedar-apple rust. These fungi have very interesting life cycles, involving alternating host plants. The fungus infects red cedar (Juniperus virginiana), and when mature, produces a gelatinous gall that releases spores that must infect certain trees in the rose family (apple, quince, hawthorn, etc.) in order to continue the life cycle. When the tree fruits, some of the fruit erupt with orange spore-producing projections. The spores from these projections must infect red cedars in order to continue the life cycle, and so on. Fortunately, from the point of view of the fungus, red cedar is a popular choice for urban landscapers, as are many species of hawthorn and flowering crabapple. This organism is hated by ornamental tree nurseries, but is fascinating to the urban nature lover. If not fascinated, one can be amused by tossing the infected fruit onto a hard surface, where it lands with a dramatic puff of spores.



For another gall-producing fungus, see black knot.

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