I've tried for years to get clips of beavers going about their lives, and finally, this year, the trail cams did their job:
Now I would like to see how the beavers move those stones!
I've tried for years to get clips of beavers going about their lives, and finally, this year, the trail cams did their job:
Sponsored by Sen. Mike Thompson:
SB323 Establishing requirements for instruments that convey a wind or solar lease or easement and requiring that certain disclosures be provided to landowners. http://www.kslegislature.org/
SB324 Establishing procedures that may be used to void or terminate leases or easements for electricity generation using wind or solar energy resources. http://www.kslegislature.org/
SB353 Establishing certain setback and construction requirements for wind energy facilities and certain operating conditions for existing wind energy facilities. http://www.kslegislature.org/
Tentatively to be heard next week is SB478: Establishing requirements for wind energy conversion system obstruction lighting to mitigate the visual impact of such lighting systems. http://www.kslegislature.org/
Heard in the Committee on Local Government:
SB325 Establishing requirements relating to zoning and recordation of wind and solar energy resource easements and leases. http://www.kslegislature.org/
None of the bills made it out of Committee.
Symphyotrichum pilosum--Hairy Aster--is a native wildflower that volunteers profusely in the Creek Field, the Road Field, and our backyard. It is an amazing pollinator plant! This year I tried to document some of the creatures that came to the asters. I am sure there were many more! (Many thanks to bugguide.net and the Kansas Arthropods Facebook group for help with identification!)
These migrating Monarchs--newly metamorphosed, they're so bright and clean--came to feed on the nectar in the flowers:
True Bugs were also part of Aster World.
It was a surprise to find these red and black bugs--Small Milkweed Bugs--on the asters in our backyard, because they normally feed on milkweeds, as their name implies. But researchers have recently documented these guys feeding on flowers in the Aster Family--as they are doing here:
Garden spiders love asters. Nectar and pollen bring dinner right to their door. Here a Banded Argiope enjoys a well-wrapped snack.
Someone had preyed on this Clouded Sulphur, but who?
Usually when butterflies are immobilized and hanging upside down on a flower, a
close examination reveals a spider's legs or one or two of the strange body parts of the predatory Jagged Ambush Bug. But in this case I couldn't find any trace of the real predator. The other creatures that appear here--the flies and the owlet moth--are after
nectar, not butterfly innards. The only remaining suspect is the owner of that
club-shaped, multi-partite antenna at the end.
Katydids and crickets belong to a special order of insects--the Orthoptera. Their hind legs are modified for jumping, with especially large femurs.
A Common Tree Cricket came to munch on the asters on October 18, 2021: