And congratulations to the other award winners, Adriana Corrales, Flavia Montaño-Centellas, Timothy J. Colston, and Zhengyang Wang! You can read a little about everyone's work on the Foundation's website. https://t.co/8gFWwiuhXx
A huge thanks to the Maxwell/Hanrahan Foundation for this award in recognition of my work on leafminers! It will allow me to devote more time to making and sharing new discoveries about these and other underappreciated herbivorous insects.
@Bertonemyia This is Persicaria virginiana, but a similar pattern was found on an adjacent maple (https://t.co/wvlY9tCY4U). The photographers have concluded that humans did this, but I don't see how that could be.
@CMacQuar I feel like it has to be some kind of (viral?) disease, but I don't understand how it would make this pattern. The regularity of the pattern & the fact that it consists of closed loops makes any kind of animal feeding seem unlikely. Same pattern was found on nearby maple leaves.
Can anyone tell me whether this is honey mesquite (Neltuma glandulosa) or something else? I'm interested, of course, because a leaf mine was found on it... https://t.co/31TC2fcBd5
@NKWhiteman I should be directing this question to you too...The S. pallida specimen is one I sent to Rick Lapoint for ID long ago when he was in your lab in AZ. I'm mentioning it in a paper, and I wonder if you have any idea whether it was kept, and if so where it is deposited.
Anybody good with scorpions? My niece's friend just got stung by this one in Kazakhstan and they want to know how worried they should be. iNat's AI is suggesting Mesobuthus.