Meet the Bewick’s Wren. It is a year-round resident that feels right at home in the thickets and shrubby areas in the open country of the oak savanna landscape of Mount Pisgah Arboretum.
Read more →It’s not a stretch to understand why these moths are shaped the way they are. Their pose mimics the look of sticks, stems and twigs to a T.
Read more →Shrouded in a cloak of quietness, the Great Horned Owl listens to the song of the forest.
Read more →Over the past few weeks I’ve seen three nymph stages of the Western Conifer Seed Bug (Leptoglossus occidentalis), or WCSB. These colorful, strutting youngsters become handsome adults and they have an interesting life story.
Read more →As I look at a leaf with its veins fanning out across its undersurface, I feel like I’m flying over a landscape.
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