This may (tentatively) be the official web presence of the pollen library – I am fairly comfortable using wikispaces and the students in my classes are as well. See if it works and provide any feedback you may have.
Enjoy the weekend.
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This may (tentatively) be the official web presence of the pollen library – I am fairly comfortable using wikispaces and the students in my classes are as well. See if it works and provide any feedback you may have. Enjoy the weekend. For those who may find it useful soon. The ppt file (which is large) contains the partial identification key for our usage. Where is our study area? We focus on >6400 ha (25 square miles) of land that used to be tallgrass prairie and is now mostly used for agriculture (especially corn & soybeans). There are lakes and sloughs too. The study area comprises these 25 sections: T128 N R40 W: Plus, the area extends into the surrounding sections: Two files showing the design of the Echinacea-mycorrhizae experiment and the locations of the sampled plants: The Protocol for Style collection tomorrow is a bit different, so, everyone needs to get to the farm at 7:15 so we can go over it! But let me give you a quick overview of the main points: • We will only be collecting styles at the end of the observation period. ONLY COLLECT STYLES ONCE! Thanks again for your help and your patience! -Kate Monster RESULTS FOR NAME THAT POLLEN Slide 1: Heliopsis Slide 2: Coreopsis But don’t they all kind of look the same?? Yesterday, between ten people at ten remnants, we collected… A big thanks to all who participated. You had an impressive capture rate and recorded your vials flawlessly. We will go out to collect again tomorrow morning, each person to a different randomly chosen site (I will post these on the flog later today). Please arrive at Hjelm House at 7:30 to synch visors and pick up supplies so that we can all begin observations at 8:00 AM. I will provide muffins and coffee. Here are some updates to the pollinator collection protocol– please read them and jot them down (if necessary) on your printed protocol before going out tomorrow morning. 1) As you all noticed, the visor option for “pollinator observed” does not allow you to move on unless you provide a response. There are two methods for selecting either “yes” or “no”. What I would prefer that you do is click on the words “pollinator observed” and click either “yes” or “no” on the resulting screen. The other possible method is to check the box for “yes” or check and un-check the box for “no”, but this should only serve as a backup plan. 2) When entering your stopwatch time, please use a decimal between minutes and seconds. So, if it takes six minutes and twenty seconds for a pollinator to arrive, your entry should read “6.20”. 3) If you observe but do not capture a pollinator, enter the data for the observation, select “no” for “pollinator captured?” and move on to the next plant. Do not stay at that plant to wait for more pollinators. If you have any other questions or helpful tips for tomorrow’s collection crew please write them in the comments and we will address them before tomorrow morning. Thanks again, guys– I guess dreams really do come true. So, for those of you who were wondering what Team Echinacea will be doing tomorrow, here is the field protocol for the transect searches that we will be using. Any questions, please let us know! Also, we were searching for Stipa today (a prairie grass that Dr. Ridley is planning to add to the common garden), and this is the setup we used to mark the sites with the GPS: The antenna allowed us to get about a 9 cm margin of error when using the Trimble. And yes, that is yours truly manning the antenna, ensuring that the carrier lock is not lost. We were all ready to tell the next person who asked us what it was that we were searching for nuclear waste. I have returned to take images of pollen as seen below. It will still be a few hours/days/more? to get the images as desired but this is a start. I am predicting some trouble to distinguish between coreopsis, helianthus, and echinacea so be ready to be distinguishing. |
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