A dull photo of a dull subject (except, of course, for the showy bush of lantana to the left). |
Texas lantana (Lantana horrida) Wild petunia (Ruellia nudiflora)
Texas bindweed (Convolvulus equitans) |
such an uneventful looking Compositae flower we will not even give its name |
Hairy tubetongue (Siphonoglossa pilosella) |
Silver-leaf nightshade (Solanum elaeagnifolium) |
Coreopsis |
Pigeon berry (Rivina humilis) Prairie verbena (Verbena bipinnatifida)
Palafoxia (Palafoxia callosa) |
Indian blanket (Gaillardia pulchella) |
White prickly poppy (Argemone albiflora) |
See the inconspicuous crab spider on the right prickly poppy flower? Here it is now below again. It is so desperately trying to be inconspicuous and a nothing that it has conveniently lost its front right crab-like claw.
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an assumed Leguminosae of some kind |
Lindheimer's Senna (Cassia Lindheimeri) |
The image to the left is another great example of the sort of drab ugliness we confess to love so much. Here the mullein (Verbascum thapsus) has grown tall and tired this late in the season, but like an old and ugly man, it cannot help but bloom alone and unrecognized.
And to the right, the dimmunitive Texas frog fruit (Phyla incisa) blossoms have attracted scores of moths and butterflies this time of year.
Below is an inconspicuous bit of useless flower.
Not a lot of attention. Not a lot of show. Just taking up space among the stones. And one of the white flowers enlarged to the right.
White heliotrope (Heliotropium tenellum) |
Wild Poinsettia
(Euphorbia cyathophora)
|
what? |
Scarlet spiderling (Boerhaavia coccinea) |
Seriously. Does it really get more uninteresting than Boerhaavia coccinea? |
OK. This blog needs some help for just a moment. . . .
Much better. No boring Boerhaavia coccinea putting us to us to sleep here.
For our mystery fish who now have proven themselves quite fertile parents, see a short video clip of their nervous attempts to guard a shifting brown cloud of several thousand eighth-inch long young ones.
Or click on this image for a second video:
One Texas Parks and Wildlife Department source to whom I emailed photos of our fish says he thinks these are Rio Grande Cichlids. This or that site may provide support for his claim.
SpeciesID=443
20cyanoguttatum.htm