Happy Birthday to David Attenborough!!
87 years and still going strong!
A very happy birthday to one of our very favorite naturalists! ~AR & MN
Happy Birthday to David Attenborough!!
87 years and still going strong!
A very happy birthday to one of our very favorite naturalists! ~AR & MN
If you look very closely, that’s a muskrat swimming across the Bronx River.
Ever wondered how beavers got the reputation for being busy, well, beavers? After checking out the nearly 200 images captured by one of our Forest critter cams of this busy, busy beaver, I think I finally understand. The Garden and the Bronx River are the proud residence of the first two beavers —José and Justin—to call New York City home in more than 200 years. Beavers were once common in our fair boroughs, but their luxurious pelts were their doom, and they were hunted and trapped to extinction in our area while simultaneously making Gotham a world capital of commerce and trade (they’re even featured on the official seal of the city).
Whether this beaver is José or Justin is almost impossible to tell, but it’s not the first time we have caught our resident critters on film. Over the summer, during an impressive heat wave, our critter cam also caught a curious fox, racoon, and one very exasperated looking great-horned owl. We’re sure there are more critter cam surprises to come, so stay tuned and keep an eye peeled when you’re visiting the Garden, you just never know who you’ll meet along the way! ~AR
ps - The awesome gifs were created by Matt Newman, aka MN.
Matt Cook, NYBG’s Assistant Manager of Arboretum and Grounds, snapped this mysterious set of tracks crossing the frozen Bronx River. Anyone have any thoughts as to what it might be? We’re stumped. ~AR
Update: Word just in from one of the herpetologists at the American Museum of Natural History that these tracks were most likely not made by a turtle (one of the more popular suggestions). Why? They’re cold blooded, and boy has it been cold! Their best guess? A large bird, perhaps a goose or a turkey.
The cross-zoological/botanical studies coming out of the sea these days are inspiring and, to some extent, more than a little strange. But sorry, vegans! If sea cucumbers aren’t on the menu, I doubt these guys will cut it, either.
(Terrible jokes are terrible.) —MN
the slugs were making the pigment, called chlorophyll a, themselves and not simply relying on chlorophyll reserves stolen from the algae the slugs dine on. “This could be a fusion of a plant and an animal — that’s just cool,” said invertebrate zoologist John Zardus of The Citadel in Charleston, S.C. (via Green Sea Slug Is Part Animal, Part Plant | Wired Science | Wired.com)
I’M SO CONFUSED AND HUNGRY CAN I EAT IT OR NOT I DON’T WANT TO BE SPECIES-IST
Wouldn’t a flock of these look awesome parading around in front of the topiary caterpillars in the Everett Children’s Adventure Garden? I think I’ll have to put in a word with some of my co-workers …. ~AR
flower flamingos :)
@ Botanical Garden, Iasi, Romania
We like to call him “Black Shadow.” ~AR
And to think, some people think only Manhattan squirrels are uber-chic. But seriously, here’s an explanation. ~AR
Urban black squirrel knows he’s cool.
It’s Friday afternoon. It’s summer. It’s hot out. Do you really need any additional reasons to spend one minute watching this chubby little muskrat gathering and storing duckweed in Twin Lakes? Didn’t think so. ~AR
The Garden’s resident hawks have been really active today. I saw one riding a thermal with a crow when I went out for lunch, and this morning Sarah Paulson, Coordinator of Teen Programs in the Everett Children’s Adventure Garden, watched “Mr. and Mrs. Hawk land in side by side tree tops,” (maybe it was Rose and Vince?). Sarah continues saying that, “neither joined the other in the same tree. Maybe that only happens when we aren’t watching!” Bird watching, just another perk to one of the best jobs in New York City! ~AR
Mockingbirds can be annoying, especially when they feel the need to mock a car alarm at 3 a.m., but they are also mighty adorable. Here are three photos from Library staffer Paul Silverman of this little bird sitting in a Viburnum dilatatum behind the Watson Education Building.



What? Like, you’ve never seen a coupla hawks hangin’ out at the Fountain of Life before?
One half of this pair was last seen taking a dip on a very hot day.

As long as the ducks can stand the sound of schoolkids having a blast learning about nature …

The marsh surrounding the Everett Children’s Adventure Garden is a pretty sweet place to live.
A whole new world of pest vs. garden worries have been opened up by this post from the Cloisters’ Medieval Garden Enclosed blog.
Who knew woodchuck’s climbed trees or liked apples?
Even the Garden’s resident red-tailed hawks are looking for ways to beat the heat. Lucky for them, they’re not restricted from using the Garden’s fountains as a way to cool off a bit.

Hawk contemplates taking a dip in the Fountain of Life

Yeah, I think a cooling dip sounds like a great idea!

Oh! Sweet! Relief!

So much better!
Huge thanks to Paul Silverman from the LuEsther T. Mertz Library for sending in these amazing photos!
Artist Philip Haas installation of the Four Seasons in the Enid A. Haupt Conservatory Courtyard at the NYBG (New York Botanical Garden)....
Imagined conversations from bygone times
What do we want?
A robust variety of naturally-occurring flora in bloom for campus beauty and...
Botanical Gardens, Bronx, NY.
People just accept that I love the New York Botanical Garden and look at the pictures of the pretty things.
BTW NYBG I love the new Native Plants...
Rosemary (in NYBG pot) and friend
Love you, Mom <3
Happy National Public Gardens Day! A female carpenter bee visiting the pea vines yesterday. She’s California’s largest bee.