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Top species richness

QPRC LGA field guide

QPRC LGA

12564
0.22 sightings / ha
Namadgi National Park field guide

Namadgi National Park

8130
0.41 sightings / ha
Morton National Park field guide

Morton National Park

5202
0.1 sightings / ha
Tidbinbilla Nature Reserve field guide

Tidbinbilla Nature Reserve

4871
2.46 sightings / ha
ANBG field guide

ANBG

4470
331.23 sightings / ha
Aranda Bushland field guide

Aranda Bushland

4438
52.73 sightings / ha
Mount Ainslie field guide

Mount Ainslie

4257
30.3 sightings / ha
Black Mountain field guide

Black Mountain

4192
23.42 sightings / ha
Wingecarribee Local Government Area field guide

Wingecarribee Local Government Area

3877
0.02 sightings / ha
Mount Painter field guide

Mount Painter

3836
118.52 sightings / ha
Mongarlowe River field guide

Mongarlowe River

3810
0.03 sightings / ha
South East Forest National Park field guide

South East Forest National Park

3764
0.83 sightings / ha
Albury field guide

Albury

3475
1.98 sightings / ha
Ben Boyd National Park field guide

Ben Boyd National Park

3363
0.95 sightings / ha
The Pinnacle field guide

The Pinnacle

3302
112.07 sightings / ha
Bruce Ridge to Gossan Hill field guide

Bruce Ridge to Gossan Hill

3108
25.98 sightings / ha
Mount Majura field guide

Mount Majura

3055
19.5 sightings / ha
Kosciuszko National Park field guide

Kosciuszko National Park

2997
0.01 sightings / ha
Wodonga field guide

Wodonga

2967
0.32 sightings / ha
Nadgee Nature Reserve field guide

Nadgee Nature Reserve

2925
0.87 sightings / ha

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Discussion

DianneClarke wrote:
13 min ago
this observation seems to be a duplicate.

Unidentified Case moth (Psychidae)
Curiosity wrote:
22 min ago
Thanks for the extra images. They give me a better feel for body colours. I think this ant could be Myrmecia tarsata.

Myrmecia tarsata
waltraud wrote:
52 min ago
https://canberra.naturemapr.org/users/22862, I think the asparagus that is mentioned in the article to which you refer is A. aethiopicus (there is one CNM record by Mike); it probably spreads in the same way as the A. officinalis (birds for larger distances / rhizomes). Thanks Mike for treatment hints; I have a damaged back and 2 tennis elbows from parkcare work so I can't dig and need to use other means of control. What poison did you use?

Asparagus officinalis
1 hr ago
There are a number of Lasioglossum (Chilalictus) species that are as small as Lasioglossum (Homalictus) which makes it difficult to identify the subgenus without seeing the underside of the abdomen. While the colour of the abdomen is reminiscent of L. (Homalictus) punctatus, neither the colour nor the surface sculpture of the thorax seems to match that species and some L (Chilalictus) species have red on the abdomen. And all that is before taking into account the variable colour of some species.

Lasioglossum sp. (genus)
Pam wrote:
1 hr ago
Agree with Ken. Not like even any Boletales I'm familiar with....not to say there arn't things out there I'm not aware of. I'd be tending to think it might be some sort of polypore. Though the colours are interesting! It would be great if a specimen could be collected and looked at microscopically and possibly some DNA work done on it!!?

Boletus sp.

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2,154,471 sightings of 19,955 species in 6,503 locations from 11,461 contributors
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