Finse Day #5
Finse Day #4
Finse Day #3
Finse Day #2
Guide to Høgsete
Høgsete is a field site close to Flåm in western Norway where I do field work. It is a 30 min walk up a steep hill and through forest. It’s tricky to reach, because there are a lot sheep trails and more than one person have gone lost trying to find it (including me).
Amy took pictures, while Francesca, Nicola and me showed the way. I hope nobody will ever get lost again. The guide can be downloaded here: GuideToHogsete
Rediscovered species that went extinct
A graphical way to show all the species that we thought had gone extinct but showed up years later, very much alive.
Statistics = magic
found here.
Furekamben
I have worked at Gudmedalen for 2 summers and always gazed up on the top of Furekamben with a glint in my eyes. „I want to go up, but there is not time today“. I never took the time to go! So this week, I went all the way up. It’s half an hour walk from our field site at Gudmedalen. Yes, it’s steep and hard, but worth the effort. The view is astonishing. You can see Flåmsdalen, a vertical rock face and where Låvisdalen lies.
So, dear SeedClim and FunCaB’ers, next time you are at Gudmedalen go up to Furekamben! It will cost you only an hour of your time. Half an hour up, 20 minutes slapping yourself, asking yourself why you never went up and then you can enjoy the view. And 10 minutes down.
Rose mutant
You probably know X-men and have heard of mutants in the animal world. But mutations can also occur in the plant world and it’s not that rare. But what my students Linn and Signe found in the field a couple of days ago is remarkable.
They are studying phenology and pollinators on common buttercup (Ranunculus acris) and have to look at the plants very carefully. A normal buttercup looks like the plant on the left side.And they found this beautiful plant on the right side! You might think that this is not the same plant, but they have the same leaves, which are very distinct.
This mutant is probably not fertile, because the stigma and stamen are not developed. But it has more petals than a normal buttercup flower and looks like a rose.
Mutant picture from Linn Vassvik.