This was observed on a placed trail cam.
Near Two Harbors, MN.
Utility company dug between the sidewalk and the pole and a few days later this appeared
Listen I feel dumb even listing this as minor, I know it probably couldn't be, but I also don't know that its purpurea. If you look in photo 9, you can see some of the habitat, with some legit purpurea in the background. These were hooded, and seemed to be fully functional pitchers, even though on these 2 plants pictured, they were never taller than 4 inches, and had the narrower pitcher. Is this just a baby purpurea that is weird? I have grown purpurea on my desk, and from what I remember about the baby pitchers on the ones I've grown, they havent had a hood and been open like that.
All of these individuals were growing within 2 feet of each other, with some truly monster purpureas right beside them.
Last photo is the sarracenia in question on the left, with a smaller dead pitcher from a purpurea on the right. I have both of these available for sequencing if anyone would be so kind. They are drying on the dash of my car right now.
I would LOVE some input from a Sarracenia expert.
Eastern Massasauga Bioblitz 2015 - Gravid Female
My husband and a co-worker saw this armadillo dead on the side of the road (CR 17) north of State Road 119.
Merkmale: Stängel unten behaart und rotfleckig, oben kahl, unter den Knoten deutlich verdickt; Blätter 2-3fach 3-zählig; Fiederblättchen am Rand bewimpert, unterseits zumindest auf den Nerven behaart, oberseits (fast) kahl; Hülle 0-3-blättrig, hinfällig; Hüllchen bewimpert, bleibend; Griffel spreizend; Früchte entwickeln sich sehr ungleichmäßig.