Monday, July 15, 2013

Fallon Fernandes - Blog 3 (Shoreline Observations)

Date: Sunday, July 14, 2013
Location: Fort point Channel; Barking Crab, Sleeper Street, Boston, MA
Time: Noon-1:30PM
Tide: Low
Temp: 88, Wind = WNW @ 10 mph
Species in area of study (under dock): Sea lettuce (green and maroon), algae, rockweed, moss, orange sponge, feather duster, mussels (blue), bryozoan
Species near area of study: crab

My initial observations of the area were of the following plantlike creatures: plant with cabbage shaped leaves (sea lettuce), algae, seaweed with bulbs (rockweed), mussels that fit the description of "blue mussels", moss, neon orange substance that seemed to grow on multiple things (plants, docks, boats, etc,) and take its shape (orange sponge), white spiney thing that wasn't solid (feather duster), tubular bulbous and different shades of browns and greens (maybe bryozoan??). Don't quote me on the identification of some species (i.e. orange sponge and bryozoan), because I consider the method unreliable in the timeframe provided. 

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Location: Rowes Wharf; Boston Harbor Hotel, 70 Rowes Wharf, Boston, MA
Time: 11:20AM-11:45PM
Tide: Low
Temp: 88, Wind = WNW @ 10 mph
Species Under the Dock: Sea lettuce (green and maroon), algae, rockweed, moss, orange sponge, feather duster, mussels (blue), bryozoan, sea stars, Forbes' common sea stars, barnacles, lichen, amphipods

My initial observations of the following creatures were as follows: plant with cabbage shaped leaves (sea lettuce), algae, seaweed with bulbs (rockweed), mussels that fit the description of "blue mussels", moss, neon orange substance that seemed to grow on multiple things (plants, docks, boats, etc,) and take its shape (orange sponge), white spiney thing that wasn't solid (feather duster), tubular bulbous and different shades of browns and greens (maybe bryozoan??), star fish (sea stars and sea stars that fit the description of Forbes' common sea stars), barnacles (prior knowledge), lichen (prior knowledge), and a tiny shrimp like creature (amphipods).

No comments: