Learn about native plant gardening and carbon sequestration

Comox Valley Nature invites the public to our in-person April general meeting as follows:

A native plant garden.
(Photo: Royann Petrell)

Date: Sunday, April 28, 2024
Time: 3:00 to 5:00 p.m. PT
Location: Main hall of Comox United Church, 250 Beach Drive, Comox
Keynote Presentation: Native plant gardening and carbon sequestration
Speaker: Royann Petrell

In addition to the keynote presentation, CVN activity leaders will give brief updates so you can learn about our ongoing activities such as birding, botany, and conservation and restoration. If you are new to Comox Valley Nature, find out more about us here. We always welcome new members.


A native plant garden over a grassy lawn is not only beneficial for wildlife and pollinators but also has the potential to sequester carbon. When carbon is sequestered in a garden, carbon dioxide is removed from the atmosphere and held in the soil. The process plays a crucial role in mitigating climate change by reducing the amount of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere.

Dr. Royann Petrell (Associate Professor Emerita, University of British Columbia) will provide background material about native plant gardening and some information about an event planned for June 15, 2024 at Steller Raven Ecological Farm. There will be time for questions and discussion from the audience.

Royann worked on a carbon sequestration research project for Project Watershed for three years and became very interested in how the process works. Royann and her husband Sylvain have been rehabilitating much of their 7.5 acre Steller Raven Ecological farm with native shrubs and trees, wildlife trees, ponds and streams, and over the last five years, native Vancouver Island grasses and flowering plants. Plants most suitable for carbon sequestration are long-lived and rooted perennials that are adapted to our wet winters and hot and dry summers.

Sapsucker feeding on a native bitter cherry. (Photo: Royann Petrell)

To date, 95 bird species have been observed on the farm, and many breed there. Recently 16 bee hives have been installed. In early spring the bees collect pollen from willows and native flowering shrubs!  Royann is keen to describe her progress and delight in how to plant a carbon-sequestration native garden. Her hope is that native gardening will catch on for the betterment of the Comox Valley.

Volunteers will be needed to help out at the June 15 event.  A list of volunteer positions will be available for people to sign up at the April 28 meeting. Funding for the June event is from a BC Nature Donor grant.

Posted in Climate, Conservation and Restoration, Guest Speakers | Comments Off on Learn about native plant gardening and carbon sequestration

Help out local nature-based education

From Hand-in-Hand’s website: “Hand-In-Hand Nature Education is an outdoor educational program located in the Comox Valley and Campbell River that is designed to offer a unique learning experience for children who are walking to 17 years old.”

Jarrett Krentzel, founder and director of Hand-in-Hand and a former Vice President of Comox Valley Nature, recently reached out to CVN to solicit the donation of nature-based items for their annual silent auction. The auction’s proceeds go to their In-House Subsidy Fund which helps children from low-income families participate in HiH’s programs.

If you have nature-related items you could donate, Jarrett requests that you contact him by May 3 at with the following information:

  • Name of your donation:
  • Subtitle (optional):
  • Description of your donation:
  • Images: Please upload attachment(s)
  • Fair Market Value (The likely selling price on the market at a specific point in time):

Alternatively, if you would like to make a cash donation, you can do so on HiH’s donation page.

Posted in Miscellaneous | Comments Off on Help out local nature-based education

Tour the Trees of the Year 2024

Nominations for Trees of the Year 2024 ended March 31, and we’ve been busy planning tour routes to help you visit these 27 impressive trees efficiently. Maps of these routes are now available. You can access them using the links in the table below.

For full descriptions of the individual trees, including location, a photo, size, and the tree’s story, see this page: Trees of the Year 2024.

Please respect private property boundaries and owner privacy by viewing the trees from public land unless otherwise invited in.

The maps

We have three ways for you to access the route maps using the links in the table below:

  • The route maps were implemented on the PlotARoute website (plotaroute.com) which has multiple viewing options. See some tips below the table.
  • If you would like to have printable information, you can download a PDF version of the plotaroute map.
  • If you like Google maps, some of the routes are shown on one here.

Note that the Grand Tour route encompasses all the nominated trees, which (except for #12 and #27) are also in one or another of the shorter routes.

Tour
Route
Tree Nos.plotaroute.com
(online)
plotaroute.com
(PDF)
On
Google
Map
?
Grand Tour1 to 27[coming soon]
Comox
7-tree cycle route
5, 8, 11, 17, 22, 25, 26web pagePDFyes
Comox 5-tree walking route8, 11, 22, 25, 26web pagePDF
Comox 5-tree and more walking route8, 11, 22, 25, 26web pagePDFyes
Bear Creek Park2web pagePDF
Courtenay A1, 4web pagePDF
Courtenay B20, 23, 24web pagePDF
Courtenay C3, 7, 10web pagePDFyes
CVRD A9web pagePDF
CVRD B6, 16web pagePDF
Comox Lake Bluffs13web pagePDF
Royston-Cumberland14, 15, “owl tree”web pagePDFyes
Seal Bay Park18, 19web pagePDF
Union Bay21web pagePDF

Tips for viewing the plotaroute maps:

  • Some of the routes are part of a plotaroute collection and appear on one map. Select the one you want to see in the table below the map.
  • Expand the map to full screen using the crossed arrows at the top right of the map.
  • Play an animation using the play icon at the bottom left of the map.
  • Zoom in or out using the + and – icons at the top left of the map.
  • The length of the route is given in the bottom margin of the map.

We are grateful to ToTY team members Roger Chayer and I.E. for all their work preparing these maps.

Posted in Tree(s) of the Year | Comments Off on Tour the Trees of the Year 2024

Trees of the Year 2024 results

The nomination period for CVN’s Trees of the Year 2024 event ended on March 31. Once again we’ve seen how passionate and observant you, our community members, are for the trees around us in both our urban and rural environments. This year, you nominated 27 trees to celebrate, including specimens of 11 different species.

Here’s how the nominations broke down among those species, most frequent first:

  • Douglas-fir (8)
  • Bigleaf maple (5)
  • Garry oak (3)
  • Western redcedar (3)
  • Sitka spruce (2)

and one each for (in no particular order) western white pine, flowering cherry, grand fir, arbutus, English walnut, and weeping sequoia.

You can read the stories and see photos of all these special trees here.

To whet your appetite, below is a sample of the photos (click a phot to enlarge it). Coming soon will be a post with maps of suggested routes for visiting these wonderful trees in person.

Posted in Plants and fungi, Tree(s) of the Year | Comments Off on Trees of the Year 2024 results

Botany at Tsolum floodplain trails, March 2024

Locorice fern

The Botany/Mycology Group had a well-attended field trip on March 12 to the Tsolum River floodplain trails adjacent to the Comox Valley Exhibition Grounds to see signs of early spring growth.

The new leaders of the group, Véronique M. and Karen C., are adopting a new educational approach to field trips. They pre-selected a few species to focus on, with the aim of having group members learn to identify them. To this end, Véronique followed up with an illustrated guide to the focus species as well as to some additional species that were observed.

The focus species on this trip were:

  • tree ruffle liverwort
  • palmtree moss
  • common script lichen
  • licorice fern
  • wild ginger
  • grand fir
  • red alder

Be sure to check out this very useful identification guide which you can download as a PDF file (26.9 MB).

Posted in Field Trips, Learning material, Plants and fungi | Comments Off on Botany at Tsolum floodplain trails, March 2024

Recording for talk on seed-based restoration

Comox Valley Nature recently hosted the following webinar, facilitated by the Canadian Society of Environmental Biologists:

Title: Seed-based Restoration for Urban Settings on Vancouver Island
Speaker: Kristen Miskelly (Satinflower Nurseries)
Date: Sunday, February 18, 2024

If you missed this event or would like to see it again, CSEB has made the recording available here. To access it you will need to provide your name and email address.

For more information about this talk, see the announcement in our earlier post.

Posted in Conservation and Restoration, Guest Speakers, Plants and fungi | Comments Off on Recording for talk on seed-based restoration

New Article: New microorganism and biodiversity in Strathcona Park

A new addition by Loys Maingon to our occasional series of long-form articles examines the implications of the discovery of a microorganism in Strathcona Provincial Park that appears to be new to science.

Read this important article here: “Biodiversity and a New Species of Gastrotrich in Strathcona Provincial Park?“.

You can always find this and other long-form articles via the Articles category in the sidebar.

Posted in Articles, Conservation and Restoration, Ecology, Microorganisms | Comments Off on New Article: New microorganism and biodiversity in Strathcona Park

Members and public invited to CVN’s 2024 AGM on February 25

Comox Valley Nature is holding our Annual General Meeting on February 25, 2024 from 3:00 to 5:00 pm in the Main Hall of Comox United Church, 250 Beach Drive in Comox.

The public is invited to learn about CVN and join the Society. The meeting will introduce leaders of the different interest groups who will give short presentations. The interest groups include Birders, Botany, Marine and Shoreline, Nature Photography, Nature Walks and Habitat Restoration. For more information about CVN, see this page and the rest of this website. Also see our Instagram and Facebook accounts.

Some examples of our activities: The Birders Group has weekly field trips and posts its observations on eBird (see this recent example). They also participate in the annual Christmas Bird Counts and Trumpeter Swan counts in the area. The Botany/Mycology Group had a recent outing to Kitty Coleman Park to view fall fungi – see images of their amazing finds here.

CVN’s habitat restoration teams do important work at Courtenay Airpark, Little River Nature Park and other locations. As part of our educational mandate, we host guest speakers who share their expertise on natural history and environmental issues.

General meetings and lectures are normally held on Sundays (most months) and are open to the public, including children and youth.

The AGM is a good chance to join us and get involved in our activities.

Posted in News | Comments Off on Members and public invited to CVN’s 2024 AGM on February 25

Winter 2023-24 fungi review, part 2

Jocie says “Now that you’ve all digested part 1, here’s part 2 of Alison’s late fall & winter fungi review: the fabulous Polypores!”
Click a photo to enlarge it.

Notes on polypore fungi in the Comox Valley, late fall into winter 2023-2024

Polypores are much tougher and more durable than gilled fungi, even the annual ones such as the Trametes species.   Many have a shelf-like or bracket/hoof-like growth pattern, others have stipes; some are hard (FomitopsisGanoderma spp.),  others leathery and pliable (Trametes, Stereum), others quite soft (Postia and Phlebia). Some have shallow pores on the spore-bearing underside, others are wrinkled, still others smooth.  A few have what look like “gills” (see Gloeophyllum below).

Picipes badius, blackleg (formerly Polyporus badius), is found on dead and downed wood, with a smooth, leathery bright orange cap, white underside with small shallow pores, and a stipe that is mostly black (caps and one underside show in photo 9.)

(9) Picipes badius

Clusters of Trametes versicolor, turkey tail, have been prolific this winter on a range of hosts; see photo 10 plus Jocie’s earlier photos. The various species of Trametes have a white underside with white tiny pores.  Another common ruffled shelf polypore is Stereum hirsutum, false turkey tail, with  orange cap and lighter border, while its underside is orange and smooth. The specimen in photo 11 shows both cap and underside.  Unlike the Trametes species it is found only on dead hardwood, alder here, and often together with one of the yellow jelly “witch’s butter” fungi (Tremella aurantia) which parasitizes the Stereum (no photo of T. aurantia).

The Postia caesia  group, blue cheese polypore (photo 12), is a soft spongy shelf-like fungus on dead conifer logs, with white and bluish-green colouration on the slightly hairy cap and white angular or maze-like shallowish pores on the underside. According to MacKinnon and Luther, edibility is unknown — it only looks like blue cheese.

(12) Postia caesia

In photo 13, Rhodofomes cajanderi, rosy conk, is just developing. It will take on the form of a hoof-like conk with zoned cap, almost black in the centre and pink round the rim, with pink pores on the underside.  In the upper part of the photo there are diminutive “hoofs” in the making.  The red droplets however were stunning. 

(13) Rhodofomes cajanderi

Gloeophyllum sepiarum, conifer mazegill. Photos 14A and 14B show the bracket-like polypore whose underside has what look like blunt gills. The orange on the cap of this example is much brighter than the more common reddish brown.

Posted in Plants and fungi | Comments Off on Winter 2023-24 fungi review, part 2

Winter 2023-24 fungi review, part 1

Report by Alison M. circulated to the Botany/Mycology Group on January 26. Watch for part 2 (polypores) coming later. Click a photo to enlarge it.

Notes on colourful fungi in the Comox Valley, late fall into winter 2023-2024

To add to the bright yellows, oranges and purples of Jocie’s report on the group’s visit to Kitty Coleman Park…. Who said that winter shrooms were all dull?

First, the mystery shroom from the Kitty Coleman report – it looked most like a Nolanea holoconiota, so photos 1A and B show a specimen (a little more pointed that the mystery specimen), complete with its base, which is typically quite fuzzy. Photo 1B shows the spore print of the Nolanea on the right – a strong deep pink. The spore print on the left is from a Pluteus exilis (deer mushroom) which is a more salmony pink colour. The mystery shroom, given its size, might have been the latter, though the cap was paler than often seen, and the usual streaking on the stipe not clear.

Waxy caps

In October I circulated a photo of the bright scarlet Hygrocybe coccinea (or possibly miniata if one follows MacKinnon and Luther) from our forest (photo 2). In late December we found the yellow Hygrocybe flavescens (photo 3).

On a walk along Rosewall Creek on January 7 we found the seldom noticed parrot waxy cap, Gliophorus psittacinus (formerly  Hygrocybe psittacina) (photos 4A and 4B). The cap of this fungus starts out a brilliant green (hence “parrot”, psittakos being the Greek for parrot), but the cap within a day will fade to a dingy yellow-beige. In photo 4A there is a young cap in front, and an older cap behind, the former not easy to spot in the moss on the shaded forest floor. In photo 4B the cap on the right still retains some of its green colour. The photo in MacKinnon and Luther, p. 87, has been illuminated with a flash.

One Mycena

Photo 5A shows the somewhat dingy cap of Mycena aurantiomarginata, but underneath the brilliant orange edges of the gills show up against a white ground (photo 5B).

Fragrant fungi

Some waxy caps are scented;  Hygrophorus bakerensis (photos 6A and 6B) has a lovely almondy fragrance (as do some of the Clitocybe species).

However, probably the most memorable scent (excluding the spicy old socks of the pine mushroom – Tricholoma murillianum) is that of the Aphroditeola olida (photos 7A and 7B). The very strong fruity perfume of this pink fungus gives rise to its common name, pink bubblegum mushroom, though its new genus name associated with Aphrodite and the perfume ought to suggest a more elevated label. The fungus was formerly in the Hygrophoropsis genus, its form, with vase shape and decurrent gills very like the false chanterelle, Hygrophoropsis aurantiaca.

One toothed fungus

Hydnellum fuscoindicum (formerly Sarcodon fuscoindicum) has a dark scaly cap that blackens with age. The cross-section of this old specimen shows the still blue flesh clearly, along with the profile of the spines. Hard to make out on the forest floor, the cap showed up better using the camera’s flash although that does alter the colour. This fungus is one of the few from which one can obtain blue colours for wool in an alkaline bath.

Posted in Plants and fungi | Comments Off on Winter 2023-24 fungi review, part 1