npub1w6…fzeq2 on Nostr: npub1zdp33…2vqv8 I love your theory. In the foothills a few km east of me, the main ...
npub1zdp33shl69xr0uq3x8n5gsjykq9upycwh6nqm02c3f6x0frrn0dq42vqv8 (npub1zdp…vqv8) I love your theory.
In the foothills a few km east of me, the main anchor of biodiversity is also an oak, but a different species; it's the great basin oak, whose name I forget. It more often has a bush-like habit than a tree-like habit, but it still produces acorns which many animals (those able to tolerate lots of tanins) can feed on. There are also box elder trees (a kind of maple), but they only seem to support box elder bugs.
In the foothills a few km east of me, the main anchor of biodiversity is also an oak, but a different species; it's the great basin oak, whose name I forget. It more often has a bush-like habit than a tree-like habit, but it still produces acorns which many animals (those able to tolerate lots of tanins) can feed on. There are also box elder trees (a kind of maple), but they only seem to support box elder bugs.