05/24/2021
Sharing this on here a couple days late, but hoping you will still enjoy it 🙂
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In honour of the International Day for Biological Diversity (May 22nd), I wanted to share this illustration of Spring Ephemerals...🌱
Spring Ephemerals (meaning short lived) are perennial woodland wildflowers which develop leaves and flowers early in the spring, then quickly bloom and produce seeds, leaving only roots or rhizomes underground for the rest of the year. They provide many benefits to forest ecosystems, like giving the first nectar to bees and other pollinators. The trout lily miner bee is one example that feeds almost exclusively on the trout lily blossoms. 🐝
I started to draw these flowers in the beginning of spring in April. They are not always the showiest blooms like tulips or daffodils, and often much harder to spot🔍, hiding in the leaf litter. 🍂
I photographed 📷most of these flowers in the South March Highlands in the west of Ottawa, which is considered to have the highest ecological value and biodiversity of any area in Ottawa. Finding them was like a little treasure hunt!
I hope you will enjoy the beauty of these little forest gems, painted in watercolour, on the International Day for Biological Diversity, with this year's theme "We're part of the solution."
Painting nature will always be part of the solution for me, serving as a reminder for how beautiful, delicate, and diverse our earth truly is 🌎