ReleasetheHag
Arachnopeon
- Joined
- Mar 12, 2023
- Messages
- 35
Just as the title says, looking for a detailed guide on telling apart decomposing hardwood and softwood.
I recently went foraging for my A. gigas, Saccharine, and I grabbed quite a few chunks of crumbly wood that already had native myriapods in them (I removed any visible individuals, of course). I made sure there was invertebrate life in every piece I picked. But looking at my pile laid out to air dry after rinsing.. some of the colors look suspicious to me.
I’d rather recollect than poison her, so does anybody have a definitive or detailed way to tell the two apart once they’ve been rotted and chunked up? It’s a long shot, but, it’s worth the try. I’m just not confident enough in my downed tree ID.
Thanks in advance!!
(PS… sterilizing collected moss? It’s rinsed with real hot water sitting in the freezer right now.. unsure of how to continue)
I recently went foraging for my A. gigas, Saccharine, and I grabbed quite a few chunks of crumbly wood that already had native myriapods in them (I removed any visible individuals, of course). I made sure there was invertebrate life in every piece I picked. But looking at my pile laid out to air dry after rinsing.. some of the colors look suspicious to me.
I’d rather recollect than poison her, so does anybody have a definitive or detailed way to tell the two apart once they’ve been rotted and chunked up? It’s a long shot, but, it’s worth the try. I’m just not confident enough in my downed tree ID.
Thanks in advance!!
(PS… sterilizing collected moss? It’s rinsed with real hot water sitting in the freezer right now.. unsure of how to continue)