

It’s often easy to see cracks in a lava field because there are endemic ‘ae ferns (Polypodium pellucidum) growing in them and they make a distinct green line through the mostly gray lava.
Posted in response to Becky’s October Squares challenge theme of ‘Kind.’ See more responses here.

Amazing, The contrast between the green and the grey is striking, and the frozen flow patterns in the larva add to the interest.
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The lava flows are a bit like fingerprints, no two the same.
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How unusual, Graham. Cool shot!
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I like taking photos of plants growing in hostile places. It’s wonderful how they manage to survive.
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Very cool!
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Thanks, Snow.
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Very effective. It reminds me of the natural limestone pavements found in parts of Europe where the plants grow in the fissures in the limestone.
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Cracks and fissures are the first place anything grows again. I was fascinated to see that ohia trees put their roots down into lava tubes and access moisture from condensation in the tubes. Nature can be pretty amazing.
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I love these! Life after death 🙂 🙂
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Yes, the reclamation of lava flows is amazing to see. It looks such a forbidding landscapes, but some plants are exceedingly tenacious.
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Wow! This is extraordinary to see, never realised this could happen. Clever fern
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There are several native plants that are among the first things to recolonize lava flows, and a few non-natives these days, of course.
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Just wonderful, not so the non native stuff though
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Not so much, no.
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