ID is a guess based on https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/107906701
Quick search led to this: https://homeguides.sfgate.com/diseases-ficus-leaves-76218.html
Seen at MDC Kendall campus during a walk for the Dade Native Plant Workshop (free workshop every third Tuesday of the month)
Seen at Elaine Gordon Enchanted Forest Park during Native Plant Day, a fun annual event organized by the Dade Chapter of the Florida Native Plant Society. More info: https://dade.fnpschapters.org/data/uploads/documents/npd2023program.pdf
I found this on the UAH campus on a warm sunny day. It was near a pond.
Could this be Smooth Earth Snake instead of Rough Earth Snake? The 2nd and 3rd images taken by gcwarbler and posted here with his permission.
no flowers on these, but the leaves and spread seem much more likely than inaturalist’s original recommendation, which was japanese clover. this is low, dense, and widespread like clover, and like other trefoil flowers here?
I may be pushing it with the ID here... seems like a decent match: https://bugguide.net/node/view/533469
Set up a single sheet at a little green patch I like to visit for birding. I have looked for bugs here before too but this was the first time I set up a sheet. I used several blacklights: one bioquip powered by a battery with 12v outlet made for jumping car/inflating tires, three DJ blacklights connected to USB powerpacks. Most of the sheet visitors were small but there was a good amount of diversity. Without my macro lens it wouldn't have felt as fruitful.
I set the sheet up around 11:20PM, left and then came back to photograph everything around 2AM (I live nearby). Moon rose around 11PM and was around 95% illuminated, so I had a lot of light competition. Wind was weak when I set the sheet up but was non-existent by the time I came back.
All observations from this sheet: https://www.inaturalist.org/observations?d1=2022-06-16&d2=2022-06-17&place_id=any&project_id=blacklighting-florida&user_id=joemdo