Archive for the ‘Wild Animals’ Category

“Slithering Salamanders, Turtleman! Why Did the Spotted Salamander Cross the Road?”

Tuesday, March 30th, 2010

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 Spotted Salamander (Ambystoma maculatum)

It’s ten o’clock at night, pitch black, with torrential downpours from a persistent coastal storm that has flooded shorelines from New Jersey to Massachusetts.  Why would any sane person venture into the swampy wetlands of SouthCoast Massachusetts to investigate what happens in the dark shadows of a rainy spring night?  Luckily, Turtle Journal needs not concern itself with sanity.  So, we pulled on our boots, slipped into our slickers, clicked on our headlamps and sloshed through the flooded wetlands … in search of loved crazed amphibians.

Why Did the Spotted Salamander Cross the Road?

Slipping and sliding through swampy backroads and bouncing through bottomless puddles, we reached an abandoned cranberry bog in Marion on the SouthCoast of Massachusetts.  Approaching the bog, we spied a spotted salamander that had gone “tharn” (a coined word from Watership Down to describe a creature frozen in place) in the middle of the road from the blaze of our headlights.  Why do they cross the road on these dark, rainy spring nights?  The simple answer is that they are impelled by biology to journey from their over-wintering sites to mating aggregations, called congresses, when the warm spring downpours arrive in late March or early April.

Slithering Salamanders!

Spotted salamanders are delightful critters.  Females larger than males; males faster than females.  Bright yellow spots running down their bodies in two parallel lines.  In the water they swim with grace, while landward they slither and waddle.

Releasing Spotted Salamanders

We couldn’t forget to mention the outrageous and cacophonous chorus of critters that bellowed for attention while accompanied by the steady, staccato cadence of torrential downpours.  We estimated this musical rendition at about 120 dB (decibels) loudness; that is, 5 db above a sandblaster and 5 dB below a pneumatic riveter.  Watching our new friends disappear into their mating pond already adorned with large egg sacs from several days (and nights) of stormy love proved a beautiful sight as they gracefully swam in seeming choreographic synchrony with Nature’s version of a Little Amphibian Night Music.

Spotted Turtle and Wood Frog Celebrate Saint Patrick’s Day

Thursday, March 18th, 2010

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Female Spotted Turtle

Warm sunshine and Saint Patrick’s Day brought out the best in nature.  Turtle Journal visited the pond at Brainard Marsh on the South Coast of Massachusetts to see what might be stirring.  Sue Wieber Nourse found a mature female spotted turtle and a tiny spotted yearling basking on the moss covered banks of shallow Brainard Pond, and a fire red wood frog catching the late morning rays on the surface of the pond.

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Mature Female Spotted Turtle with Head Withdrawn

The mature female, caught unaware in the act of basking, withdrew her head inside her dark shell adorned with yellow spots.  The yearling spotted turtle was so camouflaged that it lay hidden in “plain sight.”   Once Sue recognized that the tiny leaf was actually a spotted yearling, she crept stealthily toward it.  When just within grasp of the tiny critter, it hopped like a spring-loaded frog from the bank into the pond in a single leap.

Mature Female Spotted Turtle in Brainard Marsh 

The short video clip documents the discovery and the release of the mature female spotted turtle at Brainard Marsh in Marion, Massachusetts on Saint Patrick’s Day. 

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Mature Female Spotted Turtle Carapace and Plastron 

 Spotted turtles are a real beauty!

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Wood Frog from Brainard Marsh Pond

Basking on the surface of Brainard Pond, a fire red wood frog caught Sue’s attention.  If you’ve never tried to capture a slippery frog in its own milieu, then you haven’t the slightest concept of the phrase “Mission Impossible.”  Undeterred, Sue plunged into the mucky water and snagged the wood frog in a swingle swoop.

Wood Frog Released Back into Brainard Pond

While wood frogs are reportedly plentiful in the Northeast, this one represents the first that Turtle Journal has identified on the South Coast of Massachusetts.

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Wood Frog

Spotted turtles and a gaudy wood frog … not a bad showing from nature for Saint Patrick’s Day.

Wearing the Green for Saint Patrick’s Day 2010

Wednesday, March 17th, 2010

Everyone’s Wearing the Green for Saint Patrick’s Day 2010

The Turtle Journal team assembles a chorus of exotic critters from the Great White North to acclaim March 17th, 2010 as “Wearing of the Green” Day in honor of Saint Patrick, while still attesting to an important cultural and environmental message”  “It’s not easy being green!

Turtle Journal Arrives in Southwest Florida

Wednesday, February 3rd, 2010

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White Ibis

The Turtle Journal team arrived in Naples, Florida this afternoon for an annual update of our research observations along the southwest Florida coastline.  As the journal awaits the latest research material to arrive from the south, the moment seems ripe to reflect on the marvelously varied and colorful wildlife of the Gulf area.

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Brown Pelican

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Juvenile Alligator

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Snail Shell and Sand Dollar

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Gopher Tortoise on the Ritz Carlton Beach

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Assortment of Shells from Vanderbilt Beach

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Seahorse

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Royal Tern

Next week at this time the Turtle Journal will begin posting results of this year’s expedition to the Sunshine State.

Springtime Arrives on Outer Cape Cod

Monday, April 6th, 2009

 

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Spring Peepers Serenade at Bayberry Hill Trail

Nothing says springtime as definitively as a throatful serenade of peepers.  While a few, isolated chirps have been heard around the Cape on brief sunny interludes since late February, the first symphonic aria of soprano peepers débuted on Sunday at the Bayberry Hill Trail in South Wellfleet.

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Hermit Crab Awakens on South Wellfleet Tidal Flats

Another hopeful sign of spring is the awakening of hermit crabs within the inter-tidal zone surrounding Lieutenant Island in South Wellfleet.  This critter, although entertaining, was not amused by the human interuption of his “Day on the Beach.”