Wild Encounters in WA

I received an email that there were amphibian eggs easily visible in a small pond in a local city park. So, me being me, I had to go check it out. And bring people with me, because I heard a lot of people say that they had never seen amphibian eggs before. I think they just don't know what to look for, so I led a small group on an "Amphibian Easter Egg Hunt"

Delightfully, the small pond was stuffed with Northwestern Salamander egg masses. (No frogs, oddly, but I think the invasive American Bullfrogs at the pond have run off any of the native frogs that are normally more common)

IMG_8685.JPG

Nice example of a Northwestern Salamander egg mass, attached to a large stick.

IMG_8791.JPG

Egg masses from a distance. They look so much like algae globs after a few days, I'm not surprised that most people "Haven't seen amphibian eggs" They just need to know what to look for.

RIMG8651.JPG

Not sure what these eggs are from. They were free floating (I just used the leaf to get a better photo of them). Northwestern eggs that came loose from a mass? (Those masses are so solid, I'm not sure how. Bullfrog predation?)
 
IMG_6749.png


Some of the egg masses were unattached to anything (the pond has almost no submerged vegetation) so I was able to scoop up an egg mass to allow closer examination for the others in the group. I love in this one you can see the green hue of the symbiotic algae that grows inside of the eggs. (the eggs were then returned to where I found them)

RIMG8830.JPG

Developing embryo in another mass nearby
 
It's tadpole time! While a survey usually means seeing innumerable frog tadpoles, everyone on the team was pleasantly surprised to find a couple of salamanders swimming about. I think we even have two different species (though it's so hard to tell them apart at this age)
8b.JPG

Possible Northwestern Salamander.
D1.jpg

Possible Long-Toed Salamander (they hatch earlier than Northwesterns, hence my guess as this one is clearly older)
 
Time for a toad break! Here's two different Western Toads, encountered on two different hiking trails, located in the same region of the Cascades.

toadlet.jpg

RIMG9261.JPG

A tiny little toadlet, hopping about on the hiking trail.

RIMG5675.JPG

RIMG5673.JPG


And an extremely impressive fully grown Western Toad. I didn't realize they got this large until I encountered this lovely example of toad-ness.

As I was hiking through some beautiful Old-Growth, the bushes rustled next to the trail. I, of course, had to know what could be rustling the bushes and went to get a closer look. Whatever the beast was, it was moving in a way I had never seen (certainly not mammalian!) Then I finally saw the creature and shouted with delight "IT'S A TOAD!" and to the shock of my hiking companion, produced the largest toad either of us had ever seen in the wild.
 
Last edited:
General chit-chat
Help Users
  • No one is chatting at the moment.
    There are no messages in the chat. Be the first one to say Hi!
    Back
    Top