Annie12345
New member
Yesterday we found several piles of what my husband called 'land jellyfish' in our pasture near our pond. Upon close inspection they are obviously eggs of some sort and although I'm not certain they are going to be salamanders, I think it is likely. I'll try to post a photo of the 'land jellyfish' for you, but I'll describe it too: Lying on the ground in the grass under a fallen tree branch about twenty feet from our pond are three 'piles' of clear gelatinous looking stuff with small dark eggs in them. The piles are each about a cupful, or enough that you could probably hold it in one hand if your hand was big.Each pile has a hundred or more dark brown eggs about the size of peppercorns. We live on the northern part of the Olympic Peninsula (Washington State) about ten miles from the Straits of Juan de Fuca and at about 1300 ft. elevation.
We'd like to collect a pile of these and see what they are when they hatch. I'm assuming they would have to be terrestrial salamanders since they aren't in or ever really near the water. Do you have any suggestions on how to set up a terrarium for them. It will probably be temporary, we just want to see what they turn out to be. Would it be best to keep the terrarium outside since our house is warm? If we do decide to raise a few of them, how many could we keep in a small aquarium, and what do we feed them? And how do we feed them?

One 'pile' looks a little different from the other two. The jelly part is cloudier, the eggs larger and lighter colored. I figure they are either closer to hatching, or a different kind of critter. Any ideas?
Are there animals that will eat the eggs and the new hatchlings? What? I made a little hardware cloth box and set it over them just to make it harder for anything to get to them for now.
Thanks! Annie
PS. I'm going to be so disappointed if we hatch a hundred banana slugs.
We'd like to collect a pile of these and see what they are when they hatch. I'm assuming they would have to be terrestrial salamanders since they aren't in or ever really near the water. Do you have any suggestions on how to set up a terrarium for them. It will probably be temporary, we just want to see what they turn out to be. Would it be best to keep the terrarium outside since our house is warm? If we do decide to raise a few of them, how many could we keep in a small aquarium, and what do we feed them? And how do we feed them?

One 'pile' looks a little different from the other two. The jelly part is cloudier, the eggs larger and lighter colored. I figure they are either closer to hatching, or a different kind of critter. Any ideas?
Are there animals that will eat the eggs and the new hatchlings? What? I made a little hardware cloth box and set it over them just to make it harder for anything to get to them for now.
Thanks! Annie
PS. I'm going to be so disappointed if we hatch a hundred banana slugs.