I’ve been impressed with all the great content posted here recently. I thought I’d chip in with some of my findings from the first quarter of this year. My first herp of the year was a queen snake on an odd warm day in early January in the Bluegrass region of Kentucky:
Regina septemvittata
Later in the day I found this Northern Leopard frog, a species that is disappearing across large portions of its range:
Rana pipiens
Ambystoma barbouri
Harlan County stream
Rockcastle County cave
Desmognathus abditus
Desmognathus ochrophaeus
Rana sylvatica
Ambystoma tracks
Gyrinophilus porphyriticus
In February I visited some friends in the Hill Country of Texas. We spent every day exploring the caves, springs and streams of the region. I also ate more breakfast tacos during that weekend than in the past ten years of my life.
Eurycea latitans
Bassariscus astutus
Eurycea neotenes
Thamnophis proximus rubrilineatus
Tantilla gracilis
Bufo valliceps
Hill Country cave
Syrrhophus marnockii
Plethodon albagula
Plethodon albagula
Back home this big girl was crawling down a country road in Eastern Kentucky like she owned the place:
Ambystoma maculatum
Ambystoma opacum
Siren intermedia
Rana areolata
Eastern Kentucky No Parking Zone
Plethodon kentuckii
Desmognathus ochrophaeus
Rana sylvatica
Southeastern Kentucky sandstone cliff
Plethodon wehrlei
Desmognathus monticola
Plethodon richmondi
Aneides aenus
Gyrinophilus porphyriticus
Pseudotriton ruber
I'm looking forward to the current quarter. Activity peaks for numerous species here in Kentucky that I hope to see.
-Jb
First Quarter Report
Moderator: Scott Waters
- SnakeStick
- Posts: 355
- Joined: August 18th, 2010, 5:35 pm
- Location: Hilton Head Island, South Cackalacky
Re: First Quarter Report
Good shots, Jason. I like the pic of the steamside sally near the snow. That crawfish frog is very cool. Great post!
Re: First Quarter Report
Excellent report Jason. I'm especially impressed by the wehrlei and the crawfish frogs. Those are some solid finds! Haven't seen either in years and your post makes me want to change that.
Phil
Phil
Re: First Quarter Report
Fantastic post! Thx!- Pops
- kysnakeguy
- Posts: 207
- Joined: June 14th, 2010, 9:58 am
- Location: kentucky: where snakes can be found
- David and Suzanne
- Posts: 47
- Joined: March 7th, 2012, 1:13 pm
- Location: Fultondale, Alabama
Re: First Quarter Report
Great pics, Jason! Love the Siren. Love the pic setups too.
David and Suzanne
David and Suzanne
- Josh Holbrook
- Posts: 2196
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- Location: Western North Carolina
- Contact:
Re: First Quarter Report
Looks like a sausage.Jason B wrote:
That monticola shot is awesome. Keep up the good herpin'.
- Daniel D Dye
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- Location: New River (Brooker), Florida
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Re: First Quarter Report
Amphibian overload...Wow!!
Geez Jason, you're making me look up to many of these. I'm old and can't remember Genus specie...throw in a common name or two.
DDD
Geez Jason, you're making me look up to many of these. I'm old and can't remember Genus specie...throw in a common name or two.
DDD
Re: First Quarter Report
Ian - Thank you. We only had a couple days of lingering snow this year so I tried to get out and do some photography on one of them.
Phil - Thanks. I should give credit where credit is due; Todd found that particular Wehrle's salamander. I spotted one in a crack that I couldn't photograph a few weeks prior. We went back at night and Todd noticed the one pictured on the crawl after I walked right past it. You may have missed your chance for Crawfish frogs this season. The unseasonably warm weather in mid-March apparently cut their breeding short.
Pops and Alec - Thank you!
David and Suzanne - Thanks. Sirens are especially difficult to photograph but they sure are cool critters. I'm fortunate to have a population living in the pond at my parent's place.
Josh - The Marbled salamander certainly was a little porker, nearly immobile. I'm still learning how to get the most out of my wide angle lens, but I was pleased with the seal salamander shot too.
Daniel - Having to look up the common names helps the kids learn the taxonomy! I almost included the common name for the Ringtail cat but figured we could all handle a little mammal taxonomy too.
-Jb
Phil - Thanks. I should give credit where credit is due; Todd found that particular Wehrle's salamander. I spotted one in a crack that I couldn't photograph a few weeks prior. We went back at night and Todd noticed the one pictured on the crawl after I walked right past it. You may have missed your chance for Crawfish frogs this season. The unseasonably warm weather in mid-March apparently cut their breeding short.
Pops and Alec - Thank you!
David and Suzanne - Thanks. Sirens are especially difficult to photograph but they sure are cool critters. I'm fortunate to have a population living in the pond at my parent's place.
Josh - The Marbled salamander certainly was a little porker, nearly immobile. I'm still learning how to get the most out of my wide angle lens, but I was pleased with the seal salamander shot too.
Daniel - Having to look up the common names helps the kids learn the taxonomy! I almost included the common name for the Ringtail cat but figured we could all handle a little mammal taxonomy too.
-Jb
- Tim Borski
- Posts: 1855
- Joined: June 7th, 2010, 7:28 am
- Location: FL Keys
- Contact:
Re: First Quarter Report
I looked up Crawfish frog.Geez Jason, you're making me look up to many of these.
This is really outstanding in all respects. I'm especially partial to the gorgeous animals with the gorgeous habitat in the background. Win/win all the way!
I've sometimes wondered what happened to the car I owned in high school. Does it still smell like brook trout, wet Hodgeman's and Pam Dauber?
Tim
Re: First Quarter Report
Good stuff Jason! I've not been to the TX hill country, but it certainly is an area of interest.
- Berkeley Boone
- Posts: 878
- Joined: June 8th, 2010, 4:02 am
Re: First Quarter Report
Jason-
Incredible post, man! Very nice stuff in there. I realyl like your idea of a 'first quarter report' and may steal that idea and do something like that throughout the year so I don't end up with another of those year-in-review posts..... ha ha!
Very enoyable. I liked your queen snake shot, right off the bat! And the monticola and richmondi with the trout lily shots were very pleasing as well. What cool rock formations!
--Berkeley
Incredible post, man! Very nice stuff in there. I realyl like your idea of a 'first quarter report' and may steal that idea and do something like that throughout the year so I don't end up with another of those year-in-review posts..... ha ha!
Very enoyable. I liked your queen snake shot, right off the bat! And the monticola and richmondi with the trout lily shots were very pleasing as well. What cool rock formations!
--Berkeley
Re: First Quarter Report
Great looking finds man! All of those amphibians are great! And that wehrlei is a stunner! I have a few new sights I am hoping yields a couple of these. I just havent had time to check them. I smile every time I pass that car on the Parkway. Just wandering what the people that owned it thought when they walked out to go to town that morning lol.
-
- Posts: 2248
- Joined: June 7th, 2010, 11:42 am
Re: First Quarter Report
What a great post! LOVE that crawfish frog!
Re: First Quarter Report
Tim - Thank you. We have a lot of beautiful habitat here, especially when hunting amphibians. I had to look up Pam Dauber...
Barry - The Hill Country is a fascinating place. The microbreweries and inverts make it worth a visit, but the rivers, springs and caves are truly unique.
Berkeley - Thanks! I got the idea for the quarterly post from someone who used to post here pre-crash. I think it's a good way to share with the regional group, but I'll probably still post a year end post on the big forum. We have some gorgeous spring wildflowers in the southeast and I've made a conscious effort to work them into herp photos. There was a big patch of bloodroot just up the ravine from the trout lilies but it was too precarious to try and set up a shot.
Jayd - Thanks man. Good look with the Wehrle's. If I find myself over your way for an extended stay this summer I may offer to help search them out. That car under the boulder is amazing; the engine block must be completely smashed and driven into the ground several feet.
Tamara - I appreciate it. Crawfish frogs have a really cool call that carries for hundreds of meters across their habitat. I feel fortunate to have spent a successful night searching for them this spring.
-Jb
Barry - The Hill Country is a fascinating place. The microbreweries and inverts make it worth a visit, but the rivers, springs and caves are truly unique.
Berkeley - Thanks! I got the idea for the quarterly post from someone who used to post here pre-crash. I think it's a good way to share with the regional group, but I'll probably still post a year end post on the big forum. We have some gorgeous spring wildflowers in the southeast and I've made a conscious effort to work them into herp photos. There was a big patch of bloodroot just up the ravine from the trout lilies but it was too precarious to try and set up a shot.
Jayd - Thanks man. Good look with the Wehrle's. If I find myself over your way for an extended stay this summer I may offer to help search them out. That car under the boulder is amazing; the engine block must be completely smashed and driven into the ground several feet.
Tamara - I appreciate it. Crawfish frogs have a really cool call that carries for hundreds of meters across their habitat. I feel fortunate to have spent a successful night searching for them this spring.
-Jb
- BillMcGighan
- Posts: 2362
- Joined: June 7th, 2010, 9:23 am
- Location: Unicoi, TN
Re: First Quarter Report
Ky stuff is super, but trip to Hill Country and west is icing on cake.
E. latitans is not something we see every day. Very cool.
E. latitans is not something we see every day. Very cool.
- Todd McKinney
- Posts: 233
- Joined: August 23rd, 2010, 5:04 am
- Location: Hardin County, Ky
- Contact:
Re: First Quarter Report
Very awesome post Jason you are doing well so far this year.
- Steve Atkins
- Posts: 744
- Joined: June 7th, 2010, 5:14 pm
- Location: Asheville NC
Re: First Quarter Report
love the sirens! I'd love to take a trip to kentucky one of these days and do a little salamandering
- Steve Atkins
- Posts: 744
- Joined: June 7th, 2010, 5:14 pm
- Location: Asheville NC
Re: First Quarter Report
i had to look up the ring tail cat. What a cool animal. Are they common?
Re: First Quarter Report
Steve - I think ringtails can be locally common in parts of their range. They are nocturnal and pretty sneaky so they're not frequently encountered. Seeing it was the highlight of my trip. It was a gorgeous animal.
Shoot me a message when you want to visit KY. I'd be happy to show you around.
Shoot me a message when you want to visit KY. I'd be happy to show you around.
Re: First Quarter Report
You guys and your first quarter posts. I thought I was having a pretty good year so far until these recent posts. That wehrlei and the texas cave critters are awesome. Seeing your January queen snake on flickr got me out to our local queen spot on an unusually warm January day but I didn't see a thing.. Thought I'd be able be able to turn up a Nerodia minimally. Was the maculatum crossing the road during the day?
Re: First Quarter Report
The Texas Hill country is pretty sweet; so much to see. I started planning my next trip out there on my flight home.
The spotted salamander was crawling down the road at 11 am. I guess she was looking for a good ditch to drop her eggs.
The spotted salamander was crawling down the road at 11 am. I guess she was looking for a good ditch to drop her eggs.