Positively identified by a hummingbird bander from Alabama, but tiny hummingbird, with short bill, hunched posture sitting, and you can just make out one of the long gorget feathers
Caught in crab trap in shallow bay water 20ppt salinity. Dorsal fin origin slightly behind origin of pelvic fin; about 70 lat line scales.
One of 4 individuals of this amazing species observed while exploring a tributary of the Unadilla River. After reading Bishop's seminal work "Handbook of Salamanders", my best friend/cousin/fellow Herpetologist "Pete" (@jdanch) and I decided to check out some historical New York State records for C. alleghaniensis listed in the book, some dating back to the 1940's! We set out on a field trip to examine some old locality records from Delaware County, and were amazed to find a population still extant at one particular locale. Unfortunately we noticed a decrease in the water quality as we worked our way downstream, encountering several small factories pumping effluent directly into the river. I believe this had negatively impacted this population even prior to the 1980's, as we observed no subadults or juveniles, only the 4 large and apparently old adults (one being a "monster" female, only 2 inches shy of the 29 1/8" record specimen!) - despite the two of us having field experience with this species, and a thorough search of over a mile of potential habitat. One specimen had an unusual, large "egg-shaped" growth/lesion on the upper caudal region, a condition I suspect was related to the deteriorating water quality. Sadly, it has come to my knowledge that recent biological surveys at this location targeting this particular species have produced no additional observations of North America's very own magnificent "Giant Salamander".
Four very vocal cranes on high school athletic field. They then flew to adjacent mitigation area (2nd photo). this is about 1/4 mile from MS Sandhill Crane NWR. @mcferny, I didn't have binoculars so couldn't see tags