Three individuals (2.1) flipped under a wood plank. Snakes were observed courting each other.
5 individuals observed adjacent the beach and nearby a saltmarsh. Knotty rhizomes and the axis of the inflorescence scabrous hispid.
Esse registro tem uma história curiosa. Postado no site Wikiaves (https://www.wikiaves.com.br/4442204), foi inicialmente confundido com a vocalização de uma coruja, até que um colega sugeriu que poderia pertencer a um anfíbio do gênero Phyllodytes. Encaminhei o áudio para uma amiga, cuja sobrinha, herpetóloga, identificou como Phyllodytes kautskyi.
O artigo abaixo representa o sonograma da vocalização dessa espécie, bastante semelhante ao do meu registro.
http://antigo.inma.gov.br/downloads/boletim/arquivos/16/Simon&Gasparini.pdf
64* F ambient Small woodland vernal pool rich with fauna. Wood frogs egg cases have just released tiny larvae. Fairy shrimp, and more.
Trying to figure out what type of ducks i have. Unsure of gender. about 2 months old
Several thousand stems in 8 inches of water in a pristine pond in the Berkshires. Apparently my three iNat observations are the only three in all of New England. I does occur in all six states, though.
Macrophylla or orbiculata? For reference, my thumbnail is 17 mm long. Because, of course, we didn't have a ruler with us!!
Interesting color variation.
Found in yard
Carex exilis (coastal sedge, meager sedge), South Kingstown, RI
On wooded hummock near pond. Culms 25-40cm, filiform. Leaves to 40 cm, 2mm wide. Plant bases wine-red bladeless sheaths. Perigynia fuzzy, 2.2mm x 1.3mm, short beak. Achene trigonous, brown, 2mm long.
In circumneutral talus woodland, with Cystopteris bulbifera, Rhodobryum, etc. Carex deweyana was my guess without keying it out, and that's what the AI suggested, so going with that for now...
State endangered, globally rare. This is the fourth observation in all of iNat. Leaves are like Carex vestita but glabrous perigynia puts it into section Paniceae. Plants are widely spaced on long rhizomes. This is a known population, not my find, but still awesome to see. Protected by our state endangered species act which turned 30 years old last year. (MESA) Massachusetts Endangered Species Act.
Last photo shows habitat.
this one keeps me thinking Ambystoma but I'm thinking spotted dusky based on patterning
A small racer, found in a field. This is my first ever observation of one of these! This guy was about 2 feet long, and very quick. I only got two photos before he slithered away.
Uncommon but not really rare in the Berkshires despite almost no reports on iNat. Not rare in Vermont but endangered in New Hampshire and Maine.
Larry Ditto and I seined about a dozen amphibians we did not recognize from a small stock tank on a private ranch in Kenedy Co. We tried to photograph them on land, but they were slippery and hard to hold. We got a few shots on wet grass, then released them back into the tank. We tentatively identified them as Rio Grande Lesser Sirens after looking through some field guides.
THIS AREA IS NOT OPEN TO THE PUBLIC AND IS BEHIND LOCKED GATES.
I was involved in a photo contest on a private ranch in Kenedy Co., Texas. Larry Ditto and I seined about 30 tiger salamanders from a small stock tank on this ranch and later photographed them in an aquarium. I am not certain whether this species may have been split, so I will leave the final ID to Toby or someone more knowledgeable than me.
THIS AREA IS NOT OPEN TO THE PUBLIC AND IS BEHIND LOCKED GATES.
My wife took this cell phone image of a female Efferia in our yard today. Likely not identifiable past genus level.
finger
Farwell Canon T5i, this is the last nature photo I took of it before it got water damage 😔