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Salamander Story
By Paul Lauenstein
March 2008
The combination of melting snow, rising temperatures, and rain one weekend last
March triggered the annual migration of salamanders to their breeding grounds.
Our relatives from New York City were visiting for the weekend, so we took a
ride over to Moose
Hill Audubon Wildlife Sanctuary in Sharon on Saturday night
to witness the event.
Arriving at Moose Hill, we encountered barricades manned by volunteers, who told
us the road was temporarily blocked to traffic to spare the migrating amphibians
from getting squashed by car tires. We parked, grabbed our umbrellas and flashlights,
and headed down the road. As we walked, we scanned the pavement for signs of
life but at first saw nothing. Then we saw flashlights ahead. Several people
were crowded around the pool of light on the road, in the center of which sat
a wood frog. They told us that there were also many tiny tree frogs, called spring
peepers, hopping around and advised us to walk slowly and try not to step on
them. Sweeping their flashlights around, they quickly located a tiny tree frog
about the size of my fingernail, and then a couple more. They also told us that
the odd quacking sounds emanating from the woods were the mating calls of wood
frogs, whereas the cricket-like chirping sounds were the tree frogs' calls.
Moving carefully on, we rounded a curve in the road and encountered a fat black
mole salamander with bright yellow spots. It was purposefully crossing the road
from its underground home in the woods to the vernal pool where it was born and
where it joins hundreds of others every spring to spawn. Cold, clear vernal pools
last a few months before drying up in summer, just long enough to allow the salamander
tadpoles to emerge as air-breathing creatures but not long enough to support
a fish population that would otherwise eat them. The vernal pools provide the
tadpoles with a rich diet of fairy shrimp, mosquito larvae, and other tiny prey.
We met another group of flashlight-toting walkers guided by Patty Shaver of the
Moose Hill Sanctuary. Patty told us to tread carefully because there were numerous
red efts crossing along with the yellow-spotted salamanders. It was not long
before we found some of these earthworm-sized red salamanders trekking across
the pavement toward the vernal pool.
Having seen four species of amphibians in less than an hour, we headed home.
As we returned, the drizzle increased to light rain, and we encountered more
salamanders crossing the road than we had on the way there. Experiencing the
instinctive spawning migration of these secretive amphibians provided us with
a memorable reminder of the miracle of nature that surrounds and sustains us.
As vernal pools and
woodland habitat are increasingly compromised by development, acid rain, mercury,
global warming, and other factors related to human activities, we can only wonder
if our descendants will be similarly privileged.

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