Sunday, September 22, 2013

The End of the 2013 Herp Season Approach-eth....but there are still TURTLES!

The beginning of the semester sort of stinks.....

The collision of the field season and the school season means there isn't a free second.  We have three projects still in the active data-collection phase, which we are trying to coordinate schedules for....and everyone has class (students) or teaching/grading (me).

All of that will change sooner than we think, though.  We are in that time of the year when weather becomes highly variable.  Last week, for example, we had a high of 90 deg. F on Tuesday, and a high of 63 deg F on Friday.  This week we had two days in the mid-80s, while today it was in the mid-60s over the weekend.

That means Fall is coming, which also means the cold-blooded critters will be going down for the winter very soon.

So....thought I'd share some late-season "herpstuff".  Mostly a random conglomeration of neat things seen over the last few weeks.

Our 200-level Field Methods in Ecology class had their annual day of turtle trapping and marking (see here for last year's haul).  This year was another great one.  By luck, we got to take advantage of the last few good days left for trapping before the turtles started to focus on hibernation (and, thus, aren't as attracted to bait). 


We set traps out for two days straight.  Day 1 yielded some nice little Painted Turtles (Chrysemys picta)........

........ and of course some nice Common (northern) Snapping Turtles (Chelydra serpentina).

 
 

On Day 2, however, our traps were nearly exploding with turtles! 

A ton more Paints....

.....no Snaps (suprisingly)...BUT...a much rarer find: a Blanding's Turtle! (Emydoidea blandingii). 
Photo courtesy of T. Gotrik
In three years of trapping this location, we've never caught a Blanding's Turtle before.....

We also trap the nearby creek...and this year got another first: a Spiny Softshell Turtle (Apolone spinifera).
Photo courtesy of T. Gotrik

The students were pretty excited (and so was I).  In the end, we caught 26 Paints, 2 Snaps, 1 Blanding's Turtle and 1 Spiny Softshell.

Enough turtles for everybody to be able hold at least one in a group photo!
Photo courtesy of T. Gotrik

The students worked hard and enjoyed themselves....even when hip waders weren't quite enough to keep them dry....


OH...and it's the time of year when salamanders are migrating from their summer ponds, to where they will spend the winter.

As we found out when checking our drift fences recently.....
Tiger Salamanders (Ambystoma tigrinum).
Photo courtesy of N. Rudolph


Blue-spotted Salamanders (Ambystoma laterale)
Photo courtesy of N. Rudolph

Sunday, September 1, 2013

Holy 18-Point Buck, Batman!!

I had to sneak this one in quick.....

Two impressive animals on the cameras.

The first one would make most hunters drool.....



The second one, however, would probably give the average hunter a heart attack, if they saw it from a deer stand.

 
 

Despite the title of this blog post, I'm honestly not sure how many points this one has.  I count anywhere from 16 to 18, depending on the picture. 

Here are more....he's still in velvet, by the way.

 

This is the same site where I've been getting these nice bucks on camera year after year (see here, here, and here).  I will point out that we have a plethora of Coyotes on this same site.  There is also a fair number of hunters in the general area, and the property in-question is hunted. 

Still...every year I get these massive bucks on my camera traps, although the pictures are always in the middle of the night.