Exdraghunt
Member
- Joined
- Sep 3, 2020
- Messages
- 24
- Reaction score
- 34
- Points
- 13
- Location
- Seattle, WA
- Country
- United States
- Display Name
- Ed
I received an email that there were amphibian eggs easily visible in a small pond in a local city park. So, me being me, I had to go check it out. And bring people with me, because I heard a lot of people say that they had never seen amphibian eggs before. I think they just don't know what to look for, so I led a small group on an "Amphibian Easter Egg Hunt"
Delightfully, the small pond was stuffed with Northwestern Salamander egg masses. (No frogs, oddly, but I think the invasive American Bullfrogs at the pond have run off any of the native frogs that are normally more common)
Nice example of a Northwestern Salamander egg mass, attached to a large stick.
Egg masses from a distance. They look so much like algae globs after a few days, I'm not surprised that most people "Haven't seen amphibian eggs" They just need to know what to look for.
Not sure what these eggs are from. They were free floating (I just used the leaf to get a better photo of them). Northwestern eggs that came loose from a mass? (Those masses are so solid, I'm not sure how. Bullfrog predation?)
Delightfully, the small pond was stuffed with Northwestern Salamander egg masses. (No frogs, oddly, but I think the invasive American Bullfrogs at the pond have run off any of the native frogs that are normally more common)
Nice example of a Northwestern Salamander egg mass, attached to a large stick.
Egg masses from a distance. They look so much like algae globs after a few days, I'm not surprised that most people "Haven't seen amphibian eggs" They just need to know what to look for.
Not sure what these eggs are from. They were free floating (I just used the leaf to get a better photo of them). Northwestern eggs that came loose from a mass? (Those masses are so solid, I'm not sure how. Bullfrog predation?)