Wild Encounters in WA

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)

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Nice example of a Northwestern Salamander egg mass, attached to a large stick.

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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.

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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?)
 
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Some of the egg masses were unattached to anything (the pond has almost no submerged vegetation) so I was able to scoop up an egg mass to allow closer examination for the others in the group. I love in this one you can see the green hue of the symbiotic algae that grows inside of the eggs. (the eggs were then returned to where I found them)

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Developing embryo in another mass nearby
 
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