This afternoon while I was at my girlfriend's I took a trashcan outside to wash it. The hose is by the driveway and there are some pieces of slate laying on the gravel.
While the water running I looked under one of the pieces of slate for sowbugs. There weren't any there, sort of odd since the weather was warm enough to expect some. Then I flipped a small piece of slate, about the size of my hand. Underneath were two salamanders! Both were about 3" long but different species. The one I'm sure of is the redback salamander, Plethodon cinereus.
The other I think is a slimy salamander, Plethodon glutinosus. That ID is sort of a fallback, they look pretty much the same and the range is right.
There are a few that I think this resembles more. Their ranges are a hundred or more miles away so the slimy is a safer bet.
This isn't a paticularly dramatic adventure, not even for me. It is a reminder to keep your eyes open, nature doesn't have to be someplace far away.
While the water running I looked under one of the pieces of slate for sowbugs. There weren't any there, sort of odd since the weather was warm enough to expect some. Then I flipped a small piece of slate, about the size of my hand. Underneath were two salamanders! Both were about 3" long but different species. The one I'm sure of is the redback salamander, Plethodon cinereus.
The other I think is a slimy salamander, Plethodon glutinosus. That ID is sort of a fallback, they look pretty much the same and the range is right.
There are a few that I think this resembles more. Their ranges are a hundred or more miles away so the slimy is a safer bet.
This isn't a paticularly dramatic adventure, not even for me. It is a reminder to keep your eyes open, nature doesn't have to be someplace far away.