Fotos / Sonidos
Qué
Liebre Americana (Lepus americanus)Observ.
timhealyDescripción
Large individual ran across the trail before I could get a photo. Mostly brown coat with white feet. My first for New York State
Qué
Alce (Alces alces)Observ.
timhealyDescripción
Tracks found along the trail, seemingly not super fresh but still well-defined
Fotos / Sonidos
Qué
Sorex fumeusObserv.
timhealyDescripción
Several individuals heard well and seen repeatedly as they scurried about in the vegetation adjacent to the bog trail. Small even by shrew standards and compact in shape, almost mouse-like rather than elongated. Tail long compared to my familiar Short-tailed Shrew frame of reference but not gratuitously so, appeared countershaded. Distinctly gray pelage with paler underside. Twittering constantly while scrambling through a series of tunnels amidst the branches, grass stems, and mosses, right across the trail from a flowing stream
Qué
Salamandra de Espalda Roja (Plethodon cinereus)Observ.
timhealyDescripción
Flipped under a log
Qué
Salamandra Parda Norteña (Desmognathus fuscus)Observ.
timhealyDescripción
Flipped under a rock at the edge of a stream. Found in the immediate vicinity of several other Northern Duskies, with which it appeared largely consistent in size, structure, and color. I suspect that the tapered appearance of the tail tip is an artifact of the angle, photo quality, and wet mud
Qué
Salamandra Bilineada Norteña (Eurycea bislineata)Observ.
timhealyDescripción
Flipped under a rock at the edge of a stream
Qué
Salamandra de Espalda Roja (Plethodon cinereus)Observ.
timhealyDescripción
Larger individual flipped under a rock
Qué
Salamandra Bilineada Norteña (Eurycea bislineata)Observ.
timhealyDescripción
Flipped under a rock at the edge of a stream
Fotos / Sonidos
Qué
Salamandra Parda Norteña (Desmognathus fuscus)Observ.
timhealyDescripción
Flipped under a rock at the edge of a stream, closely associated with a Two-lined Salamander. Tail appeared laterally compressed and somewhat keeled in life, more closely approaching the impression in the third photo rather than the first two in-hand photos, where the tail is drooping over the finger and partly obscured
Qué
Salamandra Bilineada Norteña (Eurycea bislineata)Observ.
timhealyDescripción
Flipped under a rock at the edge of a stream, with an Allegheny Mountain Dusky Salamander
Qué
Salamandra Parda Norteña (Desmognathus fuscus)Observ.
timhealyDescripción
Flipped under a rock within a small stream. Poor photo quality, but overall build, color pattern, and keeled tail seemed consistent with Northern Dusky, which was encountered mere feet away in the same microhabitat
Qué
Salamandra de Espalda Roja (Plethodon cinereus)Observ.
timhealyDescripción
Larger individual flipped under a log
Qué
Tritón Oriental (Notophthalmus viridescens ssp. viridescens)Observ.
timhealyDescripción
Larger individual flipped under a rock
Qué
Salamandra Bilineada Norteña (Eurycea bislineata)Observ.
timhealyDescripción
Flipped under a rock at the edge of the stream
Qué
Salamandra de Espalda Roja (Plethodon cinereus)Observ.
timhealyDescripción
Larger individual flipped under a rock
Qué
Tritón Oriental (Notophthalmus viridescens ssp. viridescens)Observ.
timhealyDescripción
Larger individual flipped under a rock