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Boreal Toads released on Dixie National Forest, Powell Ranger District
54 Boreal toad metamorphs were released during the Watershed Restoration Initiative field tour August 11th, 2016. Once common in mountain habitats across Utah, boreal toad populations have severely declined. Biologists from the Dixie National Forest, Bryce National Park, Hogel and Denver Zoos, Utah Division Wildlife Resources and Southern Utah University interns have been monitoring toads on the Paunsaugunt Plateau, Dixie National Forest for several years. They observed an alarming reduction in toad population. This is a genetically distinct population, therefore it is very important to take action to save them!
Dixie National Forest. Credit: USDA Forest Service photo
Photo ID: 50185 Le Boreal
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Change for India helps provide bore wells to rural villages without sufficent water. Bore wells in India are a great source of clean drinking water.
Bored of revising, found some gels in my bag. What else is there to do?
Strobist info: FL50 with yellow gel set to 1/64th power.
365/30
.“There's no excuse to be bored. Sad, yes. Angry, yes. Depressed, yes. Crazy, yes. But there's no excuse for boredom, ever.”
Change for India helps provide bore wells to rural villages without sufficent water. Bore wells in India are a great source of clean drinking water.
One of a series of 'Just mucking about' kind of images from a bored evening on holiday in Somerset a fortnight ago.
Trying to see if I could do one of those basketish type things Captain Blithering does so preposterously well.
My "dull picture for May 2008" goes to this one. Excitingly we had a police helicopter floating around with its searchlight and generally making a bloody racket over the course of half an hour or so one evening. So I go to take a photo, get one experimental shot and they bugger off. No consideration, some people.
Female Stelis phaeoptera just emerged from an overnight roost inside a timber boring.
Shrewsbury 1 August 2016
The Bay of Fundy has huge tides wanting to see the tidal bore or incoming which is a phenomenon in these parts we headed to local spot to view. So did half a dozen others but instead of a 18" it was maybe 12" , still fascinating and you could hear it coming like a faint freight train ,BEST VIEWED SLIDESHOW@ 1 SECOND INTERVALS