View allAll Photos Tagged salamanders
Fiddling with Flickr's iPhone app. It reminds me so much of Camera+, only it's free. Sucks that I bought Camera+ just less than a week ago, but then, it only cost me s dollar. Still, I hate the redundancy.
Taken with the iPhone 4 on a walk the other day. No filters, just rotated it 90 degrees on Flickr's website.
Difficult to resist a picture of "Stumpy" when he comes out to say hello. He's the Tiger salamander (Ambystoma tigrinum) who regenerated his toes, leg and tail after an accident. He lives at the Idaho Fish and Game MK Nature Center in Boise, Idaho. Photo by Frank
Spotted Salamander Ambystoma maculata. Female loaded with eggs headed to the pond to breed. We were fortunate enough to catch them during their short breeding season and got a lot of pictures. This little lady was very cooperative and sat motionless for several minutes. Dave
Whether it's your first time seeing a spotted salamander or your hundredth time: salamanders make people smile!
North Lincoln Street, Keene, NH.
April 14, 2022.
photo: Karen Seaver
Aneides ferrus - Clouded Salamander I found walking across my porch steps. It was the smallest salamander I have ever seen outside of being a newborn at about 1 inch long.
Slimy Salamanders were, until recently, considered one widespread species of woodlands all over the Eastern United States. They have now been split (rightly or wrongly) into over a dozen separate species, of which the white-spotted is one example. They are native to most of North Carolina, Virginia, and NE Tennessee and Northern SC. They are relatively common in older forests. This one was one of many found under a rotten log in the Unaka Mountains of TN/NC.
It was a salamander night, but one did not make it across the road. This is the depression left in the road after 2000+ pounds drove over it. Sadly, the salamander lost the battle. I like salamanders.
Last weekend I went hiking with my boyfriend, his friend Abby, and his Botany class. While they were all learning about plants (snore) Abby and I trekked around a stream where she found this little guy.
This is a large individual of a small species. The seepage salamander is aptly named, and is found under rocks in mountain seeps and springs. It is a smaller member of the extremely variable and confusing "Dusky Salamander" i.e. Desmognathid group. It is found in the central southern states.
California Slender Salamander - another resident of my garden...found beneath a huge clump of sword fern
Portfolio | Prints | Blog | Newsletter