Monday, October 25, 2010

The rest of the season in NM

Wow, the time has flown by. The season is almost done and I realized I haven't posted for a while. Here is some of what I've found around.


New Mexico Whiptail

Eastern Collared Lizard

Speckled Earless Lizard

We took a trip down south to look for subocs and decided to pop into the Gila. We found no live snakes, but did find some other herps:

Red-spotted Toad

Canyon Treefrog tadpoles

Fence Lizard

Gila Spotted Whiptail

Ornate Tree Lizard

Green Toad - possibly a county record, there are none reported in Sierra County in Deghenhardt's book.

DOR herps included:
Trans-pecos Ratsnake
Western Diamondback Rattlesnake
Desert Box Turtle
Blacktail Rattlesnake
Sonoran Gopher Snake
Coachwhip
Big Bend Patchnose Snake
Plains Leopard Frog
Couch's Spadefoot

We have seen some other herps as well:

Spadefoot tadpoles


Tim came down from Colorado on his way to Arizona, so Bill, Regina, Nikki and I met up with him to do some roadcruising. The first herp of the trip was this:

Western Diamandback Rattlesnake

This would be a precursor of things to come for the night, I think we got our dirty dozen [i]atrox[/i]. Here are some other finds from the night:

American Bullfrog

WDB

This one was very calm, then:

Up he went! - This was the highest posturing I've seen!

Here he is after we moved him off the road. We were walking back to the car and heard some rattling from the other side of the road. It belonged to this beautiful creature:

Prairie Rattlesnake - love the pattern on this one! This was the most pissed off [i]viridis[/i] I have ever encountered, it left my snake hook full of venom!

Night Snake

I'll spare you the several pictures of [i]atrox[/i], we saw several!

The rest of these pictures are some critters we have found road cruising and checking traps on the reservation:

Prairie Rattlesnake

another

Painted Desert Glossy Snake

Side-blotched lizard

Chihuahuan Spotted Whiptail

Roundtail Horned Lizard

Speckled Earless Lizard

Great Plains Toad

Fence Lizard

Plains Spadefoot

Eastern Collared Lizard

Spiny Softshell Turtles

Painted Desert Glossy Snake



Longnose Snake

Sonoran Gopher Snake

Me with another

Dragonfly

Western Coachwhip



Roundtail Short-horned Lizard - my wife has an eagle eye for these!

Side-blotched Lizard - we named her "Kinky" we have caught her in the traps at least 3 times!

Regal Ringneck


We had a Saturday off so we decided to go to the Magdalenas for the afternoon to look for crotes mainly, but I also wanted to see some crevice spiny lizards again this year. Here is what we found:

Mountain Patchnose

Here it is closer

Headshot

Crevice Spiny Lizard

Well, that's about it for the year. There still is the possibility of late season den activity, but we will see what the weather does! Thanks for looking!

Josh

Sunday, October 3, 2010

NMHS Fall Field Trip - Wind River Ranch - Mora County, NM

This past Labor Day weekend was the New Mexico Herpetological Society's fall field trip. We went to Wind River Ranch again. We went there this past spring. You can see what we found on that trip here: http://www.fieldherpforum.com/forum/viewtopic.php?f=9&t=362. I will show things in chronological order and then show the photo session at the end. So, don't get discouraged if the pics aren't the best at first! We brought our friends Jeremy and Iwalani with us who were not herpers, but now are :thumb: . We arrived on Friday night. It was late and we cruised a little on the way in and saw a couple elk, but no herps. We got to the cabin we were staying at and made some pizza and went to bed. Here are some pictures of the cabin we stayed in:




The next morning I got up and flipped a few of the various boards laying around the cabin and found several centipedes but no herps. As everyone got up, we decided to take a walk to the nearby ghost town. We encountered these on that walk:

Me, Iwalani & Jeremy

Plateau Fence lizard

Bison





Nikki at the ghost town

Me at the ghost town

Prairie Ringneck found under some vinyl siding - Jeremy & Iwalani's first sought after snake!

The Mora River
As we were flipping in the ghost town I saw some movement and a canine shape running toward us. My first thought was "coyote," then I saw that it was two dogs. There is one man who still lives in the area. His name is Ben and they are his dogs. Here is a picture of one of them getting a drink:



Plateau Fence Lizard

On the way back to the Cabin, Iwalani carried the ringneck and fell in love with it. This is the girl who screamed and ran when I brought out my rosy boa one night at my apartment a few years ago. She had named it by the time we got back to the cabin. The name escapes me right now. One non-herper converted! :thumb: :beer: <-- that's root beer because I don't drink ;)

We returned to the cabin and made some breakfast burritos and napped a little before heading out again. We decided to go to some ponds where we saw a lot of bullfrogs the last time we were here. We spotted this frog along the river on the way to the pond:


I looked around the pond and Jeremy and Iwalani walked around a little bit and then I heard my wife calling and she had found this:

Eastern Snapping Turtle

We also saw several bullfrogs. We decided to head back to the cabin. Jeremy and Iwalani had to head back home, so we needed to get some things packed and such. Iwalani wasn't feeling well, so we were helping her when Logan came inside the cabin and asked his mom for the camera because there was a rattlesnake outside! There is only one species of rattlesnake known in the area, so I was pretty sure what was out there. I dropped what I was doing and ran outside to find this:

Prairie Rattlesnake - I was right!

Scott, Rebecca, me, Brian & Ted with the camera in the back there

Logan, Scott, Rebecca, me & Dave

me stopping Logan from getting envenomated.


We said bye to Jeremy and Iwalani and they went home and bought hiking boots so that could go herping with us again!

We went for a road cruise that night and found a few things out:

Woodhouse Toad

We also found a couple DOR's:

Lined Snake



Plains Garter Snake

And also this live snake:

An attractive bullsnake

After cruising we returned to the cabin and got some sleep. The next morning we arose and checked a spot we found last spring that had turned up some things. Dell went with us. On our way there we found Pat hanging out on the bridge near the ghost town. This is what he was looking at:

Eastern Snapping Turtle

We continued on our way and these are some of the things we found:

juvie Short-horned Lizard that Nikki spotted



Plains Garter that I flipped
Dell flipped a couple ringnecks
I saw this railroad tie and told Dell that I had flipped it on two occasions on the last trip and found the same Great Plains Skink. I flipped it and found:

The same skink! I guess it likes that railroad tie!

Another Plains Garter

We stopped at the pond again because Dell had not been there yet:

Eastern Snapping Turtle

some bullfrogs with the turtle


We got back to the cabin and some others had hiked along the river and found some of these:

Northern Leopard Frog - sorry for the crappy pic, it's the only one I got.

Dell and I decided to try to find our own leopards and walked out to the river and found no frogs, but did find this:

Wandering Garter Snakes - it is interesting, we found tons of these guys in the spring, in fact it was the only species of garter found on the spring trip. In July, Charlie Painter was out there and they found some blackneck garters, plains and wandering. We only found plains and wandering this trip.

We went back to the cabin and had dinner and then went road cruising. We went with Ted and Dell. The others were going to catch bullfrogs at the pond. We had a pretty productive cruise:

Plains

Wandering

We saw a DOR and stopped to check it out. Ted pulled up to it and Dell rolled down the window and said, "coontail." sure enough it was this juvie:

Western Diamondback Rattlesnake - RANGE EXTENSION! They have been found in the county, but not within miles of where we were. The carcass was collected and will be vouchered at the museum.

The rest of the cruise produced several DOR bullsnakes.

We returned to the cabin and found Scott outside and we told him what we found and he told a us a story. Apparently, one of the group had gone missing and they had searched everywhere for her and could not find her. They eventually got a hold of her on her phone and she was walking back to Albuquerque. She was upset with her husband and decided to go home. They convinced her to come back and they left early the next morning.

The final day didn't involve much herping, but mainly packing up, cleaning and a photo session of various things found on the trip and then a mass releasing:

Wandering Garter

Prairie Ringneck

Bullsnake



juvie Plains Garter

Plains Garter

All in all it was a good trip! Several county records for the database and even a range extension!

Josh