Subject: [Tweeters] long-toed salamanders
Date: Feb 14 13:53:14 2014
From: Stan Bezimienny - grzebiuszkaziemna at gmail.com


Mark,

I am not sure you can call any amphibian in Seattle "common", since it is
paved all over, but they sure *were* common. There are surviving breeding
populations, I know of at least one. Maybe the one in your house was moving
to a breeding pond, they breed this time of year.

Stan

>Message: 9
>Date: Thu, 13 Feb 2014 20:19:58 -0800 (PST)
>From: mark salvadalena <marksalvadalena at yahoo.com>
> Subject: [Tweeters] Long-toed Salamander and Pine Siskin questions
>To: "tweeters at u.washington.edu" <tweeters at u.washington.edu>
>Message-ID:
<1392351598.2237.YahooMailNeo at web160204.mail.bf1.yahoo.com>
>Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"

>I frequently see these two critters during the summer in the subalpine
zone of the Olympic Mountains. I expect to see Pine Siskins >at my Seattle
home during the winter, but I'm not seeing them this winter. I don't expect
to see Long-toed Salamanders, but there >was one walking across my living
room last night. So, my questions are these: Where did the Pine Siskins go
this winter? British >Columbia? Colorado? Are Long-toed Salamanders common
in Seattle? Why was one in my house?

>Mark Salvadalena
>Seattle

>mark salvadalena at yahoo dot com
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