| About: Vernal Pools |
In 2007, the Dummerston Conservation Commission received a grant from the New England Grassroots fund to inventory the vernal pools of Dummerston develop an ongoing monitoring program, and work to protect the town's most important pools. Oh yes, and to put together the information on this website. From here you can navigate to general information about vernal pools, learn more about their inhabitants, see a map of the vernal pools of Dummerston, and find out how to become a vernal pool monitor. Vernal poll exploration-early spring 2006
Yellow Spotted Salamander
There are many ways to define "Vernal Pool." Because we are interested in the specialized habitat they provide for a suite of creatures, we like the definition provided in Elizabeth Colburn's book, Vernal Pools, Natural History and Conservation:"
Usually the pools are located in the woods where they're protected from the sun, and form in shallow basins where spring rains and snow melt collect. Each spring and early summer they teem with life, which then disperses into the forest when the amphibians mature, making vernal pools an important part of the entire forest food chain. Vernal Pool Amphibians
The big event on the Spotted Salamander
calendar is their annual sojourn to their breeding habitat. The
preferred habitat for this activity is a woodland vernal pool. It is on
these treks to their breeding pools that we have the best opportunity
to see these amphibians. They are up to 9 inches long, gray to black,
and each salamander has a distinctive pattern of yellow polka dots on
its back. The belly is usually pale gray, but can sometimes have
lighter speckles. The young salamanders wriggle free of their jelly coating after a month or two. The warmer the water temperature, the sooner they hatch, but the warmer the temperature, the sooner the pond will dry up. Each year it is a race with the sun. The larval salamanders have feathery gills and very soon develop legs, but it takes a few more months for them to be ready to join their kind on land. Many vernal pools will dry before this metamorphosis can be completed. Fortunately, Spotted Salamanders can live 20 years, so the adults have other opportunities to reproduce.
Jefferson's Salamander Rare in most of Vermont, the Jefferson's salamander is common in some of Dummerston's vernal pools, and even outnumbers spotted salamanders in some of them. These salamanders have light blue flecks on a brown to gray background. The flecks are mostly on the stomach. Jefferson's can be up to 7 inches long. Like the spotted salamanders, Jefferson's migrate from upland habitat to vernal pools each spring to lay their eggs. They often arrive at the pools earliers the spotted salamanders. These
salamanders often hybridize with blue-spotted salamanders the next
salamander on this list. The hybrids are nearly impossible to tell from
the purebreds, so we call the salamanders that look like Jefferson's Jefferson's complex salamander's.
Jefferson's Complex If
you read about Jefferson's salamanders, above, you know that where
these species' ranges overlap, hybrids are often more common than
either pure species. These two species and their hybrids form a group we call Jefferson's Complex. Most sensible sexually reproducing species have chromosomes that are arranged in matching pairs in most of their cells, a condition called diploidy. Eggs and sperm each contain one set of chromosomes (haploid). These chromosomes merge when an egg is fertilized and a new diploid life begins. Many of the hybrids, however, are triploid, tetraploid, or even pentaploid. Most of the hybrids are females. Many of these hybrids reproduce by gynogenesis. This means that the egg requires a male sex cell to become activated, but it does not fertilize the egg. When the female produces eggs, the numbers of chromosomes are not reduced. The egg develops into a clone of the mother.
The Wood Frog, Rana sylvatica, is the frog with the most northern
distribution in North America and can be found in the forests of Alaska
and Canada. These frogs overwinter beneath the leaf litter, and by
increasing the percentage of glucose in their cells, are able to
withstand the freezing of up to 1/3 of the fluids
in their bodies with no ill effect. A favorite meal of many
predators, wood frogs rely upon their ability to blend in with leaf
litter to survive, that and their prodigious ability to procreate. Each
female will lay between 750 and 1,500 eggs per year. Although only 4%
of these survive to become fully metamorphosed froglets, according to
one Alaskan study, that still results in 30 to 60 little frogs per
coupling. Even if, as another study indicates, seventy percent of these
move up the food chain in their first year, that still means that the
frogs that arrive at the pools to breed each spring have a good chance
of replacing themselves. It also indicates the importance of wood frogs
to the rest of forest life. In spite of these attributes, these
frogs, like all amphibians, have vulnerabilities. When vernal pools dry
early, the entire year�s offspring might be lost. The frogs are also
susceptible to bacterial diseases, environmental toxins, and
ultraviolet radiation. Your efforts to help them reach their breeding
pools will not only ensure the continued life of individual frogs, but
will strengthen the local population of these important and interesting
creatures. No one knows for sure how these frogs find their breeding
pools. There is evidence to suggest that they use olfactory and
celestial cues. It might be that they follow gradients of increased
humidity down hills to the pool basins. Once there, the males begin the mating calls that make the pools sound like the cafeteria at a duck school. These frogs have vocal pouches near their front legs, so you will see their sides expanding as they croak, rather than their throats. Each female is likely to be swamped by suitors, and she is lucky if she can swim away with just one male gripping her back in the embrace called "amplexus." Once she arrives at the egg laying site, often a site used by many females, and begins laying eggs, the male releases his sperm and stirs the water with his hind feet. After the eggs have been laid, they part, and without so much as a "See you next year," the male heads back to try his luck again. The females usually sink to the bottom after this amorous encounter, and leave the pool as soon as they are able.
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Spotted Salamander
Blue Spotted Salamander
Wood Frogs