Sweet Auburn: The Magazine of the Friends of Mount Auburn Environmental Leader and Innovator | Page 20

People and Happenings Seeking Spotted Salamanders by Hilary Hopkins, Mount Auburn Inscription Volunteer On April 9th I got an email from the Cemetery. “It’s the first warm rainy day of spring. The spotted salamanders in our vernal pool might have their Big Night tonight. Come at 7:30 and we’ll go see.” So they have a Big Night?? Get down and party, do they? Well, yes. The salamanders hibernate in protected places near the pool. On the first warm, wet spring night, they emerge and head toward it. Males and females cavort together in the water, and a few days later, gelatinous masses of eggs result. A little crowd of salamander hunters was gathered at the Cemetery’s front gate in the dusk. By that time it had not been raining for quite a few hours, and I was worried that the salamanders would not find the weather to their liking. I liked it though—warmish and humid after a long, cold, windy winter. I took some pictures of the bare trees against the sky, which was gray and overcast. We made our way to Consecration Dell and the vernal pool in the bottom of it. We were met by Joe Martinez, a herpetologist who studies the Cemetery’s amphibians and reptiles. Joe had some nets and plastic tubs. The pool still had a pancake of ice in the middle, though the margins were clear. As darkness gathered, we went slowly around it, shining our flashlights into the water to see if we could find salamanders. I loved being in the dark, moist air. I began to hear the deafening high-pitched chirpings of spring peepers, tiny one-inch long frogs. “Look! Here’s one!” I heard from the other side of the pool. I hurried over. Not a salamander, but a spring peeper. Flashlights shone on the leaves. For the life of me I couldn’t see anything. “No—right THERE!” Oh! My goodness, he looks just like a leaf. He sat in our lights, frozen. I took some pictures. We began to hear them all over. Their chirps are astoundingly loud, especially when you see how tiny they are. CHIRP CHIRP CHIRP CHIRP Joe called, “I got a toad!” We gathered around him to see. Several years ago he released some American Toad tadpoles in the pool, and he has been monitoring their progress, in- viting visitors to report sightings, which he marks on a map of the Cemetery. The map shows how their population has increased and is moving through their new home. But where are the spotted salamanders? I set off again round the pool with my flashlight illumi- nating the now-dark path and the shallow water. As I come round to the beginning again, there’s a commotion. “Got one! Got one! I’ll put him in the tub!” Yes indeed, there in the bottom of the tub is a handsome salamander, black with yellow spots. We watch him and, possibly, he watches us. I love the salamander’s big eyes, an inscrutable matte black. We admire him for a while and then most of us head back to the front gate. Today I learned that Joe had located several more spotteds after we left. But still not the really BIG NIGHT. Perhaps not wet enough. It is supposed to rain in the evening later this week. Maybe we will go out again. I hope so. Hilary Hopkins, of Cambridge, is a long-time volunteer at Mount Auburn Cemetery, where she works in the monument inscription program. She is a traveler, naturalist and writer and maintains a website, www.hilarysplaces.com. “So many great dramas of the natural world take place right around us, but are hidden in plain view. Here’s reality, not virtual but REAL. But you gotta look or you won’t see. Left to right: American Toad, spotted salamander, spring peeper. 18 | Sweet Auburn