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Things are stirring in the forest...


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Did my good deed for the day yesterday, the stream running through the path in the forest after the heavy rain had finally stopped flowing. I was walking through the muddy remains and saw something flipping around. On closer inspection there were two flipping and two too tired to move. They were about 30mm long and had dark bodies with tiny legs and feet.

They couldn't walk and so I reckoned they must still be at the land stage so I flipped them onto a leaf and took them to a pond where they happily swam away. I think they were young newts.

Also yesterday saw my first lizard of the year.

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Was late for my walk tonight as finally got the right wind direction to buzz people in the tower of the castle at Bordeilles with my kite.

Saw a big female deer she was quite inquisitive and kept stopping to look over her shoulder. For some unknown reason tonight we have lots of pigeons roosting in the woods. Lovely noise of wings as they take to the sky and others joins in a great wave of sound.

Saw two red squirrels, wildboar footprints and a robin was waiting when I got home.

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Driving home on Friday  night a small deer ran out of a field on my left, looked a me in the headlights then ran off into the forest on the other side of the road, beautiful.  Mindfull of a warning on the radio a little while back of 'where there's one there will be more' I drove very slowly and saw all the mates of the first one run across the road.  Lovely things.
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                   [IMG]http://i15.photobucket.com/albums/a363/Bechamel/ChevreuilJan09.jpg[/IMG]

Only specks in the distance, but they are there.  I since saw them on our land one afternoon.  I could see their beautiful little faces through the branches, but didn't have the camera.  I backed off, but they had seen me and ran.  I always hope the chasseurs don't get them.

 

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[quote user="Âme"] I haven't seen any yet this year, but here is a photo from last spring. This one isn't a baby! I'm told they can live for 25+ years.[/quote]

What a super beast, Âme!  A male Marbled Newt, Triturus marmoratus, I believe.  Most handsome ...

Reckoned to be endangered in France, I see - and yes, 25 years in captivity.

Amicalement

Craig

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Craig - Thanks for the identification. Having googled more pictures I'm sure that you're right.

As this one is in the wild (an old agricultural water hole) it would have a lifespan of 15 years rather than 25. 

Fascinating creatures. Some of them are bright yellow and black.

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[quote user="Âme"]<snip>Some of them are bright yellow and black. [/quote]

Ah, you may have something else there ...

Do they look like this, by any chance?

[IMG]http://i468.photobucket.com/albums/rr42/Ventodue/firesalamander.jpg[/IMG]

Or maybe this?

[IMG]http://i468.photobucket.com/albums/rr42/Ventodue/firesalamander2.jpg[/IMG]

Amicalement

Craig

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Hi Âme,

Still Marbled Newt, methinks - just more yellow than the previous.  Have a look here, for example: http://calphotos.berkeley.edu/cgi/img_query?query_src=&enlarge=0000+0000+0704+0092

Can you see yours has a crest on the lower half of the tail?  That marks it out as a newt, and Marbled is what you have around you (apart from Palmate, which it's not).

Colour isn't very important in amphibians - Common Frogs, for example, come in a range of colours from deep olive green through yellow green, to reddish/orange and occasionally albino.

Anyway, it's not what I posted earlier (Fire Salamander) which has no crest, is almost exclusively nocturnal and, critically, doesn't hang around in ponds ...

Amicalement

Craig

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Thanks Craig. The picture in the link is a beauty. They are very difficult to photograph! I rarely see newts out of the water, only once in late autmn when I was gardening and disturbed a little brown one. There are palmate newts in the same pond too.

When I first saw the muddy puddle that is now the pond, I thought that it was going to be a problem... but then I saw life (tiny newts).  The 'puddle' is now a much larger, deeper pond fed by rainwater from the roof, so it stays right through the summer, albeit becoming a bit soup-like in the hottest months. The amount of life a pond supports is incredible. 

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