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Wildlife

Nature Notes, Plants, Wildlife

“Beginning to Feel Like Spring”

by Linda Martinson

Certified Blue Ridge Naturalist

Nothing like a Pandemic and a foot of snow to make you good and tired of winter, but a few days before the end of February, I heard the first calls of spring peepers in the evening and I felt a burst of Blue Ridge Spring happiness. Spring peepers do sound happy and thrilled to be alive…maybe because they are eagerly seeking mates. We have the northern subspecies of spring peepers (Pseudacris crucifer), widespread throughout the area wherever they have the right habitat. That would be, for example, moist fields; woods with creeks and marshes; and low grassy areas near ponds and wetlands. Spring peepers are small, about the size of a paper clip, so although the chorus of their calls is loud, the tiny frogs are seldom seen.

Naturenorth.com
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Nature Notes, Wildlife

The Adaptable Fox and other Canids

by Linda Martinson

Blue Ridge Naturalist

One definition of a fox is “a wolf who sends flowers”. Unlike wolves that are rarely seen but often persecuted or the versatile coyotes, foxes are more solitary and rarely bothered unless they are killing chickens. This may be because they are small and cute; clearly not a threat; and careful not to be seen. Often when a fox sees a person, it freezes and watches curiously for a while looking rather sweet and friendly, i.e., “they send flowers”. Foxes belong to the Canidae family of mammals in the order Carnivora, which also includes domestic dogs, wolves, coyotes, jackals, dingoes, and many other dog-like mammals both extant and extinct.

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Nature Notes, Wildlife

Coyotes: Just Going Along

by Linda Martinson

February 2020

One could write a book about coyotes, but don’t bother because an excellent and engaging one has already been written: Coyote America by Dan Flores. Coyote America has been described as “one of the great epics of our time…a masterly synthesis of scientific research and personal observation….the illuminating five-million-year biography of [an] extraordinary animal.” 

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