Can
you identify what's in this photo?
Each Wednesday morning
on Camp Lutherlyn's Facebook page
the Lutherlyn Environmental
Education Program posts a photo.
Readers
have all morning and afternoon
to
make their best guess about what the photo is.
Around
6 pm LEEP provides the answer and a brief explanation.
Each
week's What is it Wednesday post
will
also be posted on the Nature of Lutherlyn blog,
after it is posted on Facebook,
sometimes
with additional bonus information.
In
addition to bringing you current editions of What is it Wednesday
on the
Nature of Lutherlyn blog,
we
will be reposting old editions,
creating
a What is it Wednesday archive.
This photo was posted as a What is it Wednesday on
May 5, 2021.
And
the answer is....
This is a pickerel frog.
The image is a little funky-looking and it looks like there is an extra separate foot because we are viewing this pickerel frog through the side of a container, and the image is refracted through the water and plastic. Here's what it looks like with a clearer view from above:
We usually leave critters in their homes at Lutherlyn, aside from a short scoop-up to look at them – the animals who live here are best cared for by mother nature. But this week, LEEP had a chance to visit Northwest Elementary in Butler, PA to help the kindergarteners through fourth graders get to know some mammals and amphibians. We brought some of our Discovery Room friends with us to give students a closer look at mammals, and caught a pickerel frog, green frog, tadpoles of spring peepers and green frogs, and red-backed salamanders to show them amphibians.
It was wonderful to spend a day with the students of Northwest Elementary! After their adventure, all the amphibians were returned to where we found them at Lutherlyn, including this pickerel frog.
Pickerel frogs are smaller than green frogs and larger than
spring peepers, and fairly easy to indentify by their square and rectangular
markings. (Leopard frogs look similar, but have circular or oval
markings.) You may also be able to identify
that there are pickerel frogs around without even seeing them – their call
sounds a bit like a squeaky door slowly swinging open. Like most frogs, they
can been found near water (this one came from alongside the amphitheater pond),
but they also frequently wander out into grassy areas further from their water
source. Spring is a great time to look and listen for frogs and other
amphibians!
For more on how LEEP can bring nature knowledge to you, either by coming to your location or welcoming your group to Lutherlyn, check out www.Luthelryn.com/ee.
Like and follow Camp Lutherlyn on Facebook, to see What is it Wednesday posts when they come out and have the opportunity to share your guesses in the comments!
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