Reptile & Amphibian News Blog
Keep up with news and features of interest to the reptile and amphibian community on the kingsnake.com blog. We cover breaking stories from the mainstream and scientific media, user-submitted photos and videos, and feature articles and photos by Jeff Barringer, Richard Bartlett, and other herpetologists and herpetoculturists.
Tuesday, September 25 2012
The Southwestern California herp community has a big hole in it today. Jarron Lucas passed away quietly in his sleep, surrounded by friends, on his way back from the Hopi Mesa on Sunday, September 23.
To many Jarron was a mentor, but to me he was a friend. I remember meeting him last summer for the first time at the Chiricahua Lodge between the Biology of the Rattlesnake symposium and the International Herpetological Symposium. Returning late to the lodge with a group of herpers, he was overjoyed at the find of a wee baby Mojave Rattlesnake. "It isn't how much you find, but that you are out there looking." I had just gotten into field herping and that thought rang true.
Each time I posted photos this summer of even the most ugly bullfrogs, an email of encouragement would come through telling me all that mattered was that I was out there and I kept looking.
Thank you for the inspiration Jarron. I will keep looking.
Jarron Lucas, Mark O'Shea, and a friend check out the Mojave found at sunrise by Mark as I watched.
Tuesday, September 11 2012
In an effort to create a safe place for the native Diamondback terrapins, two organizations are working together to reduce road kill problems on the Jekyll Island Causeway.
Diamondback terrapins, which grow up to 7 inches long, thrive in the marshes off the Georgia island. But during nesting season, female terrapins seek to lay their eggs on high and dry ground - often the causeway that motorists travel between the island and Brunswick on the mainland.
The Jekyll Island Foundation is asking for donors for help raising $50,000 to fund a conservation research and education project focused on the terrapins. The study is a joint effort between the Georgia Sea Turtle Center and the University of Georgia.
To read the full article, click here.
Kemp's ridleys turtles are on their way to becoming a more stable species if word out of South Padre is correct. A record 6000 babies were born and released this year.
A group that cares for and releases endangered sea turtle hatchlings into the Gulf of Mexico says it had a record 6,000 babies born this year.
Supporters say the total indicates the Kemp's ridley species is on the road to recovery.
Sea Turtle Inc. executive director Jeff George told the Valley Morning Star (http://bit.ly/QhOSpC) that the turtles hatched from 69 nests recovered by the organization.
To read the full article, click here.
Last, California is moving to make the Pacific Leatherback its newest state symbol.
The legislation will declare October 15 every year as Leatherback Conservation Day in California, urge conservation of this ancient marine species and encourage schools to teach about the native sea turtle. The bill is intended to recognize the importance of California state waters to the survival and recovery of the Pacific leatherback. Naming this species as the state marine reptile will add it to other state icons including the California gray whale, golden trout, poppy, and the redwood.
“Designating the Pacific leatherback sea turtle as our state marine reptile is part of a coordinated worldwide conservation effort to save a species whose population has declined more than 95 percent,” said Assemblymember Fong, who authored the bill. “Naming the leatherback sea turtle as our official state marine reptile will demonstrate California’s commitment to protecting leatherback sea turtles, our ocean’s ecosystem, and recognize the education and awareness this official designation bestows for this revered creature whose migratory pattern includes California’s coast.”
To read the full article, click here.
Photo courtesy of Limey from Royal Reptilia
Monday, September 10 2012
BP promised that all the oil was cleaned up and gone from the Gulf after the disastrous 2012 Deepwater Horizon Gulf oil spill. But as Hurricane Issac hit land and stirred the water, oil is resurfacing. From WSBradio.com:
Since Isaac made landfall more than a week ago, the water the storm has receded and tar balls and oil have been reported on shores in Alabama and Louisiana, where officials closed a 13-mile stretch of beach Tuesday.
BP said Wednesday some of that oil was from the spill, but said some of the crude may be from other sources, too.
"If there's something good about this storm it made it visible where we can clean it up," BP spokesman Ray Melick said.
BP still has hundreds of cleanup workers on the Gulf Coast after the Deepwater Horizon drilling rig exploded, killing 11 workers and leading to the nation's largest offshore spill.
Melick said the company was working with the Coast Guard, state officials and land managers to clean up the oil on the Fourchon beach in Louisiana. He said crews would be there Thursday.
Isaac made landfall near Fourchon on Aug. 28 as a Category 1 storm, pummeling the coast with waves, wind and rain. Seven people were killed in Louisiana and Mississippi.
Ed Overton, a chemist and oil spill expert at Louisiana State University, said the exposed oil was weathered and less toxic, though it could still harm animals — such as crabs, crawfish and bait fish.
However this gets spun, the questions remain. How many fish and other animals will this harm? And how will it impact the still-struggling local economy?
Friday, September 7 2012
The use of cobra venom to help reduce pain and increase the performance of race horses has been on regulators' rador, and now it looks like "Frog Juice" is getting in on the action.
The Nebraska Racing Commission is investigating the use of a product called "Frog Juice" as an illegal enhancement for racing horses.
Insiders at horse-racing tracks call it frog juice, and concerns about its use as a performance-enhancing drug in Louisiana, Oklahoma and other states have spread to Nebraska.
The Nebraska Racing Commission is investigating a case in which a urine sample drawn from a horse in the July 15 field at Horsemen’s Park in Omaha tested positive for a drug known scientifically as dermorphin.
The drug is extracted from a South American tree frog and acts as both a painkiller and a stimulant. And, as of Aug. 4, Adams horse trainer Kim Veerhusen has been suspended and ordered to pay a fine of $1,500 pending review of the incident by the commission.
According to the formal complaint, a horse named Cheatin’ Cowboy may have had dermorphin in its system when it finished second in the first race of the day in Omaha last month.
Cheatin' Cowboy since has been disqualified as a source of purse money, and Veerhusen has been suspended through Sept. 19 while drug allegations are investigated. Along with that, entry of any horses he owns or trains will be denied for the rest of the race season as it continues in Columbus.
To read the full article, click here.
Wednesday, September 5 2012
The East Texas Herpetological Society in Houston, Texas, will hold its 22nd Annual Conference, Breeder Expo, and Educational Exhibit on the weekend of September 29-30 at the Crowne Plaza Houston Northwest, drawing speakers and vendors from around the country.
Texas' oldest and longest-running reptile event as well as one of the oldest events in herpetoculture, the ETHS expo is famous for its Friday night icebreaker, where in the old days breeders would sneak away and trade off their "primo" stock before it even hit the expo floor. Both kingsnake.com and NRAAC were "born" at the ETHS expo, and over its 22 years it has been responsible for introducing thousands of hobbyists to the world of reptiles and amphibians.
Different from most of today's expos, the ETHS Symposium and Expo focuses as much, or more, on education as it does on swapping animals, with a full symposium scheduled for Saturday and the expo and sale scheduled for Sunday. Speakers and topics for Saturday's symposium include:
• The Snakes of Paraguay - Joe Furman
• Research on the American Alligator - The Larger Side of Herpetology - Cord Eversole
• Herping in Vietnam - Paul Freed
• Leopard Geckos - History of Morphs (A pictorial discussion of the evolution of Leopard gecko variation) - Ron Tremper
• The Life and Times of a Disney Zoo Vet - Komodo Dragons to Hippos and lots of Herps in between - Dr. Greg Fleming
• The Herpetofauna of Guanacaste Province, Costa Rica - Louie Porras
• Conservation of Chile’s Imperiled Amphibians - Dr. Dante Fenolio
Saturday night there will be a banquet and keynote presentation by noted herpetologist Bill Lamar, whose presentation, "A Naturalist Looks at 37 Years in the Tropics," will provide a colorful overview of his career chasing reptiles and amphibians in the jungles and rainforests of Latin America. The address will be followed by ETHS' traditional benefit auction.
Sunday's expo and sale will include breeders, hobbyists, and businesses from around the country trading and selling reptiles and amphibians, as well as food, caging, supplies, books, t-shirts, field gear, and more. kingsnake.com's big black "Zombie Hunter" snake hunting truck will be on display in the parking lot all weekend, and we will be handing out free kingsnake.com window stickers Sunday.
For more information, directions, admission costs, and to register as an attendee or vendor for the ETHS Expo and Symposium, please visit their website at http://eths.org.
The ETHS Symposium and Expo is running in parallel with the First National Reptile and Amphibian Law Symposium and Workshop, a free educational event held in the same hotel the same weekend. Hosted by the ETHS as well as the ARAV, PIJAC, and NRAAC, this event will bring together stakeholders with the federal and state agencies that govern the laws regarding amphibians and reptiles. For more information and to register for this event please see http://nraac.org.
Tuesday, September 4 2012
The First Annual Reptile and Amphibian Law Symposium and Workshop in Houston, Texas, Sept. 28-30 continues to gain momentum as the date for the event draws closer. Panelists from the United States Fish & Wildlife Service as well as the Food & Drug Administration, Centers for Disease Control, and other agencies have signed on, as have reptile industry leaders such as Robroy McInness of Glades Herp Farms Inc., Mark Cantos of the Florida Reptile Industry, and Ty Park of Ty's Lizards.
To ensure representation from a wide a variety of stakeholders, a wide net was cast in the outreach for panelists for the event, which is the first of its kind. Panelist invitations were sent to more than 70 state and federal agencies, as well as dozens of private organizations, including those as diverse as Defenders of Wildlife and The Nature Conservancy, the International Herp Symposium and the United States Association of Reptile Keepers. Private businesses were not excluded, with panelist invitations being extended to a dozens of breeders, importers and exporters, pet stores, manufacturers, and other related businesses.
Confirmed panelists so far include:
Dr. Michael Murphy - HHS/FDA
Susan Jewell - Injurious Wildlife Listing Coordinator, USFWS
Craig Hoover - Chief, Branch of Operations, USFWS
Dr. Elliott Jacobson - ARAV / University of Florida
Andrew G. Gluesenkamp, Ph.D. - Herpetologist, Texas Parks and Wildlife
Megan Russell, - Wildlife Permits Specialist Texas Parks and Wildlife
Collette Adkins Giese - Attorney, Center for Biological Diversity
Scott Hardin - Biologist, Pet Industry Joint Advisory Council
Dr. Jennifer Wright - Centers For Disease Control and Prevention
Ken Foose - President, International Herp Symposium
Cindy Steinle - Chicago Herpetological Society, Small Scale Rescue
Carole H. Allen - Gulf Office Director, Sea Turtle Restoration Project
Gerald Keown - Executive Director, SW Center for Herpetological Research
Michael Maddox - Pet Industry Joint Advisory Council
Dr. David Doherty - East Texas Herpetological Society
Doug Hotle - Curator of Herpetology, Albuquerque Biological Park
Jeff Barringer - Founder, Kingsnake.com
Robroy McInnes - President, Glades Herp Farm Inc.
Marc Cantos - Florida Reptile Industry
Ty Park - Lasco Inc./Ty's Lizards
All of these people and more are expected to converge on Houston to discuss the wide array of regulations and laws that govern reptiles and amphibians in the wild and in captivity in the United States. Topics to be covered include CITES and other international laws, the Lacey Act, the Endangered Species Act, and other federal laws, as well as state laws, codes, and regulations. Other topics include parasites, diseases, and pathogens and the law, and private reptile ownership, ethics and the law.
The conference is free and open to anyone with an interest. To register for the conference as a panelist or attendee, please go to http://www.nraac.org/register. Panelist registration will close at midnight on September 15 to allow us time to prepare printed programs for the event, so if you, or your agency or organization, plan on participating, please submit your registration as soon as possible.
Special reduced rates at the event hotel, the Crowne Plaza Houston Northwest in Houston, are available. To book your room online, click here. Make sure to use group code NRAAC to get the discounted event rate.
This Symposium is co-hosted by the East Texas Herpetological Society, which will be holding its annual expo in parallel. Make sure to visit their expo, one of the longest running events in the reptile community, held the same weekend in the same facility. For information on attending or vending at the ETHS Expo, please visit their web site at
http://eths.org/
If you are a member of a reptile club, herp society, or conservation organization, please forward information on this conference to your organization and its membership to make sure your organization is represented at this important event. And make sure to let your reptile and amphibian friends know as well!
Alligator hunting may be legal in Florida, but that doesn't mean it's legal to shoot at one from a truck, or disfugure a wild animal. From WPTV.com:
Deputies on Sunday charged Robert Lee Chason, 22, of the 2600 block of Southwest Martin Avenue, Palm City, and James Hataway, 38, of the 800 block of Southwest 34th Terrace in Palm City, with armed trespassing, possession of American alligator. Joe Chason, 24, of the same address, and a teenage girl, who was not identified in the report, were both charged with trespassing. Hataway faces additional charges of tampering with evidence, illegal method of taking an alligator and other charges.
About 5:11 p.m. Sunday, deputies stopped a pickup on Southwest Citrus Boulevard after receiving reports that occupants in a pickup were trespassing on private property. Before stopping the truck, deputies saw a recently cut alligator in the middle of the road.
While questioning the men, Robert Chason admitted to shooting an alligator and said Hataway threw the tail out of the window. Deputies noticed blood was on Robert Chason's legs, the truck's bed and passenger side, the report states.
To read the full story, click here. We can only hope animal abuse is tied into those additional charges.
Inset photo: Mugshot of one of the accused animal abusers, courtesy of Martin County Sheriff's Office.
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