While we sat in Study Butte eating the evening meal, the sky darkened. For the last hour or so lightning had been flashing east of us and we had heard a very occasional rumble of thunder. Suddenly the wind picked up and the outside was obliterated by a dust storm. Driven by the lusty gusts a self-opening tent scooted by. It was followed closely by a young lady attempting to recorral the errant canvas. Then quiet. The wind dropped, the tent was caught by the chaser, and a bolt of cloud to ground lightning followed immediately by a deafening clap of thunder--the desert storm was upon and around us. And as every herper knows, a desert storm of any significance (and even many of lesser impact) means amphibians. Amphibians emerge from nooks, crannies, and burrows to set up very temporary housekeeping in the newly formed, very ephemeral, desert pools.
While monitoring nearby rainfalls on his iPhone, Jake determined that the strongest storms had been about 50 miles away. So off we went, reaching the area a few minutes before sunset. It took just a few minutes to learn that almost every swale was in flash-flood stage and only a few more minutes to determine that huge pools now sat atop desert flats that had until only a few hours earlier been long parched. We knew then that our choice had been a good one.
By nightfall a few tentative anuran vocalizations were heard. Among the first to call were the Couch's spadefoots,
Scaphiopus couchii. Shortly thereafter red-spotted toad,
Bufo punctatus, had joined the spadefoots in chorus. By full darkness the voices of western green toads,
Bufo debilis insidior, and Texas toads,
B. speciosus, had been added and the roadway was fairly seething with all 4 anuran species.
It was a night that we would long remember.
More photos under the jump
A vocalizing red-spotted toad.
The Texas toad is often most easily identified by eliminating the species that it can not be.
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