EDGE Can Conduct Blue-Spotted Salamander Surveys and Assessments in Ohio

EDGE Can Conduct Blue-Spotted Salamander Surveys and Assessments in Ohio
October 15, 2024 Lesley Shoaf

The Blue-spotted Salamander (Ambystoma laterale) is one of Ohio’s rarest amphibians and is listed as an endangered species by the Ohio Department of Natural Resources Division of Wildlife. This species is known from Henry, Lucas and Williams counties in Ohio. Blue-spotted Salamanders prefer swamp forests, grassy meadows, and prairies with sandy soils where ephemeral vernal pools form in the early spring.

Habitat assessments for Blue-spotted Salamanders can be performed throughout the year and require walking throughout the project footprint and identifying suitable habitat features. Construction monitoring for Blue-Spotted Salamanders can occur throughout the active season from March through October. Blue-spotted Salamanders are highly fossorial and spend most of their life underground, thus visual encounter surveys should be conducted in March and April when this species is most active and utilizing ephemeral breeding habitats.

EDGE’s professional herpetologist, Mr. Aaron Crank, is authorized to conduct Blue-spotted Salamander surveys and habitat assessments within Ohio and has extensive experience surveying this species throughout its range. If evaluating and managing potential disturbances to Blue-spotted Salamanders is critical to the success of your project, please reach out to Aaron for #further insight.

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