Spring Break 2006
Night snake
Cliff chirping frog
Texas salamander
Texas indigo snake
Western slimy salamander
Four-lined skink
Greater earless lizard
From the hill country, we traveled south...way south, into the Rio Grande valley (extreme southern Texas). We visited many places there, inluding Laguna Atascosa National Wildlife Refuge (NWR), Santa Ana NWR, a couple of the Las Palomas Wildlife Management Area (WMA) units, and the Sable Palm Grove Audobon Sanctuary, to name a few. In the valley, we saw more Texas indigo snakes (5 total for the trip, I think), a Ruthven's whipsnake, a Texas horned lizard, Texas blind snake, rosebelly lizards, and many other species. While in the valley, we ventured to the coast to Boca Chica beach where we found keeled earless lizards in the sand dunes.
American alligator
Rio Grande lesser siren

Texas horned lizard
From the valley, we headed northwest a bit to a home-away-from-home, as it were, for me. We spent a couple of days on the Chaparral WMA, where I lived on-site and conducted my masters research for about 7 months over 2 summers. Here we found yet another Texas indigo snake, 8 or 9 western diamondback rattlesnakes, a glossy snake, a longnose snake, Texas banded geckos, a checkered garter snake, flathead snakes, and a bullsnake. A nice stop to round our list off.

Bullsnake

Texas banded gecko

Glossy snake

Western diamondback rattlesnake

Checkered garter snake

Longnose snake
The trip was a blast and I saw several "lifers" (species I had never seen before). I think we ended up with about 38 species total (I didn't list common ones like American bullfrog or red-eared slider). Enjoy the pictures!


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