With the first frosts of the year occurring, the earlier and earlier nights, and the last of the leaves beginning to drop, our thoughts naturally turn towards winter.Most people consider our mid-atlantic winters devoid of life and that is a fair assumption based on the witnessable preparations of our deciduous treescape, but life is still all around us – whether hibernating, finding new ways to survive this cold new world, or staging it’s re-emergence.In some rare cases life is occurring in all of its grandest theater, as is the case with our marbled salamanders (Ambystoma opacum). Each fall, as the weather begins to cool, this native (and nearly statewide) salamander begins to court, mate, and lay their eggs!Credit: Joe VillariUsually depositing these eggs in a covered depression of sorts, their larvae continue to develop as the weather gets colder and colder, eventually hatching from when the winter rains come and submerge them for a few days. Once hatched these larvae, or salamander tadpoles, live out the first part of their lives in vernal pools during the coldest parts of the year!While this sounds like an extreme adaptation, just think of the enormous advantage this provides them to be able to live and grow while there are few other predators, or competition, sharing their vernal pools with them!For those interested in more about how the animal world survives (and in some cases, thrives!) through the winter, we recommend Bernd Heinrich’s 2009 book, Winter World: The Ingenuity of Animal Survival.We also plan on documenting and highlighting the winter life that occurs here at VOF’s Preserve at Bull Run Mountains. So stay tuned and stay curious!
Join us in celebrating the women and girls integral to our science program here at BRMNAP! This year, we are highlighting our 2020 Natural Science Fellow, Meredith Hart, who studied our insect biodiversity, contributing to our greater understanding of our ecosystems and biodiversity.
Yesterday I was made aware of a 10 year old boy with autism who ventured away from his uncle’s home that borders the preserve’s Jackson Hollow section.The kid left home early afternoon with the family dog, a large mastiff, and ultimately got lost. The neighborhood, Prince William County Police Department, and VOF Preserve staff & associates…
Dear Preserve Community, Some of you may already found yourselves privy to this information, but I am now writing to inform you all of the bittersweet news that Summers Cleary will be leaving VOF. Although her time here was much shorter than we would have liked it to have been, I can confidently state…