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Adult from southeastern Kentucky.
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Turned up from under a log in the moist forest floor. Allegany County, NY (USA)
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This species looks superficially similar to the Black-Bellied Salamanders (D. quadramaculatus and D. folkertsi), but its belly is one feature that differentiates it.
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English Hill State Park, NY (USA)
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Adult female brooding eggs in northern GA.
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Hatchling Desmognathus folkertsi were found alongside their mother.
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Mount Rogers National Recreation Area, Va. (USA)
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Check out this jewel: beautiful dorsal pattern and bright legs. Nantahala National Forest, North Carolina, USA
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Macon County, North Carolina
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Juvenile from northern Georgia.
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Adult from eastern Tennessee.
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Dusky Ravine, Allegany County, NY (USA)
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The shovel-shaped head of this species is quite evident on this individual.
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Adult from Michigan.This species--along with Eurycea cirrigera--is found in one rocky stream surrounded by hemlock and nowhere else in Michigan.The origin of this population--native or introduced--is still not yet known.
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Juvenile from northern Georgia.
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Subadult from northern Georgia.
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Virginia, United States
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A red-cheeked version of this ubiquitous species; this form is usually most prevalent in areas where Plethodon jordani (the Red-Cheeked Salamander) exist, but they are interestingly common at Coweeta, North Carolina.
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This was my first find of a Seal Salamander. In the genus of my beloved local Dusky Salamanders (Desmognathus) and so familiar in ways, but much larger than any Dusky and such a beautiful spot pattern. Photographed in a creek near Blue Hole not far from Charlottesville, Virginia (USA).
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Gravid adult female from northern Georgia.
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A nice treat to lift a stone and find this meal underway Dusky Ravine, Houghton Creek, Allegany County, NY, USA