The rains of April have stirred the evolutionary magic of
the vernal ponds of southeastern Michigan into full swing. That is nature's
way! In the words of wildlife-wise Amanda, "Every spring on warm, wet
nights, salamanders wake from their winter slumber and return to the same
vernal pond year after year for mating. The males lay little spermatorfores in
the water that look like pieces of rice, and then the females do their wiggle
dance around them to fertilize their eggs!!"
Here in northern Oakland County, as many humans cursed the
rains and Kearsley Creek churned out of her banks and swirled over fields, and
muddy roads swallow small cars, salamanders emerge from under the logs in
nearby woodlands where they had remained all winter in near suspended animation
… marching over leaves and twigs to reach the swallow seasonal ponds - their
vernal (spring) ponds to mate.
And this season they were not alone … the timing was perfect
for tiny spring peepers to hop over to the salamanders passion ponds and
secluded wetlands in order to assure the continuation of their species, and
fill the night air with delicate jingling bells like song.