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What in the world is a vernal pool?
A vernal pool is where
salamanders, frogs, and funny critters that swim on their
sides, called fairy shrimp, go to lay their eggs. These pools are so special, even endangered
animals like to go. In a vernal pool, you can find yellow
spotted salamanders, blue spotted salamanders, wood frogs,
turtles, snakes, and many other curious critters that need
water to live. These animals have to be quick, though,
because the pool is only open for a short time. Vernal pools
fill up in the spring with water from melted snow and April
showers. As summer comes and dries up the pools, baby frogs,
little salamanders, turtles, and all their new friends are
ready to crawl onto nearby dry land to their fall and winter
homes.
Why do we need vernal pools? Can’t
all those animals just lay their eggs in a pond or lake?
Vernal pools are the
forests’ food source! It works like this: Small bugs eat the
fallen leaves, frogs and salamanders eat the bugs, turtles
and snakes eat the frogs, birds eat the snakes, foxes eat
the birds, eagles eat the foxes, and so on! Without vernal
pools, we would have forests full of old leaves and many
animals would not find food to eat. Vernal pools help keep
Maine’s forests healthy.
Ponds and lakes do have many of the
best parts of a vernal pool (water, food, twigs to attach
their eggs to) but they also have something that vernal pool
do not:FISH. You see, a fish’s favorite snack is eggs. When
they see a big clump of salamander eggs they can’t help
themselves but to eat them all. Well, our vernal pool
friends don’t like to become snacks, so they must live in
very special places where fish can’t go. Since vernal pools
usually lose their water in the summer, fish can’t live
there, making vernal pools a safe place for the wiggliest,
jiggliest, silliest, slimiest creatures in the forest to
raise their babies.
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Color A Vernal Pool

Color The Amphibian Lifecycle

Vernal Pool Word Search
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