Stream Salamander Monitoring Project
Great Smoky Mountains Institute at Tremont
Basic Protocol
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Marbled Salamander
Northern Slimy Salamander Both salamander were found under logs at the west end of Cades Cove, during Tremont's "Fall Naturalist's Weekend". Find out more about salamanders in the Park. Photos by Charles Wilder. |
Materials
For the artificial habitats, we have tried 2 materials. We used “bird block” netting, which is made of black nylon. It did not hold up as well as the alternative material, a plastic fencing. It is called Gardeneer Plastic Fencing and is made by Dalen Products, Inc. The Web address is <http;//www.gardeneer.com>, They don’t sell their products directly from their Web site, but they do list other Internet sites and retailers that carry their products. The company is located in Knoxville and actually donates the fencing to Tremont because we have that local connection. I’m sure you could use any similar type of netting or fencing material. The bags are roughly 10 inches by 10 inches and are closed on 3 sides by plastic wire ties. Each bag gets stuffed with leaves and a rock to help weight it down. We are experimenting with putting rocks around and on top of the bags as well. In fast-moving water, we tie the bags to rocks or branches so that they don’t wash away. We label our bags with basic flagging tape and a permanent marker.
- Materials for the basic monthly monitoring include:
- 2 Plastic tubs
- Strainer or colander (plastic type used for pasta works great)
- Plastic ziplock bags
- Clipboard
- Data sheets (see attached)
- Salamander keys (see attached, but you’ll want ones that work for your area, obviously)
- Pencil
- Ruler
- Scale (a basic spring scale that goes to 30 grams works fine)
- pH paper or meter, thermometer, turbidity tube and/or other water quality monitoring materials
- For the quadrat searches, the students will also need a meter-square quadrat frame. We use one made of PVC pipe.

