Yesterday we were hiking in Paradise Valley, and we met two boreal toads migrating from the forest towards the creek. It was a good thing that they were moving, because otherwise they're really hard to see. Today I realized that I didn't know much about toads, so I thought I should find out a bit more.
It turns out that boreal toads deserve a bit more admiration from us. They are the highest elevation amphibian in Canada, and to get through winter, they hibernate underground for up to six months, staying below the frost line. According to researchers, they mostly use the burrows of golden-mantled ground squirrels, sometimes even sharing them with the squirrels! The burrows need to be deep enough to prevent freezing, so toads will hibernate up to 1.3 m underground.
Life in the mountains is tough, so female toads lay between 5,000 and 15,000 eggs in late spring to keep the whole show rolling. Since they live so high, and lay so many eggs, boreal toads contribute a lot to high elevation wetlands: the eggs and tadpoles are food for many aquatic critters. One time in Kananaskis, we saw a huge school of toad tadpoles, and we both thought, “that's a lot of food.”
The tadpoles transform into toadlets in a couple of months, and then leave the water, which might seem weird, since we usually think of amphibians as aquatic, but boreal toads are mostly landlubbers. They eat bugs in the forest, and only come back to the ponds for breeding. They can live to be 12 years old.
One final reason to admire boreal toads: they're beautiful, in their toady kind of way.
Our latest observations on the nature of Lake Louise and Banff National Park
June 22, 2014
June 17, 2014
Beavers at Lake Louise.... Inconceivable!
We've lived in Lake Louise for over twenty years, and we've never seen a beaver here. That's still true, but we now know that one visited our home town last week.
We were out for a stroll along the Bow River the other day, and found the proof right beside the pedestrian bridge at the train station: a freshly cut cottonwood. When we poked around in the cottonwood grove nearby, we found another couple of chewed up trees.
It made us wonder about the beaver who had a quick bite in our backyard. Was it trying to make a home here, or just passing through? Both options are possible. Beavers can live in riverbanks, without making dams and lodges, but the Lake Louise area is pretty poor habitat.
It's more likely that this was a youngster travelling through. Juvenile beavers leave their native ponds at the age of two, and can travel anywhere from ten km to 200 km to find a new home.
Bon voyage, Castor canadensis!
Freshly cut cottonwood alongside the Bow River |
It made us wonder about the beaver who had a quick bite in our backyard. Was it trying to make a home here, or just passing through? Both options are possible. Beavers can live in riverbanks, without making dams and lodges, but the Lake Louise area is pretty poor habitat.
It's more likely that this was a youngster travelling through. Juvenile beavers leave their native ponds at the age of two, and can travel anywhere from ten km to 200 km to find a new home.
Bon voyage, Castor canadensis!
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