Field notes, v1525
Page 31
Image from the Biodiversity Heritage Library. Contributed by Museum of Vertebrate Zoology, University of California, Berkeley. | www.biodiversitylibrary.org
Transcription
and recaptured alcedon #98 at G10. The afternoon run of traps at 10am WSW Cornell caught 3 alce dartlos, one trap into had been freshly scented by a jpt: Toads the skull of a freshly skinned jpt crease on a fence post a couple of km W of the restcamp traps. When we were poking around a km or 2 east of the restcamp into, in very sandy, leechy Sofrin, Anna dug out a small hole from which a mouse excaped and left behind 5 whisked young in a nest. They were pigmented, already had tails as long as mother's; probably Elyopentora. Gather them in sand under dead leaves. The afternoon trap check at Canada Bonto produced a couple of lizards and a couple of alce spattlos. Early afternoon cloudy, in 50s, breeze, then cleared up, 42° at sunset, little wind, no caterpillars to be seen at that time x no. 12 Canada Bonto. Night calm, clear, and cold, min, 19°F. Morning sunny, calm. Traps in Sofrin etc. around camp caught 1 tucu, 1 alce tartulo, and 1 lizard. Didn't hear a single tucu call of this camp during 3 days x Traps at 10am WSW Cornell caught 3 alce dartlos, no caterpillars there. Picked up the girl traps at 10:30. One new Elyopentora q at K11, 30g, very pigmented. Released her without tagging. Saw 1 caterpillar on