Image from the Biodiversity Heritage Library.
Contributed by Museum of Vertebrate Zoology, University of California, Berkeley.
| www.biodiversitylibrary.org
Transcription
A.C. EGGLEZ
1960
JOURNAL
2 mi. E SEQUIM, CHUCKASLA CO., WASHINGTON
23 JUNE
AT 1200 AFTER
DOTTING UP SPECIES IN A LITTLE PICNIC
SPOT ON BAY ABOUT 2 MI. E OF TOWN.
BEHIND A CULVERT LEADING OFF WATER
FROM UPHILL I GOT A LARGE & A
SMALL PRAWN WITH REDDISH LEGS &
FEET. ALSO GOT A TINY TRACHIA:
WHILE TURNING UP A ROTTEN LOG BESIDE
PICNIC AREA. AFTER LUNCH DROVE TO
NEARBY DUNGENESS FISH HATCHERY TO
LOOK FOR BATS. DR. BENSON & BK BRAK
HAD CONVERGED HERE 4 YEAR AGO X
HAD GOTTEN BOTH MYOTIS YUMANENSIS
& LUCIFUGUS IN ABUILDING HERE.
DUNGENESS Hatchery, 500+ft., 4 mi. SSW Sequim,
23 JUNE
Mr. BRENNAN THE SUPERVISOR SHOWED US
OF THE DEPARTMENT IN THE MAIN BUILDING
THE ATTIC WHERE WE SAW 100+ BATS CLUSTERED
AROUND THE BACK CHIMNEY. WE COLLECTED
2-3 DOZEN. SAW BOTH ADULT (MYOTIS) & YOUNG.
THE YOUNG SEEMED BIG ENOUGH TO FLY FOR
THEMSELVES BUT WE DID NOT HAVE AN OPP-
TUNITY TO SEE IF THEY RETURN COULD.
CAUGHT A BROWN & RED THAMNOHYLS IN GRASS
NEAR THE MAIN BUILDING. THIS IS A SALMON
HATCHERY. DROVE ALONG N SHORE OF OLYMPIC PEN.
PAST PORT ANGELES TO SOME CAMPGROUND NEAR JOYCE.