Image from the Biodiversity Heritage Library.
Contributed by Museum of Vertebrate Zoology, University of California, Berkeley.
| www.biodiversitylibrary.org
Transcription
Here, H.
1997
June 15 were on their way to the ponds. Kelly (continued) showed me a big orange - legged centipede (Scolopendra) disappearing into a hole in mossy embankment,
±2130hr.
June 16 Kelly and I left the hotel at 0930hr and arrived at the trail-stream jet ±1000hr and lower waterfall ±1020hr. Partly cloudy, but some sun makes it through to the streambed. Lots of trash, especially plastic Ja Vie waterbottle, but no condoms. The exact site where Ted got the T. morticola is rocky moss-covered and leaf litter to the right of the main torrent and between it and a smaller cascade ±5m away. I now get 730m el at the main pool and had set my altimeter this AM. This pool, where Marsh et al. watched S. lianguligera molin, is ≈3×5m in greatest dimension.
Late afternoon Dave Hardy and I handled the "Pseudoboiga" for Mark Moffett to photograph, and it readily S- coiled and spreads its head, but only gave bites and briefly chewed my parts. Then Dave and I pose it