NFR Got any Herp pictures?

Non-fishing related
Cascade Frog in Redwood National Park
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NW Gartersnake (presumably, I didn't do any scale counts) on a Metolius River path
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Southern Alligator Lizard from the Deschutes. I tried to get a better angle, but he would have none of it!
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I really like these Alligator Lizards. They can get pretty large (for a lizard in the PNW), are relatively easy to catch (should one feel so inclined), but bite very hard (which is why I rarely feel inclined to catch them).
 
Random shots from over the years:

One of the aforementioned rough skinned newts, small Hood Canal area lake
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Teeny tiny turtle, from @Zak's home lake
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Outhouse occupant, Seeps lake
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My biologist daughter and friend on a herp field trip, central Cali desert
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Same daughter, different field trip
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Unalived frog, bass gullet, Seeps lake
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Woodland Park Zoo Komodo dragon giving me the hairy eyeball. Chilling, even through glass!
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No picture but today I saw a unique rattler just above the cable crossing at Moody on the east bank. Front half was a mottled yellow and the back half was black. He was very lazily crossing the trail he buzzed me from 12'8" away.
 
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Backpacking a few years ago and ran across this mass of frogs in a little meadow
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Idaho panhandle has a lot of these
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The snake never was able to get the sculpin down because of the dorsal fin.
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A particular rafting trip I've done several times usually involves an encounter. Last year this one came wandering into camp one evening, eventually passing through to get down into the rocks next to the river.
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I looked for the rattler to emerge the next morning, but instead three garters came out from under what appeared to be the same rock. I've since learned scientists now believe it is not uncommon for them to form social groups.
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I did run into a blue-tailed skink in my back yard this year, but wasn't able to get a pic.
 
I go to Malaysia practically every year, and as you can imagine, I was bound to see a few herps visiting one of the world's megadiverse countries with more than 550 species of reptiles and 240 species of amphibians.

Here are a few highlights:

Saltwater Crocodile (Crocodylus porosus). Floating down a river in Borneo, must've seen more than 20, stopped counting after a while. This was one of the biggest. You would think the regular sight of something like this would stop anyone from swimming in the river. You would be wrong.
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My 8-year old kid goes, "Look, there's a snake!" and I'm like, "Where??!!"
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"Ohhhhhh, there!" (Almost dead center in the photo above). A Bornean Keeled Pit Viper (Tropidolaemus subannulatus).
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This Wagler's Pit Viper (Tropidolaemus wagleri), closely related to the Bornean Keeled PV above, was almost a backyard animal, saw it about a hundred yards from my parents' home. BTW, Asian pit vipers are related to your rattlesnakes, they all have these heat sensing pits between their eyes and nostrils that make them really effective hunters in the dark. These two pit viper species are unusual in that their venom is mainly neurotoxic -- viper venom is usually mainly hemotoxic.
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And here's a Mangrove Pit Viper (Trimeresurus purpureomaculatus). They're pretty sedentary, so once you see one, you know that you'll find it more or less in the same area the next time you go by. Their venom is a powerful hemotoxin, and they have a reputation among locals for being irritable, so approach with caution!
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My favorite gekko, the Tokay (Gekko gekko), one of the world's largest, reaching 15 inches in length. You hear it way more than you see it. When you do see it, on the side of a wall, for example, it's like, "Woah, that's big!" Not venomous, but aggressive when handled and has a strong bite that will draw blood.
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Going underwater, found a Yellow-lipped Sea Krait (Laticauda colubrina). Related to the cobras, its neurotoxin is pretty potent, but it's not an aggressive snake -- this one was rather curious and actually followed me for a few seconds, always at a safe distance.
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One of my favorite photos of a turtle. This is a plain tuckered out Green (Chelonia mydas).
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Thanks for looking,
Kenneth
 
This little guy narrowly missed being run over by my mower last week.
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I'm no expert but am guessing that it's a Western Skink. We recently had a bigger one on our front porch but this one was only a couple of inches long so probably a juvenile. The vividness of the neon blue tail is amazing.
 
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