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Other People's Herp Lists and Photos
Here are some other reptile and amphibian life lists and photo collections I've found on the web. Please let me know if you run across any others.
Scott Albert's
list and photos
Scott's list includes notes about where he first saw each type.
Chad Arment's
list and herping links
Chad's list is based in Ohio, and mostly includes herps from the eastern US states.
Tim Burkhardt's
list.
Tim has a seriously impressive and rapidly growing list of herps he's seen in the wild. He was based in California; now I hear he's in Arizona, concentrating on Mexican herps.
Greg Cooper's
list
Greg's list is modest, but as he says, you've gotta start somewhere.
Michael Craven's
list and photos
Michael's site has many outstanding photographs of herps and other animals.
Jonathan Crowe's
list and field herping notes
Jonathan lives in Ontario, where most of the herps on his list were seen.
Jeremiah Easter's
list and herp stuff page
Jeremiah's list has many subspecies and local variants listed. Most of the taxa listed are from the western U.S.
Eitan Grunwald's
herping stories
Eitan has a delightful collection of stories from herping trips around the U.S. and in Costa Rica. Each one is a pleasure to read, and the photos are great too. Every time I visit his site I am torn between wanting to go out in the field and wanting to improve my website.
Phillip Higgins's
list
Phillip's site is devoted to herps from the state of Georgia.
Robert Jadin's
list
Robert's site includes many photographs and field notes. His site also hosts lists by David Kahr and Josh Engelbert.
Steven Krause's
Humboldt County herps website
Steven's site includes photos and discussion of species native to Humboldt County, California, along with many links to other herp-related information. The site is also the web headquarters of the Humboldt County Herpetological Society.
Jon Loman's
list of photos
Jon's list includes many photos of Australian and African herps.
Chris McMartin's
list
Chris has been videotaping herps across America. His herping accounts are organized state-by-state.
Gary Nafis's
California herps website
Gary maintains a fantastic site of California herp info, and he's seen and photographed most every herp in this herp-rich state. (His website also includes photographs from other people.)
Mike Pingleton's
list with photos
Mike's list is similar in spirit to mine -- each species has a page, mostly accompanied by photos, with some tales of the herps pictured therein.
Joshua Puhn's
Pacific Northwest herps website
Joshua, aka "The Salamander Wrangler", has species accounts, location descriptions, and photos for the herps of Oregon and Northern California.
Don Roberson's
photos and accounts
Don is an expert California-based birder whose web accounts of herps and mammals are constantly growing.
Tom Spinker's
list
Tom has a list of snakes he's seen in southern Florida as well as photos of herps from Florida, Mexico, and Puerto Rico.
Ryan Thies's
snake list
Ryan lists not only the snake species he's seen, but also the number of individuals of each species. 122 Prairie Ring-necked Snakes in 2004, yow!
Brad and Lynn Weinert's
list
Brad and Lynn's site has photographs of all sorts of wild critters, from herps to birds to bugs, even flowers and plants (do those count as critters?).
J.D. Willson's
list
J.D.'s lengthy list is copiously illustrated, with many exceptional photos.
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