Student contractor and amphibian research technician, Claire Netto, is handling a salamander captured at Wendell State Forest in Wendell, MA. This salamander is one of many being monitored by the Northeast Amphibian Research and Monitoring Initiative (NEARMI) using mark-recapture techniques.
Jill Fleming (Former Employee)
Science and Products
Collaborative Project to Understand Red-backed Salamander Population Dynamics and Climate Change Adaptation
Northeast Amphibian Research and Monitoring Initiative
Monitoring Vernal Pool Amphibians in the Northeast
Assessing Amphibian Disease Risk in the Northeast
Mercury concentrations in amphibian tissues across the United States, 2016-2021
Data from: ''Evaluating the effect of expert elicitation techniques on population status assessment in the face of large uncertainty''
Data from a national survey for the amphibian chytrid fungus Batrachochytrium salamandrivorans
Student contractor and amphibian research technician, Claire Netto, is handling a salamander captured at Wendell State Forest in Wendell, MA. This salamander is one of many being monitored by the Northeast Amphibian Research and Monitoring Initiative (NEARMI) using mark-recapture techniques.
Range-wide salamander densities reveal a key component of terrestrial vertebrate biomass in eastern North American forests
Broad-scale assessment of methylmercury in adult amphibians
Mercury (Hg) is a toxic contaminant that has been mobilized and distributed worldwide and is a threat to many wildlife species. Amphibians are facing unprecedented global declines due to many threats including contaminants. While the biphasic life history of many amphibians creates a potential nexus for methylmercury (MeHg) exposure in aquatic habitats and subsequent health effects, the broad-scal
Range-wide population projections for Northern Red-Bellied Cooters (Pseudemys rubriventris)
Evaluating the effect of expert elicitation techniques on population status assessment in the face of large uncertainty
Experimental evaluation of spatial capture–recapture study design
A latent process model approach to improve the utility of indicator species
Moving from decision to action in conservation science
Science and Products
Collaborative Project to Understand Red-backed Salamander Population Dynamics and Climate Change Adaptation
Northeast Amphibian Research and Monitoring Initiative
Monitoring Vernal Pool Amphibians in the Northeast
Assessing Amphibian Disease Risk in the Northeast
Mercury concentrations in amphibian tissues across the United States, 2016-2021
Data from: ''Evaluating the effect of expert elicitation techniques on population status assessment in the face of large uncertainty''
Data from a national survey for the amphibian chytrid fungus Batrachochytrium salamandrivorans
Student contractor and amphibian research technician, Claire Netto, is handling a salamander captured at Wendell State Forest in Wendell, MA. This salamander is one of many being monitored by the Northeast Amphibian Research and Monitoring Initiative (NEARMI) using mark-recapture techniques.
Student contractor and amphibian research technician, Claire Netto, is handling a salamander captured at Wendell State Forest in Wendell, MA. This salamander is one of many being monitored by the Northeast Amphibian Research and Monitoring Initiative (NEARMI) using mark-recapture techniques.
Range-wide salamander densities reveal a key component of terrestrial vertebrate biomass in eastern North American forests
Broad-scale assessment of methylmercury in adult amphibians
Mercury (Hg) is a toxic contaminant that has been mobilized and distributed worldwide and is a threat to many wildlife species. Amphibians are facing unprecedented global declines due to many threats including contaminants. While the biphasic life history of many amphibians creates a potential nexus for methylmercury (MeHg) exposure in aquatic habitats and subsequent health effects, the broad-scal