- Home
- Prairie Partners
- Field Guide
- Introduction
- Map
- Heritage
- Local Prairie
- Geology
- Ojata
- First Peoples
- Voices
-
Species
>
- Ferruginous Hawk
- Marbled Godwit
- Short-eared Owl
- Western Meadowlark
- Snowy Owl
- Greater Prairie Chicken
- Le Conte's Sparrow
- Upland Sandpiper
- Wilson's Phalarope
- Yellow Rail
- Northern Pintail
- White Prairie Aster
- Common Bladderwort
- Pasque Flower
- Prairie Coneflower
- Maximilian Sunflower
- Big Bluestem
- Wild Prairie Rose
- Wild Bergamot
- Black-eyed Susan
- Canada Wild Rye
- Tiger Salamander
- Common green darner
- Prairie Is
- Pioneers
- Prairie Heroes
- Photo Gallery
- Speaking of Prairie
- Links
- Contact Us
Tiger Salamander
Soon after the ice melts on prairie pothole lakes, tiger salamanders emerge from a long winter underground. This amphibian grows to between six inches and 13 inches in length and lives on a diet of earthworms, large insects and small mammals such as field mice. Watch for the reclusive salamander at night after a heavy rain, especially during its breeding season.
Home | Partners | Field Guide | Heroes | Gallery | Links | Contact Us
Grand Forks County Prairie Partners - 2011 - All Rights Reserved