The Peterborough Examiner

City to close road for salamander crossings

- LIAM CASEY

The Jefferson salamander, an endangered amphibian found only in southern Ontario, has begun to emerge from the ground along a small stretch of the Niagara escarpment and has been dodging cars as it crosses the lone road on its annual march to breeding ponds.

Starting Thursday, the salamander­s will not have to worry about traffic as the city of Burlington, Ont., will shut down about a kilometre of King Road for three weeks to allow for their safe passage, the fifth consecutiv­e year the city has taken such measures.

“I’m certainly proud of the program,” said Burlington’s Mayor Rick Goldring. “As humans, it’s the least we can do for these little guys.”

The program has had success, according to Conservati­on Halton, which studies the rare amphibians that can live up to 30 years.

“We can say with 100 per cent certainty, that there has been no mortality of Jefferson salamander­s during this period on the road as they cross,” said Hassaan Basit, the chief administra­tive officer of Conservati­on Halton.

The organizati­on’s ecologists have been out looking for the rare salamander­s — which are 12 to 20 centimetre­s long, brown or grey in colour and move only at night — as the sign that the annual breeding migration has begun.

Basit said they saw a few last week and notes that once the March rains begin to fall and warmer weather arrives, the salamander­s wake up and head toward the temporary ponds that appear in the spring before drying up in mid-summer.

“It’s amazing because they show a really strong fidelity to return to their birth pond and so they are quite determined to reach those ponds,” Basit said.

The problem is that the ponds are on one side of King Road and the salamander­s dig in for the winter on the other side.

“There’s lots of ‘why did the salamander cross the road jokes?’ ” Basit said with a sigh.

Before the city began its practice of closing the road, the salamander­s were dying at a “significan­t” rate, he said.

While the group doesn’t have a population number for the salamander­s, Basit believes the program is working. In addition to the lack of dead amphibians on the road, ecologists have found Jefferson salamander eggs in the ponds, showing the creatures have at least made it across the road.

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