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DEC Contact: Dana Ferine (845) 325-8143 March 16, 2026
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DEC ANNOUNCES 18th YEAR OF THE AMPHIBIAN MIGRATIONS AND ROAD CROSSINGS PROJECT IN THE HUDSON VALLEYVolunteers Advised to Put Safety First While Helping Amphibians Cross the Road |
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The New York State Department of Environmental Conservation (DEC) today announced that warmer temperatures and rain have spurred the start of annual migrations of vernal pool breeding amphibians like frogs and salamanders. Throughout the Hudson Valley, Amphibian Migrations and Road Crossings (AM&RC) Project volunteers are surveying roads to safeguard the continued movement of frogs and salamanders and reduce amphibian road mortality. “DEC’s Amphibian Migrations and Road Crossings Project engages communities and volunteers to take direct conservation action to help protect salamanders and frogs as they migrate from forests to vernal pools,” said DEC Commissioner Amanda Lefton. “Every year, hundreds of migrations happen safely thanks to the efforts of the individuals and organizations who volunteer their time to protect New York’s amphibians and help DEC collect critical data for proactive habitat conservation.” DEC's Hudson River Estuary Program and Cornell University initiated the AM&RC Project to raise awareness about critical amphibian habitat, engage volunteers to help collect data on the annual migration, and decrease amphibian road mortality. More than 1,000 volunteers participated in the effort since 2009, helping to move an estimated 51,000 salamanders, frogs, and toads safely across roads. DEC supports programs like the AM&RC Project to connect New Yorkers to nature, educate people about the importance of wetlands and healthy, connected forests, and encourage proactive conservation planning to prevent habitat fragmentation. The program is critical for maintaining the state's rich diversity of plants and animals, and especially the vernal pool-breeding amphibians of conservation concern throughout their Northeast range. In late winter and early spring, amphibian species like wood frog (Lithobates sylvatica), spotted salamander (Ambystoma maculatum), and Jefferson-blue spotted salamander complex (Ambystoma jeffersonianum x laterale) emerge from underground shelters in the forest and head to vernal pools for breeding. Vernal pools are small, temporary wetlands that serve as critical breeding habitat for these amphibians. The pools hold water until summer, so the adult amphibians must gather, breed, and deposit eggs early enough to ensure their aquatic young can hatch, grow, and leave the pools before they dry up. Due to their importance, vernal pools were added to DEC’s recently expanded freshwater wetlands protections. This year, migration started slowly in the first week of March, with a bigger night of migration documented by AM&RC volunteers on March 11, when scattered rain fell in the Hudson Valley and evening temperatures were above 60 degrees Fahrenheit. On March 11, at least 125 volunteers surveyed roads from the Lower Hudson Valley to the Capital District, contributing more than 50 hours of survey time and assisting more than 1,650 amphibians across roads. On the next warm, rainy nights, DEC expects more salamander and frog species will be migrating. AM&RC volunteers document road locations where they observe migrations in the Hudson Valley, record weather and traffic conditions, and identify and count amphibians on the move. Volunteers also carefully help the amphibians safely across roads. Between 2009 and 2025, volunteers have documented 20 species and counted nearly 58,000 live amphibians and more than 25,000 migrating amphibians killed by passing vehicles. Species reported most frequently during migration nights include spotted salamander, wood frog, and spring peeper (Pseudacris crucifer). To a lesser degree, volunteers also observe Jefferson-blue spotted salamander complex and four-toed salamander (Hemidactylium scutatum), two species of conservation concern in New York. Safety is paramount, and project volunteers are advised to take all necessary precautions. Volunteers are strongly encouraged to wear reflective safety vests and headlamps to increase visibility on dark roads and not interfere with passing vehicles. Amphibian safety is also important, and frogs and salamanders should be handled carefully with clean, wet hands, free of hand sanitizer, lotion, and other substances that can be toxic to amphibians' porous skin. With such a large geographic area to cover, the AM&RC Project benefits greatly from the support of local partners who assist with coordinating volunteers in their communities. This year, partners include Albany Pine Bush Preserve Commission, Climate Smart Rhinebeck, Columbia Land Conservancy, Cornell Cooperative Extension of Columbia and Greene Counties, Hudson Highlands Land Trust, Hudson Taconic Lands, John Boyd Thacher State Park, Saw Kill Watershed Community, Teatown Lake Reservation, Town of Ancram Conservation Advisory Council, Town of Bedford Conservation Board, Town of Gallatin Conservation Advisory Council, Town of Lloyd Environmental Conservation Council, Town of Pine Plains Conservation Advisory Council, Town of Pound Ridge Conservation Board, Vassar College, and Wallkill Valley Land Trust. For more information, including a short video about amphibian migrations, visit DEC's website. DEC held in-person and virtual trainings for volunteers in February with 131 participants. New Yorkers interested in volunteering to participate in this Hudson Valley project are encouraged to watch a recording of the training on YouTube and read the Volunteer Handbook (PDF). Project volunteers are encouraged to use the hashtag #amphibianmigrationhv in social media posts. |
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