Peepers are a sound of spring
After the winter we had, it’s incredibly enjoyable to once again hear
birds singing. Our avian friends that we too often take for granted – like
robins and cardinals – are providing us a chorus of beauty and cheer.
Western New Yorkers’ ears have also been blessed by another melody, but
from an entirely different creature – a diminutive amphibian. That would be the
spring peeper.
Late-March to late-April marks the breeding season for peepers in the northern
portion of Western New York. The southern half, especially closer to the
Pennsylvania border, might have peepers breeding into mid-May due to the cooler
temperatures associated with the higher elevations and the deep valleys.
While this breeding season is underway, peepers court one another with, well,
peeps. If you live near a pond, marsh, or slow moving stream, head outdoors a
few hours before sunset and for forty minutes after. That birdlike “pee-eeep”,
a half-second long in duration, is a sound comes from these male treefrogs.
If that watering hole is the pick-up joint for dozens if not hundreds of
peepers, the collective sound (which some have compared to sleigh bells) is
amazing. Together, it becomes a high-pitched trill which can be deafening. To
prove my point, a few years back I brought home from work my noise meter to
measure how loud their calls are. The cumulative chorus at our pond was
overwhelming, exceeding 95 decibels. If you worked in such an environment OSHA
would mandate hearing protection.
You might occasionally hear a lone spring
peeper in October, too. Herpetologists call that the fall echo. Some peepers
react to the sunlight and temperatures being like that of the spring. And, with
hibernation coming up, their bodies are already preparing for mating that comes
right after they thaw out.
It’s truly amazing how much sound can come out of a creature so small. Spring
peepers are three-quarters of an inch to an inch-and-a-quarter in length. They
are wee animals, far smaller than their cousins, the toads and frogs (as a
matter of fact, most frogs could eat them). They are light brown to grey with a
dark diagonal cross or “x” on their back.
You’ve likely never seen a spring peeper – they are not only small, but they
are timid. If you get too close to their breeding pond, they will stop singing
and hide.
Next month, when they are done increasing their populations, the peepers will
leave those ponds and head into the woods to climb trees and grasses to spend
the rest of the year feeding on small invertebrates.
Despite their secrecy, they are among the most abundant amphibians on the
Niagara Frontier, as made evident by their calls alone.
If you live in a city or village and never had the chance to listen to spring
peepers, make it a point to drive out to a larger wetland like the Iroquois
Wildlife Refuge or Hartland Swamp (if you are a Niagara County reader) or visit
the Genesse River’s WAG Trail or Alma Pond (if you are an Allegany County
reader) to catch the spring peepers in action in the coming days and weeks.
Their choruses are interesting and one of the true, honest-to-goodness signs of
spring.

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