In the Footsteps of Conant: Herping Ohio’s Hill Country
—Roger Conant
Herpetology in Ohio—50 Years Ago
Northern Red-bellied Snake.
As we pulled to a stop along the roadside, the fluttering hum of cicadas died down and the air hung still for a moment as if the forest was waiting to inhale. I grabbed my snake stick from the bed of the truck as Carl slipped his backpack over his head. We both knew the drill. The hillsides all around us held promise of snakes, lizards, and turtles hidden below cover.
Eastern Black Kingsnake.
Weekends were Conant’s designated field days. He would travel from his home base in Toledo, accompanied by a small and variable band of zoo colleagues, local naturalists, and a few wide-eyed teenagers, all eager to indulge their persistent childhood urges to catch the scaly and slimy. The crew would pack snake bags and collecting jars into Roger’s 1931 Chevy and set out for the unknown. Their findings were quintessential, helping to verify species records and contributing to the state’s first range maps.
Eastern Smooth Earthsnake.
For over 15 years, Carl Brune has spent his free weekends and rainy evenings ‘filling in Conant’s gaps.’ Originally from California, Carl moved to Ohio to teach physics at Ohio University. He has helped to expand the known ranges of species from copperheads to streamside salamanders, and has even authored two chapters in the Amphibians of Ohio Textbook.
Northern Copperhead.
I began herping with him in late August 2017. Growing up in a suburb of Cleveland, reptile diversity was somewhat lacking. For as long as I can remember, I’ve dreamed of seeing the creatures hidden among the rolling hills of Ohio’s southern counties. In 2016, I moved to Athens to study Wildlife Biology and Conservation. By luck or fate, I found myself in the middle of one of Ohio’s most herpetologically diverse regions.
A map of the physiogeographic regions of Ohio from Conant's The Reptiles of Ohio.
It is no secret that Roger Conant preferred the Hill Country over any of Ohio’s other physiogeographic regions. Eleven of the thirty reptile species he documented there were found nowhere else in the state. The Hill Country encompasses the southeastern third of Ohio and sits on the Unglaciated Allegheny Plateau at the base of the Appalachian Mountains. Except for the blue grass region, the Hill Country is the only part of Ohio that was free of ice during the Pleistocene. When the glaciers receded at the end of the last ice age, their melt waters carved out the labyrinth of ravines and hilltops that define the Hill Country of today.
Black Racer.
Before the arrival of Europeans, 95% of Ohio was covered by huge stands of old-growth forest. Oaks and hickories cloaked the rolling hills and provided habitat for wolves, bison, elk, black bear, and even wolverine. By the beginning of the 1900s, the state’s megafauna would be gone, and the forest would be reduced to 10% of its former grandeur. The trees were cleared for timber and to allow access to the exposed layers of coal, iron, and oil. Once these natural resources were fully exploited, industry moved on, and the forests were allowed to regrow. Remnants of old coal towns and iron districts still stand in isolated pockets of the backwoods, totems to this past age.
Northern Ring-necked Snake.
Despite the disappearance of many of Ohio’s native fauna during this era of rapid and intense deforestation, there have been no documented extinctions for any of Ohio’s 47 species of reptile or 40 species of amphibian. Just how and where these fragile creatures survived is something of a mystery. Logging took place over many decades, and it is possible species found refuge in small, remaining tracts of habitat, recolonizing the surrounding land once the forest had regrown. Considering the scale of habitat loss that swept through Ohio in the 1800s, it is remarkable any native herpetofauna survived at all.
Black Ratsnake.
Logs and rocks provide cool, moist places for snakes to hide during the heat of the day. Nature, however, can be supplemented with a little human ingenuity. In Conant’s time, logging operations left behind huge saw dust piles strewn along the steep slopes. When covered with pieces of hacked-off bark, these damp, sturdy piles provided the perfect escape from the elements. Conant recounts one exceptionally good find, “a large slab-covered pile in Hocking County yielded a fence lizard, three young broad head skinks, a northern water snake, eleven hatchling black rat snakes, and two juvenile copperheads.” As mill practices shifted, Conant’s fruitful saw dust piles became a thing of the past.
Eastern Milksnake.
During the course of our search, Carl and I might flip upwards of 100 pieces of cover and hike ten miles through the ravines and hilltops, all to find a handful of serpents. Somedays, the snakes are plentiful, others require hours of work to find the most common of species. There is really no telling where or when a species might turn up; it's often a matter of being in the right place at the right time.
Eastern Wormsnake.
Conant was well aware that with each decade, more species were pushed closer toward extirpation. Fifty years after his surveys, Conant lamented that, “many places that once supported thriving colonies of various species have vanished.” Rattlesnakes, spotted turtles, Kirtland’s snakes—species Conant would have commonly encountered in his day—have all but disappeared from most of the state.
Timber Rattlesnake.
Conant laid the ground work for our modern generation of herpetologists. It is now up to us to protect the species and populations that remain. Efforts to mitigate the damage we have done to our natural environment can often seem confusing and convoluted, but I have found there is something very down to earth about the study of reptiles and amphibians. Even someone unaccustomed to the complex and long-winded jargon of scientific literature might be able to detect a hint of the adventure and mystery only thinly veiled behind tables of snout-vent lengths and scale counts.
Hobby, obsession, the ‘weird’ cousin of birding, call it what you will, but herping has captivated my life ever since I first opened Roger Conant's field guide. In a few months time, the snakes, lizards, and turtles will begin to emerge from their frozen retreats. Carl and I will soon be back among the rolling hills of Southern Ohio, flipping logs, boards, and carpets for the secrets hidden beneath. Only time will tell what we find.
Carl and myself after a day of dip netting for salamanders in 2018.
Ryan Wagner is a student studying Wildlife Biology and Conservation at Ohio University. He is an avid herper, birder, nature blogger, and wildlife photographer. You can read more of his articles at ryansweeklywildlife.blogspot.com or follow him on twitter @weeklywildlife.
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