Kenyon College student Matti Freiberg engages Kailee Foreman, a regular visitor to the Brown Family Environmental Center at Kenyon, in Gambier, Ohio. (Photo by Don Comis) |
Clay, 11, hunts for water creatures, along
with Lindsay Mills (yellow blouse),
Olivia Mills (blue blouse),
and Hannah Mills (black shirt).
(Photo by Don Comis)
|
Proud mothers and a father and a grandmother shared in the childrens' excitement at their finds as they emptied their nets into water in a bin for temporary storage before release.
The excitement and interest level was written in the faces of some of the younger children like 6-year-ol Emma Parsisson and the older children like Walker Mills, 11. Walker yelled that he had seen a turtle and enjoyed seeing both the turtle and the adult frogs he couldn't net.
But his net and that of the other children ended up filling the bin with a tree frog tadpole, a bullfrog tadpole, snails, a "backswimmer" water bug, a "giant water bug', a diving beetle, dragonfly and damselfy nymphs, and a "fishing spider". Not to be confused with a water strider, the fishing spider is a semi-aquatic spider that uses water like a spider uses a web--to travel on and to sense vibrations of prey, which can include water striders.
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