Rare, Threatened, and Endangered Species of Frederick County, Maryland


Book Description

The artwork presented in this book was hand drawn in ink on backgrounds of torn, collaged, paper maps. The maps, taken from a Collegiate World Atlas published by Rand McNally in 1964, are of the United States and the world. They are torn and collaged to illustrate that the colorful lines, shapes, and numbers that name, divide, locate, and demarcate the land are an illusion of ownership. The land does not belong to us. The collaged maps also symbolize the idea that some species have been forced out of Frederick County and into other regions and may be rare, threatened, and endangered across the United States and the world.Information for this project was sourced from the List of Rare, Threatened, and Endangered Species of Frederick County, July 2019 by The Maryland Department of Natural Resources, The Maryland Wildlife and Heritage Service, and The Natural Heritage Program. Each species is identified by common name, scientific name, state rank, and state status.The Piscataway people include both the Maryland State Recognized Piscataway Conoy Tribe and the Piscataway Indian Nation. Piscataway ancestral lands extend on most of the Western Shore of Maryland from Virginia to the Chesapeake Bay and north to Frederick including present day Washington, DC.All proceeds from the sale of this book go to the Piscataway Conoy Tribal College and University Scholarship Fund.

























The Maryland Amphibian and Reptile Atlas


Book Description

The definitive resource for finding, identifying, and conserving Maryland’s amphibians and reptiles. Naturalists, herpetologists, and ecologists alike agree that tracking herpetofauna is a challenging undertaking. Scientists are concerned about the decline of once-familiar species, but evidence has often been too anecdotal to support firm conclusions. To better understand the distribution of amphibians and reptiles in Maryland and forecast species' futures in a time of accelerated environmental threats, conducting a comprehensive statewide survey updating 1970s-era distribution maps seemed ideal. However, this endeavor was of an impossibly ambitious scope for scientists alone to tackle. Enter the Maryland Amphibian and Reptile Atlas project, comprising nearly a thousand dedicated citizen scientists who discovered and recorded the locations of herpetofauna throughout every corner of Maryland. In The Maryland Amphibian and Reptile Atlas, Heather R. Cunningham and Nathan H. Nazdrowicz present the findings of this massive undertaking. This definitive guide combines nearly 160 comprehensive new herpetological maps with historical distribution maps and in-depth species accounts. Color photos illustrate the natural history of the 89 species of frogs, salamanders, turtles, snakes, and lizards that call the state home. Essays discuss historical studies, the effects of Maryland's current climate, geology, and habitat diversity—and the myriad conservation issues these animals face. This richly detailed book represents a triumph of citizen science and the culmination of an intensive research partnership. It will appeal to both amateurs and professionals interested in herpetology, natural history, or ecology, as well as those with a special interest in Maryland's biodiversity.