Search Result
Gallery Photo
This coastal giant salamander had a large fish, a sculpin, in its stomach. The fish came out during the gastric lavage procedure.
Gallery Photo
Coastal giant salamander being measured for length
Gallery Photo
A coastal giant salamander being measured for length in the left bin, and the sculpin that was in the salamander's gut in the right bin
Gallery Photo
OSU undergraduate student Theo Nuss readies the sampling equipment
Gallery Photo
Theo Nuss recording data
Gallery Photo
A very large cutthroat trout
Gallery Photo
Electroshocking in Lookout Creek
Gallery Photo
The pool behind this rock was home to a very large cutthroat trout
Gallery Photo
The rocks in the stream were covered in algal growth
Gallery Photo
Rylee Rawson, an undergraduate field technician, helps with sampling
Gallery Photo
Dave Leer, Rylee Rawson, and Ivan Arismendi electroshocking for fish and salamanders
Gallery Photo
Electroshocking in Lookout Creek
Gallery Photo
Ivan Arismendi, left, and undergraduate stduent Najma Ain, catch fish in Lookout Creek
Gallery Photo
Dave Leer, Rylee Rawson, Ivan Arismendi, and Najma Ain, electroshocking for fish and salamanders
Gallery Photo
Ivan Arismendi, left, and undergraduate stduent Najma Ain, catch fish in Lookout Creek
Gallery Photo
Dave Leer, Rylee Rawson, Ivan Arismendi, and Najma Ain, electroshocking for fish and salamanders
Gallery Photo
Undergraduate student Najma Ain, using a net to capture fish in Lookout Creek
Gallery Photo
Ivan Arismendi electroshocking for fish and salamanders in Lookout Creek
Gallery Photo
Ivan Arismendi (Assistant Professor, OSU) with Dave Leer (CreekWalker Photography) and OSU undergraduate students Najma Ain and Rylee Rawson electroshocking for fish and salamanders in Lookout Creek.
Gallery Photo
Undergraduate student Najma Ain, left, prepares a data card for the fish sample
Gallery Photo
Ivan Arismendi looks at several cutthroat trout caught in a reach of Lookout Creek.
Gallery Photo
Each sample group of fish is photographed, with an identification card, and a ruler. Later, researchers use the ruler and special software to calculate the length of each fish in the photograph.
Gallery Photo
Each sample group of fish is photographed, with an identification card, and a ruler. Later, researchers use the ruler and special software to calculate the length of each fish in the photograph.
Gallery Photo
Undergraduate student, Najma Ain, looks into a tub containing cutthroat trout of various sized. Researchers count and photograph the fish and return them to the stream.