Here for the hellbenders!
https://www.citizen-times.com/story/news/local/2025/01/25/word-from-the-smokies-park-embarks-on-cutting-edge-hellbender-study/77884854007/
"With wrinkly skin that comes in various shades of brown, eastern hellbenders arent easy to spot. These giant salamanders, which average 20 inches in length, spend most of their lives nearly invisible under rocks on the bottom of cool, fast-flowing streams. In a two-year research project starting this summer, Great Smoky Mountains National Park will use a combination of cutting-edge technology and traditional survey techniques to solve the mystery surrounding the hellbenders distribution in the Smokies.
One of the major conservation questions is: Are hellbenders reproducing in our streams? said Jonathan Cox, wetlands biology technician for the park. And it's really hard to find that out because their lifespan is so long that you can have a hellbender detected in a stream for multiple decades, but it may be the same individual.
Hellbenders can live for 30 years or more, so figuring out whether the adults alive today are reproducing successfully is imperative to securing the species future. Hellbender populations have declined significantly over recent decades, leading the US Fish and Wildlife Service to propose that the salamander be listed as an endangered species. A public comment period on the listing proposal is open through Feb. 11."...(more)