Meanwhile, here in Maine, we have our own version of the Everglades exotic snake invasion, with a suspected python observed by police eating a beaver then swimming across a river in an urban area.
http://www.upi.com/Odd_News/2016/06...aver-eating-snake-on-the-loose/1111467300770/
It's a serious problem--a few years back we had a Gabon viper scare--in MARCH!. LOL.
http://www.pressherald.com/2010/03/09/deadly-african-snake-turns-up-on-saco-trail_2010-03-08/
That salamander reminds me of a brook trout I caught last year--not a particularly large fish at ~13 inches--that puked up two bright orange salamanders in the bottom of my canoe while I netted and released it. I've always wondered why 2" orange wet flies are so effective in early June, and I've now concluded they represent the larval salamanders as they migrate towards shore to emerge, which seems to be happening about the same time these flies are effective.
Or at least that's my story. It can't be that brook trout are stupid and just smash orange stuff.