Nature Notes From Crater Lake
Volume 19, 1953
Lizard Adventures on Mt. Mazama
By Richard M. Brown, Assistant Park Naturalist

Shasta Alligator Lizard; tail regrows x 2/3. Photo by John
Rowley, Ranger Naturalist. |
Previous to the summer of 1948, our
knowledge of the lizards in Crater Lake National Park was very scanty.
The pigmy horned toad,
Phrynosoma douglassi douglassi Bell, the northern alligator lizard,
Gerrhonotus coeruleus principis Baird and Girard, and the Shasta
alligator lizard, Gerrhonotus coeruleus shastensis Fitch, were
the only ones that had ever been reported for the area (Vincent, 1947).
It has just recently been determined that all of our alligator lizards
are intermediate between these two subspecies, although the
characteristics of the latter predominate (Farner and Kezer, 1953).
During the 1948 season, the first
observations and collections of the Sierra pine lizard, Sceloporus
graciosus gracilis Baird and Girard, were made inside park
boundaries (Wood, 1952). The first Shasta alligator lizard was captured
that same summer, along Copeland Creek (CLNP 44). Since that time,
through 1951, no pine lizards and only two alligator lizards were
collected, one near Park Headquarters (CLNP 313) and one on the summit
of Union Peak (CLNP 360).
Several new discoveries were made in
the summer of 1952 which provided additional records and specimens for
the park. The first horned toad came into our collection (Farner and
Kezer, 1952). An alligator lizard was found in a new locality, beside
Vidae Falls (CLNP 558). One pine lizard (CLNP 526) was taken just inside
the south boundary (Wood, 1952). These events of the early summer
aroused much interest and enthusiasm on the part of Ranger Naturalist
Robert C. Wood and myself in respect to lizards of the park. We were
eager to find new places in which these creatures were living and, if
possible, to turn up new species for the area.
On September 2, 1952, Robert Wood and I
were driving along the northwestern part of the Rim Drive. Suddenly,
near the Devil's Backbone, I spotted a large lizard right on the road.
We stopped almost immediately, jumped out of the car and captured it
with much excitement. Except for the Union Peak record, this was the
highest point (ca. 7400 ft.) within the park in which a lizard had ever
been seen! We brought our prize to Park Headquarters and added it to the
collection (CLNP 570). It looked very similar to our pine lizards,
although it was somewhat larger and rather differently colored and
patterned, but time was so short before we were due to leave for the
season that we were unable to try to identify it.
This summer we soon turned our
attention to that unusual animal. Robert Wood tentatively classified it
as a Pacific fence lizard,
Sceloporus occidentalis occidentalis Baird and Girard. Here was a
new lizard for Crater Lake National Park! The specific identification
has since been confirmed by Dr. Robert H. McCauley, Jr., who did his
research in herpetology at Cornell University. He considered that this
is probably the correct subspecies also, but he could not make positive
determination from the preserved specimen. I wish to thank Dr. McCauley
for this generous assistance, given so willingly during his brief visit
to the park.
Our story now turns back to June 21,
1952, when Mr. and Mrs. Michael Harrison were camping in Castle Crags
State Park, near Dunsmuir, California The following day, the Harrisons
came to Crater Lake National Park to visit Ranger Naturalist Ralph
Welles and his wife, Florence. Their visit lasted two days, during which
time they enjoyed traveling the Rim Drive.
Early this season, Ranger Naturalist
Beatrice Willard was chatting with Ralph and Florence. They mentioned,
incidentally, that the Harrisons had discovered a lizard in the back of
their car while stopped, on June 23, 1952, at a viewpoint along the Rim
Drive near The Watchman. Little realizing the possible consequences,
Gayle Harrison had put the lizard out of the car then and there.
Beatrice, remembering that we were quite pleased with a new lizard which
we had found the previous year, brought this significant bit of
information to me. Another visit to the park by the Harrisons this year
gave me an opportunity to learn that their lizard had probably been
picked up during their 1952 stay in Castle Crags State Park.
Now, to be sure, we have no way of
knowing whether or not their lizard and ours are one and the same. But
it is interesting to note that more than two months elapsed from the
time at which Gayle released a lizard near The Watchman and the day on
which we found ours near Devil's Backbone. This is surely time enough
for a lizard to travel the distance of approximately two miles between
these points.

Sierra Pine Lizard x 2/3. Photo by John Rowley, Ranger
Naturalist. |
This story would be a most remarkable
series of coincidences if these two lizards should actually be the same
individual. Such a possibility is increased by the fact that no lizard
of this kind has ever been found in the park before. In addition, Castle
Crags State Park is nearly in the center of the natural range of the
Pacific fence lizard (Smith, 1946)! Here, at least, is an excellent
example of the care which must be taken in announcing the discovery of a
new species in an area and especially in a National Park, which receives
a great number of travelers from a wide range of places.
To report at this time that the Pacific
fence lizard occurs naturally in Crater Lake National Park would be
unjustifiable. Several additional records would be required before we
could be reasonably certain that such lizards had not been released by
one or more of the many thousands of visitors who come here each year.
This is made even more significant by the fact that the Pacific fence
lizard, although it occurs natively here in Klamath County, is known
only from the Sonoran and Transition zones, (Anderson and Slater, 1941).
Our specimen , would therefore be completely out of place where it was
found on the Rim Drive. That spot is in the Hudsonian zone (Wynd, 1941),
a long jump from the natural habitat of this lizard.
This season I have found and collected,
with Robert Wood's assistance, several Sierra pine lizards in various
new localities. These were taken in the South Entrance utility area (CLNP
571, CLNP 572), about one mile north of there along the highway (CLNP
573) and on the Wineglass (CLNP 588, CLNP 594). This last location is
particularly interesting because of its elevation (ca. 6450 ft.), the
highest place in which the pine lizard has been collected within the
park, and because of the plants growing there. In this area are found
ponderosa pine,
Pinus ponderosa Dougl., and green manzanita, Arctostaphylos
patula Greene; which otherwise grow at much lower altitudes in the
park.
These plants are typical of the
Transition zone, the natural habitat of the pine lizard. I suggest that
this part of the rim wall is supporting a relict Transition zone
community. The Wineglass area is located on the northeastern part of the
rim, which there receives the greatest amount of sunlight and would be
the most favorable section of the rim wall for such a community. This
possibility is strengthened by the work of Hansen (1947), who has found
that ponderosa pine ("yellow pine") forest had reached a maximum in the
Mt. Mazama area at the time now established for the collapse of that
mountain - - about 6450 years ago. This is probably the type of
vegetation that would have reforested Mt. Mazama, at least as high as
its new rim, upon the return of conditions permitting tree growth. Thus,
a Transition zone community may have persisted to the present time in
this isolated area within the rim, high on the mountain where the
Hudsonian zone now prevails.
Another discovery for this summer was
made when I found a colony of alligator lizards in the talus slope at
the southern edge of the rock quarry 0.9 miles north of Cold Spring
Campground, giving us an additional location for this elusive animal.
Three of these have been added to our collection (CLNP 587, CLNP 592,
CLNP 593).
Here are the most unusual and important
experiences that we have had this summer in our seeking out and finding
the evasive lizard. Perhaps another year of exploration will provide us
with even more fascinating adventures.
Now and then surprises seem to come
more suddenly and unexpectedly than is believable. Less than two hours
after I had finished writing this article, Assistant Chief Ranger James
W. B. Packard telephoned Park Naturalist Harry C. Parker to tell him
that he had found a lizard on the back steps of the Packard residence at
Annie Spring junction. It turned out to be one more alligator lizard (CLNP
595) and one more new location for this interesting creature.
References
Anderson, Oscar I. and James R. Slater.
1941. Life zone distributions of the Oregon reptiles. College of Puget
Sound, Dept. Biol., Occ. Pap. 15: 109 - 119.
Farner, Donald S. and James Kezer.
1952. A new horned toad record for Crater Lake National Park. Crater
Lake Nature Notes 18:22-23.
-----. 1953. Notes on the amphibians
and reptiles of Crater Lake National Park. Amer. Midl. Nat.
50(2):448-462.
Hansen, Henry P. 1947. Postglacial
forest succession, climate, and chronology in the Pacific Northwest.
Trans. Amer. Phil. Soc. 37 (1):1-130.
Schmidt, Karl P. 1953. A Check List of
North American Amphibians and Reptiles (6th ed.). University of Chicago
Press, Chicago, viii, 280 pp.
Smith, Hobart M. 1946. Handbook of
Lizards. Comstock Publishing Co., Ithaca. xxi, 557 pp.
Vincent, W. S. 1947. A check list of
amphibians and reptiles of Crater Lake National Park. Nature Notes,
Crater Lake National Park
13:19 - 22.
Wood, Robert C. 1952. The northern
mountain lizard. Crater Lake Nature Notes 18: 17.
Wynd, F. Lyle. 1941 The botanical
features of the life zones of Crater Lake National Park. Amer. Midl.
Nat. 25(2):324-347.