MHS General Meeting has Moved!
Starting on December 6, 2024, and running through all of 2025, MHS meetings will now be held at the Harriet Alexander Nature Center (HANC) in Roseville, just a few miles from our current meeting site. The building is nestled on the edge of 52 acres of marsh, prairie and forest habitat. A brief walk on a paved path leads through beautiful woods from the parking lot to the front door. (People with mobility issues or large items can be driven to the door and dropped off before parking.) Members may enjoy walking on the extensive boardwalk that winds through the…
2025 Board of Directors Elect
As of November 2025 General Meeting Election, on an unopposed ballot, the following have been elected: President: Renee Valois,Vice President: April Homich,Recording Secretary: Christopher Rueber,Membership Secretary: Sophie Faacks,Newsletter Editor: Nancy Haig,Treasurer: Rae Rueber,Member at Large: Dan Snorek,Member at Large: Crystal Welle,Member at Large: TJ Carlson,Member at Large: Unfilled
May ’22 Speaker: Erica Hoaglund – The Endangered Blanchard’s Cricket Frog
Erica Hoaglund has worked for over 15 years with herps and other animals through the Nongame Wildlife Program of the Minnesota Department of Natural Resources. She covers Region 3/Central, which includes about 26 counties. On May 6th, she spoke to the MHS about a new joint project with HerpMapper, aimed at putting community science to work documenting Minnesota’s only endangered amphibian, the Blanchard’s cricket frog. Her talk covered the frog’s status and history, phenology, habitat and ecology, distribution, how to identify the species, and a new citizen science survey seeking help from MHS…
April ’22 Speaker: Gaea Crozier – Wood Turtle Research in Northeastern Minnesota
Gaea Crozier of the MN DNR is a nongame wildlife biologist out of Grand Rapids who works with wood turtles (Glyptemys insculpta) and other creatures. She spoke for the MHS General Meeting on April 1st about the results of a recently completed project on wood turtles in northeastern Minnesota through MN DNR’s Nongame Wildlife Program. The project examined threats to the turtles and the effectiveness of management aimed at addressing those threats. Crozier also spoke about current efforts related to wood turtles in northeastern Minnesota. Wood turtles are a threatened species in Minnesota, ranging over the eastern portion of…
October ’17 Speaker: Beth Girard; Lizards: What They Do and How They Do It!
Beth has been an active member of the Minnesota Herpetological Society since 1999. This year, she served as the 2017 State Fair Coordinator and continues her role as the current Adoption Chair. She joined MHS with her four children when we moved to the Twin Cities from Orlando, Florida. It was her love of everything herp and work as an informal science educator that fuels her passion for squamates. Now that her kids have grown up and moved on, there are still plenty of animals at her house! Last year she was asked to do a 2-hour lizards and dragons…
March ’17 Speaker: Aquatic Newt Husbandry; Wild Salamander Threats
Bradley Wilson has been fascinated by the oft-overlooked newt since he first heard of such a creature in a Monty Python movie his father showed him in the early 1980’s. His parents home quickly became filled with aquariums and terrariums. Freshwater community tanks, oddballs such as the now outlawed fish Snakeheads, lungfish, freshwater toadfish, lionfish and moray eels. Saltwater tanks housing Volitan Lionfish, Tangs, Triggers and more moray eels. Guinea pigs, teddy bear hamsters, ferrets, rabbits all made a home with him at one point or another. At one point he owned a Cayenne river caecilian; which met an unfortunate…
October ’16 Talk: The Great Herp Extinction: What We Know (And What We Can Do) About the World’s Vanishing Herps
Jeremy Hance is a freelance environmental journalist. Currently he is a senior correspondent with Monagabay and writes a blog on the Guardian entitled Radical Conservation. He has been covering wildlife conservation issues, including the rising tide of mass extinction, since 2007. In pursuit of his stories, Jeremy has traveled to nearly thirty countries across five continents. He is also the author of a book of essays entitled, Life is Good: Conservation in an Age of Mass Extinction. You can follow him on Facebook or Twitter @jeremy_hance.
September ’16 Speaker – Richard Glor
Speaker – Dr. Richard Glor Bio: Rich Glor is a lifelong helper who developed his passion for reptiles and amphibians as a teenage volunteer at the Buffalo Zoo and later as a member of the Cornell University Herpetological Society. He earned his PhD in Ecology and Evolutionary Biology at Washington University in St. Louis through work on the evolution of species richness in anole lizards. He conducted postdoctoral work at the University of California, Davis in the Center for Population Biology before spending several years as a professor at the University of Rochester. He joined the University of Kansas in…