CRATER LAKE, Ore. — Mark Buktenica, who’s worked as Crater Lake National Park’s aquatic biologist for 30 years, remembers times not so long ago when Mazama Newts, a species found only at Crater Lake, were common sights along the lake’s shorelines.
He says things changed in the 1990s, when sightings of the 8-inch long salamander, formally christened the Mazama Newt but affectionately called “mud puppies,” became less common. Instead, he and others found spiraling populations of nonnative crayfish, which had been introduced to the lake in 1915, ironically, to be food for the lake’s non-native fish.
“We kept seeing more and more crayfish,” Buktenica says. “And now you can hardly pick up a rock without finding one.”
Concerned about the shift, studies led by park aquatic biologist Scott Girdner, Buktenica and biologists from the University of Nevada, Reno, began in 2008. They’ve learned crayfish now occupy nearly 80 percent of the lakeshore. Newt populations, in contrast, have declined and face possible extinction.