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Hellbender

Rod Williams (right) and former Purdue undergraduate forestry student Cody Rhoden scan an eastern hellbender before releasing it into a Southern Indiana river. (Purdue Agricultural Communication photo/Jamie Loizzo)

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Purdue scientists help protect giant salamander

Updated: Friday, 12 Oct 2012, 2:36 PM EDT
Published : Saturday, 13 Oct 2012, 4:30 PM EDT

WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind. (AP) - Purdue University scientists are helping with an effort to save Indiana's shrinking populations of a giant amphibian called the hellbender.

Hellbenders are North America's largest salamander, growing to between 1 and 2 feet long with flat green or brown wrinkled bodies. They are long-lived, spending up to 30 years under flat rocks in rivers and streams across Appalachia and adjacent regions.

But surveys starting in 1998 show that the animal that's also known as a "devil dog" and "old lasagna sides" is on the decline in southern and east-central parts of Indiana where populations exist.

Purdue scientists are part of a national group trying to save the species. Last month they released eight juvenile hellbenders in southern Indiana that were fitted with radio transmitters to track their movements and survival.

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