Long-toed salamanders (Ambystoma macrodactylum) are common amphibians throughout the Pacific Northwest, making them an ideal species to use for restoration assessment. A successful wetland restoration project would be expected to have a healthy long-toed salamander population, but it was not previously known whether long-toed salamanders were present in the Union Bay Natural Area (UBNA), a Seattle park with many ongoing restoration efforts. The Amphibian Corridor restoration project in UBNA, installed in 2015, aimed to provide amphibian migration habitat. To assess its efficacy, I examine long-toed salamander movements and woody debris microhabitat preferences within and around the corridor. The study also acts as an inventory of amphibians present in the corridor and throughout UBNA. The corridor and surrounding areas are being monitored throughout the 2021 breeding season (January through May) for adults, larvae, and egg masses. To find larvae and egg masses, dip net aquatic surveys are conducted once per week, alternating between day or night surveys. To find adults, visual encounter terrestrial surveys are conducted once per week, alternating between day or night surveys. Individual salamanders are photographed and identified by their unique spot patterns so that individual movement can be tracked using a mark-recapture method. The location and microhabitat of all amphibians are recorded . My surveys have shown that long-toed salamanders use the corridor. To date, 18 individuals have been recorded in the corridor with up to 10 recaptures per individual, and 11 individuals have been recorded in other parts of UBNA with up to 8 recaptures per individual. Three egg masses have also been found in UBNA. UBNA management and future restoration could be informed by this study’s insights about long-toed salamander microhabitat preference and movement strategies. Given this information, similar restoration projects to the Amphibian Corridor in other urban parks may be effective for amphibian conservation.