Kalpana Kalpana (Editor)

Tremblay's salamander

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Kingdom
  
Animalia

Order
  
Caudata

Phylum
  
Chordata

Rank
  
Species

Class
  
Lissamphibia

Family
  
Ambystomidae

Genus
  
Mole salamander

Similar
  
Mole salamander, Salamander, Silvery salamander, Granular salamander, Jefferson salamander

Tremblay's salamander (Ambystoma tremblayi) is a member of the family Ambystomidae from the United States of America and Canada. Reaching between 3¾ and 6⅜" (9.3 and 16 cm), the salamander is long and slender with many bluish-white markings. It is dark gray to gray-black and the area around the vent is black. Tremblay's salamander is a hybrid species of Jefferson salamanders (A. jeffersonianum) and blue-spotted salamanders (A. laterale). This hybridization created two all-female species: Tremblay's and silvery salamanders. These genetic curiosities possess three sets of chromosomes instead of the normal two.

Contents

Behaviour

Tremblay's salamanders breed with male blue-spotted salamanders from March to April. Eggs are laid singly or in small masses of 6-10 eggs on debris at pond bottom. The males' chromosome contribution only stimulates the egg's development; its genetic material is ignored. It is not often observed and its diet and lifestyle are unknown.

Habitat and range

These salamanders live on the bottom of deciduous forests from northern Wisconsin, northern Indiana, northern Ohio, and southern Michigan east through southern Quebec to the New England coastal plain.

References

Tremblay's salamander Wikipedia