Himalayan newt

Himalayan newt
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Amphibia
Order: Urodela
Family: Salamandridae
Genus: Tylototriton
Species: T. verrucosus
Binomial name
Tylototriton verrucosus
Anderson, 1871

The Himalayan newt (Tylototriton verrucosus) is a species of newt found in the Indian subcontinent and Southeast Asia. Other common names include: crocodile newt, crocodile salamander, Himalayan salamander, red knobby newt.[1]

Description

This newt can reach a length of 20 cm. The tongue is small and is free on the sides and only slightly towards its base. The teeth on the palate are in two oblique rows that meet at the front of the mouth. The skull has a thick, bony fronto-squamosal arch, a feature of all salamanders.[2] They have five toes and the tail is flattened to aid swimming.[3]

The head is wide and the snout is short and the head has three prominent bony ridges with pores, one along the center and two along the back of the sides of the heads (the parietal ridge). There are no lobes on the lips. The body is 3 to 3.5 times as long as the head. There is no crest running along the dorsal midrib as in some newts but there is a prominent vertebral ridge with a series of knobs formed from the expansion of the neural processes of the dorsal vertebral bones. There is a series of 15 or 16 knob-like porous glands along the sides with the last three behind the leg. The legs are moderately long with the fingers and toes within webbing but are slightly flattened. The tail is at least as long as the head and body and is flattened to help in swimming. The tail has an upper and lower crest which meet at the tip of the tail. The anal opening is a longitudinal slit, and its borders are not raised. The skin is rough and the parotoid glands are large. There is a strong fold on the chin. The entire newt is uniformly blackish brown, slightly paler on the lips, snout, chin, throat, and under surface of limbs. The lower edge of the tail is orange-yellow.[3]

During the breeding season in May and June these behavioural differences between the sexes. Courtship and mating occur at night and as in many salamanders involves the male moving around it while bending, pushing and curving its tail.[4]

Diet

They feed on spiders, worms, millipedes, scorpions, molluscs and a range of insects.[5]

Range

Mountains of Yunnan, Kakhyen Hills, Sikkim, Manipur and Northern Burma.[6] Preservation efforts are on in its habitat in Darjeeling (India), where it breeds in good numbers. It may be extinct in Vietnam.[1] The populations in Northern and Northeastern Thailand were described as new species, T. uyenoi and T. panhai, respectively.[7]

See also

References

  1. 1 2 3 Peter Paul van Dijk; Guinevere Wogan; Michael Wai Neng Lau; Sushil Dutta; Tej Kumar Shrestha; Debjani Roy & Nguyen Quang Truong (2009). "Tylototriton verrucosus". IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. Version 2012.2. International Union for Conservation of Nature. Retrieved 4 January 2013.
  2. William Edward Duellman, Linda Trueb (1994) Biology of amphibians. JHU Press. ISBN 0-8018-4780-X page 464
  3. 1 2 Boulenger, G.A. (1890). Fauna of British India. Reptilia and Batrachia. London: Taylor and Francis.
  4. Roy D; M. Mushahidunnabi (2001). "Courtship, mating and egg-laying in Tylototriton verrucosus from the Darjeeling district of the Eastern Himalaya" (PDF). Current Science. 81 (6): 693–695.
  5. Devi, N. T. (2005). "The food of the Himalayan Newt (Tylototriton verrucosus Anderson): A preliminary study". Journal of the Bombay Natural History Society. 102 (2): 166–168.
  6. The Myanmar Herpetological Survey Project
  7. Kanto Nishikawa; Wichase Khonsue; Porrawee Pomchote; Masafumi Matsui (2013). "Two new species of Tylototriton from Thailand (Amphibia: Urodela: Salamandridae". Zootaxa. 3737 (3): 261–273.
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