A marbled salamander larva.
Marbled salamander larvae.
The marbled salamander ambystoma opacum also called the banded salamander is a member of the mole salamander family.
These pools that dry up each summer and are refilled each winter are known as vernal pools.
The marbled salamander is typically found in floodplains and low lying fertile areas dominated by hardwood trees.
Salamanders like all amphibians require water for reproduction.
Recently metamorphosed individuals are brown or gray with light speckles.
Marbled salamanders range from the.
Marbled salamander larvae are also active predators and may be the dominant predators in their temporary ponds.
As they grow larger they will eat tadpoles insects and other salamander larvae.
The larger larvae will also eat caterpillars and other.
They eat zooplankton mainly copepods and cladocerans when they first hatch but add other prey to their diet as they grow including larger crustaceans isopods fairy shrimp aquatic insects snails oligochaete worms and the.
Marbled salamanders emerge from their underground homes in early fall to migrate to their breeding grounds.
The larvae are dark brown or black with bushy gills and light spots the form a line on each side.
Females will lay about 30 100 eggs in a depression on land usually beneath a log or leaf litter.
The larvae of the marbled salamander are also quite voracious predators eating zooplankton upon hatching but adding more prey as they grow including aquatic insects isopods fairy shrimp snails worms and the larvae of other amphibians.
The marbled salamander mates and lays its eggs on land.
It gets its name from the white or silver bands that cover the black bodies of adult salamanders.
However unlike most salamanders which lay their eggs in the winter or spring marbled salamanders lay their eggs in dried up pools in the fall.
Marbled salamanders only eat live prey.
All marbled salamanders have black undersides.
Marbled salamanders like this pregnant female found at an attleboro tennis court often must cross through yards while migrating to their breeding sites during late summer nights.
Adults take terrestrial invertebrates such as worms insects centipedes and mollusks snails slugs.
The female stays with her developing eggs until rain fills the wetland and triggers.
Larvae take small aquatic animals zooplankton but larger individuals will take eggs and larvae of other amphibians as well.
A female marbled salamander guarding her clutch of eggs within a dry portion of a mendon swamp.
Life cycle the marbled salamander breeds from september to october in the northern part of its range and from october to december in the southern part of its range.
This is opposite from other mole salamanders that breed during early spring.
A marbled salamander larva.