Who is newt, who is salamander?? hehehe

R

rafael

Guest
Hi caudata lovers!! I'm a brazilian guy newbie in caudata...

I have a little question: who is newt and who is salamander? Is diferent??

Sorry for the poor english!
 
Hi, and welcome! You should get somebody elses opinion, but most newt are mostly aquatic, and most salamanders are mostly terrestrial. That is the most basic answer, good luck!
 
The answer to this and many other questions is found in the FAQ at Caudata Culture:
http://www.caudata.org/cc/faq/faq.shtml

"What is the difference between a newt and a salamander?

Surprisingly, there is no really meaningful difference. The distinction is more historic than scientific. Newts are a subgroup of salamanders. All newts are salamanders, but not all salamanders are newts. The following are the things that distinguish newts from salamanders.

A salamander is called a "newt" if it belongs to one of the following genera: Cynops, Echinotriton, Euproctus, Neurergus, Notophthalmus, Pachytriton, Paramesotriton, Pleurodeles, Taricha, Triturus, or Tylototriton.
Newts generally spend more of their adult lives in the water than salamanders. However, there are exceptions (terrestrial newts and aquatic salamanders).
Newts generally have more distinctive differences between the sexes and a more complex aquatic courtship. Again, there are exceptions."
 
Thank'sssssssss!!

Very basic question... But...
My "newts" are 5 Triturus cristatus, 1 Pleurodeles waltl, 4 Cynops orientalis and several Ambystoma mexicanum (newt or salamander?? hehehe)

Look the Axolotls here: www.myreef.hpg.com.br/axolote.htm
 
Axolotls classify under "aquatic salamanders," as do sirens, hellbenders, giant salamanders, etc.
 
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