Question: Ambystoma maculatum x Ambystoma mexicanum

Icarez

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Patrick
I have been reading a lot on this forum about cross breeding
I got offered to take in 6 maculatum for free because apparently he is tired of the hobby
I am going to take them ofcourse :D

Would cross breeding these species be possible?
And would some of the larvea stay neotenic? or will they just all grow out to be land salamanders?

I would love some links to other articles to read about or maybe some forum threads :)

Cheers
 
I imagine that the maculatum are terrestrial and your axolotls will be aquatic. How are you planning to mate them??

Please keep them seperate and enjoy them for the gorgeous seperate species they are.


Regards Neil
 
Ofcourse they are kept seperate :p I'm not doing anything untill I have every little peice of info I need
I was just wondering if these species were compatible, and I don't know how to mate them, that's more or less the question :p
I was thinking maybe the maculatum also made spermpiles? (Spermaphores?) wich can be put into the water where an Axolotl can run over them and get fertilized?
But then again, I have no idea how this has even been done by others
And I was actually most interrested in if the offspring of this will be salamander or axolotl? or mixed?
 
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It's more than introducing a spermatophore. There's a little bit of courtship involved. Just putting spermatorphores into an axolotl's tank doesn't guarantee you'll get fertilization.

And further, WHY would you want to do this? Hybridization is never to the benefit of either species.
 
Well I never said I really wanted to do it, I'm well aware that it's not benficial, I'm just trying to get a better understanding about species, family and order

Anyways, thanks for the info
 
Probably not likely with one terrestrial and one aquatic.

Definetly not recommended. Even if you could get them to breed by some miracle you are looking at offspring that may not morph correctly or could be deformed. And if they morph into terrestrial they could also have issues. You just may end up with a clutch full of special needs Ambystoma you have to care for or euthanize.
 
I imagine that the maculatum are terrestrial and your axolotls will be aquatic. How are you planning to mate them??

Please keep them seperate and enjoy them for the gorgeous seperate species they are.

this mix will be very important!!never heard of!!
please tell us what happened!!
morphing is not so bad,they will go back in water in spring
imagine,a spotted axo!!
 
in the wild,the ambystoma`s also use subspecies,when a mate is not around,offspring will have most of there own genes,its a survivingmethode,they are masters in it,like reparing missing limbs etc
 
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