- Joined
- Oct 14, 2004
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- Location
- Bristol
- Country
- United Kingdom
I've spent the last week in the Indre region of France hiking in some of my favourite forests and wooded river valleys. Salamandra salamandra terrestris larvae are very abundant at this time of year, appearing in most small pools, troughs and puddles. Adults are harder to find, mostly hiding under rotten logs. The wet, cold April weather made them easier to find than during the hot summer months however. I was also fortunate to find my very first marbled newt in the wild! Having kept T.marmoratus for many years as an "exotic" it was really magic to find a sub adult under a log. As soon as I picked it up it oozed toxins and was extremely uncooperative, but that didn't wipe the smile off my face
You must excuse the quality of some of the photos, it was lashing down with rain and I haven't quite mastered taking aquatic shots in the field.
Woodland habitat inhabited by S.s.terrestris (not in the stream!)
S.terrestris larva
S.s.terrestris close to morphing
Triturus marmoratus - note the white toxic secretions
Lissotrition helveticus larva
Adult male Lissotriton helveticus through very wet and dirty glass.
Salamandra salamandra terrestris
Probably the finest looking S.s.terrestris I've had the pleasure of finding.
Woodland habitat inhabited by S.s.terrestris (not in the stream!)
S.terrestris larva
S.s.terrestris close to morphing
Triturus marmoratus - note the white toxic secretions
Lissotrition helveticus larva
Adult male Lissotriton helveticus through very wet and dirty glass.
Salamandra salamandra terrestris
Probably the finest looking S.s.terrestris I've had the pleasure of finding.