Setting up the spot and camera (put controls on manual, set up the lighting and focus, keep focus distant controllable) before you move in the animals helps a lot. This way you won't have to handle them that much, and it's just 'positioning' the newts, and, after a minor focus change, clicking!
Coen, your marmoratus are very beautiful.
About your last question, I'll translate something that is written in the book 'Anfíbios e Répteis de Portugal',a book about my country's herpetological fauna:
"Triturus marmoratus (...) Sexual Dimorphism - The males show the head proportionally smaller than the females, and feet proportionally bigger. (...)"
Hope this had helped you...
---João
(Message edited by black_snake on November 29, 2006)
Maybe because it is a more irrelevant sexual difference.
As you know, the size of the cloaca or, like in this specie, the male crest, is a more reliable way to identify the gender...
That's true Joao, but these are still pretty juvenile at 2 years, so they still have an orange line on their backs, but it could well be a male and a female because of that determination.
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