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Flatwoods Salamander (Ambystoma cingulatum)
Physical Description:
3 ½" to 5" in
length
Head and limbs are relatively small in size
Dark with gray netlike markings on its back
Belly is black with gray specks
Range:
S. Carolina south to Okefenokee
Swamp in Georgia and Florida, west to se. Mississippi.
Habitat Description:
Require flat, low-lying longleaf
or slash pine forests with interspersed isolated wetlands.
Spring/Summer; the vast majority of their
time is spent underground
Fall/Winter; autumn showers prompt migration
to breeding wetland sites
Feeding:
A carnivorous, opportunistic feeder,
Feeds primarily on small worms, beetle larvae,
and termites
Breeding:
In fall they gather at the grassy
area between the wetland and forested uplands, laying sticky clusters
of eggs that cling to vegetation.
Female lays up to 160 eggs, singly or in
small groups
As the wetland fills, the eggs are inundated
and begin to mature.
Larvae hatch 3-5 weeks after laying
Interesting trivia:
Habitat specialist
Found primarily underground or in cool, damp
crevices under rocks or logs during the day time
Come out at night to search for food
Wetlands where eggs are laid must be typically
free of large fish that might otherwise eat large numbers of salamander
eggs and larvae
Status:
Federally threatened
Causes for decline:
Habitat degradation through forestry operations
that cause major soil disturbances and alterations to forest and ground
cover conditions surrounding isolated wetlands
Fire suppression that removes habitat between
upland and wetland
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