In this species breeding takes place in the autumn and on land near fishless woodland ponds or swamps.
Breeding marbled salamanders.
Fertilization is internal and each female may lay 50 200 eggs usually in small depressions under logs in leaf litter or under vegetation at the edge of the water.
It migrates to a pond before autumn rains begin.
Each female lays her clutch of 30 to 100 eggs in a dry depression and the embryos begin to develop.
Marbled salamanders breed in autumn unlike most other mole salamanders which breed in winter and migrate to wetlands during before a good rain to court and mate.
Marbled salamanders are part of the mole salamander family which is a group of salamanders endemic to north america and the only genus in the.
Breeding habitat marbled salamanders are one of two species of ambystoma that breed on land petranka 1998 and they are the only ambystoma species that exhibit parental care nussbaum 1985 1987.
There the animal begins to court and mate.
Family ambystomatidae are a medium sized chunky salamander reaching up to 4 25 inches in length 10 8 cm as adults they have a variable number of white bars on the body.
Like other ambystomatids these salamanders spend most of their time underground in burrows and are infrequently seen outside of the breeding season.
We estimated a similar annual.
The marbled salamander is a relatively common resident throughout north carolina.
Like other mole salamanders marbled salamanders are predators of.
The female stays with her developing eggs until rain fills the wetland and triggers.
Females will lay about 30 100 eggs in a depression on land usually beneath a log or leaf litter.
Sporting white or gray bands across its body this secretive species is known to hide out beneath leaves and logs.
Marbled salamanders ambystoma opacum urodela.
Marbled salamanders appear to be characterized by lower annual survival and higher breeding probabilities than other ambystomatids.
Larval marbled salamanders are difficult to distinguish from other ambystoma salamanders of nh spotted blue spotted and jefferson salamanders.
Although other salamander species in the mole salamander family breed in water the marbled salamander does not.
September is the peak breeding period in massachusetts for one of its most attractive yet unorthodox amphibian species the marbled salamander ambystoma opacum during rainy foggy or very humid nights adults emerge from underground burrows in the forest and migrate overland to swamps and vernal pools to breed and deposit eggs.