Salamanders: Facts and List of Different Types With Pictures (2024)

Salamanders are vertebrate animals that make up one of the most recognizable groups of amphibians found throughout the world. Their lizard-like appearance may often mislead people into thinking that they are reptiles, but they do spend part of their lives in water, which classifies them as amphibians. Depending on species, salamanders can breathe through lungs, their permeable skin, or through special membranes in their mouth.

Most species are about a few inches long, though some can grow up to 5-6 feet, with the Chinese giant salamander being considered the largest. Below is a list of all the extant types, except those in the Salamandridae or true salamander family, which are known as newts in a slightly contradictory way.

  • List of Types

  • Basic Facts



    Giant salamanders (Family Cryptobranchidae)

    HellbenderJapanese giant salamanderChinese giant salamander

    Asiatic salamanders (Family Hynobiidae)

    Longdong stream salamanderAlpine stream salamanderTaibai stream salamander
    Western Chinese mountain salamanderChiala mountain salamanderYenyuan stream salamander
    Alishan salamanderAmji’s salamanderOdaigahara salamander
    Abe’s salamanderGuabangshan salamanderOita salamander
    Formosan salamanderChinese salamanderTaiwan lesser salamander
    Akaishi salamanderHida salamanderKorean salamander
    Tōhoku salamanderHakuba salamanderLiaoning salamander
    Buchi salamanderXingan salamanderJapaneseblack salamander
    Oki salamanderJapanese clouded salamanderJeju salamander
    Ezo salamanderAmber salamanderTokyo salamander
    Sonan’s salamanderHokuriku salamanderKori salamander
    Turkestanian salamanderYunan salamanderTsushima salamander
    Yiwu salamanderTsinpa salamanderWushan salamander
    Japanese clawed salamanderFischer’s clawed salamanderShangcheng stout salamander
    Paghman stream salamanderGorgan salamanderPersian brook salamander
    Kuankuoshui salamanderPuxiong salamanderGuizhou salamander
    Jinfo Mountain salamanderYellow-spotted salamanderShuicheng salamander
    Primorye newtSiberian salamanderCentral Asian salamander

    Mole Salamanders (Family Ambystomatidae)

    Jefferson salamanderAxolotlCalifornia tiger salamander
    Tiger salamanderMountain stream salamanderStreamside salamander
    Blunt-headed salamanderDelicate-skinned salamanderReticulatedflatwoods salamander
    Yellow-peppered salamanderFrostedflatwoods salamanderNorthwestern salamander
    Blue-spotted salamanderGranular salamanderTremblay’s salamander
    Lake Patzcuaro salamanderLeora’s salamanderLong-toed salamander ― Subspecies: Santa Cruz long-toed salamander
    Lake Lerma salamanderSilvery salamanderMabee’s salamander
    Ringed salamanderSpotted salamanderMichoacan stream salamander
    Barred tiger salamanderMarbled salamanderMole salamander
    Puerto Hondo stream salamanderDurango salamanderTarahumara salamander
    Anderson’s salamanderSmall-mouth salamanderPlateau tiger salamander
    Taylor’s salamander

    Amphiumas or Congo eels (Family Amphiumidae)

    Two-toed amphiumaOne-toed amphiumaThree-toed amphiuma

    Pacific Giant Salamanders (Family Dicamptodontidae)

    Coastal giant salamanderCope’s giant salamanderIdaho giant salamander
    California giant salamander

    Lungless salamanders (Family Plethodontidae)

    Alberch’s salamanderAlvarado’s salamanderPeter’s climbing salamander
    Brame’s climbing salamanderNauta salamanderTwo-lined climbing salamander
    Coal-black salamanderCataguana salamanderCarabobo climbing salamander
    Orphan salamanderCelaque climbing salamanderCloud forest salamander
    Chinanteca salamanderCerro Pando salamanderHotel Zaracay salamander
    Millville Climbing salamanderLa Loma salamanderConant’s salamander
    Camp Sasardi salamanderEl Cope giant salamanderMonte Escondido salamander
    Rio Santa Rosa salamanderDunn’s climbing salamanderQuebrada Valverde salamander
    Oak forest salamanderTapanti climbing salamanderYellow-legged climbing salamander
    Doflein’s salamanderEl Cusuco salamanderFranklin’s climbing salamander
    Ecuadorian climbing salamanderGuaramacal salamanderEngelhardt’s climbing salamander
    Yellow-belly climbing salamanderGómez’s web-footed salamanderHartweg’s climbing salamander
    Coban climbing salamanderWinter climbing salamanderRio Quiri salamander
    Paramo Frontino salamanderCamron climbing salamanderGuerreran climbing salamander
    Lozano’s salamanderHoly-Mountain salamanderJackson’s climbing salamander
    Lincoln’s climbing salamanderMagnificent web-footed salamanderLongest climbing salamander
    Finca Chibigui salamanderOaxacan climbing salamanderCrater salamander
    Mombacho salamanderMexican climbing salamanderCope’s climbing salamander

    Habitat: Where Do Salamanders Live

    Some salamanders spend part of their adult life in water, while others are completely terrestrials as adults, though all of them need water to lay eggs and reproduce. Most species prefer cold, moist environments, living near rivers, lakes, ponds, or around marshes so they can have quick access to water.

    They are often most active during the night as the heat and light during daytime can dehydrate them quickly, especially the land dwelling salamanders.

    Do Salamanders Hibernate

    Since all amphibians are cold-blooded, terrestrial salamanders do need to hibernate in burrows or under leaf debris during winter to keep themselves from freezing. Aquatic species may remain active underwater, as the temperature is always higher in deep waters. Some have been spotted to stay active in the depths of lakes and ponds even after their surface is frozen over.

    Diet: What Do Salamanders Eat

    These carnivorous animals feed on anything they can catch, from insects like beetles, and crickets, spiders, worms, maggots, and flies to snails and other mollusks. Larger species may even eat small frogs, and other smaller salamanders. The diet of salamander larvae include small tadpoles, water insects and other aquatic invertebrates.

    Some populations may display cannibalistic habits as well, specifically during their larval phase, when they can feed on smaller larvae of the same species.

    Salamanders have small sharp teeth on both their upper and lower jaws that help them snatch and kill their prey. Even their larva has tiny conical teeth. Adults make use of their sticky tongue to capture insects.

    Reproduction and Life Cycle

    Mating can take place either in water or on land, and fertilization of the eggs is generally internal, but may be external in some species. After mating, the females lay small to large batches of tiny eggs in a concealed site in a quiet waterbody, like under a rock, or on the lower surfaces of water plants. The parents, usually the female, protect the eggs till they hatch.

    Like in all other amphibians, the larval development occurs entirely in water, with the larvae breathing through gills till they complete their metamorphosis, when they lose the gills, and grow legs to move to land. Though some salamanders, like the axolotl, retain their gills and remain aquatic even when they become adults.

    Lifespan: How Long Do They Live

    Their lifespan varies from just a few years to 20-30 years, depending on their species, population, and size. Chinese giant salamander, the longest living member of this order, has an average lifespan of 50-60 years.

    Predators and Threats

    Medium to large fish, frogs, larger salamanders, snakes, turtles, birds of prey, rodents, and larger mammals are all known to prey on the small to medium species. Giant salamanders do not have many enemies in the wild, as they are often the apex predators in their food chain.

    Apart from habitat loss and capture for the pet trade, additional threats like harvesting for food, and extensive use in scientific experiments are pushing many species, like the axolotl, on the brink of extinction.

    Can Salamanders be Dangerous to Humans

    Salamanders are generally not harmful for humans, as they tend to run away in case of a confrontation. However, being aggressive hunters by nature, they may bite when cornered, like thearboreal salamander. They have special poison secreting glands that release a kind of toxin when handled, which can cause skin irritation. Still,there is no serious threat unless you actually swallow a salamander, which may be poisonous.

    The toxic skin secretion, while not seriously harmful in most cases, can cause vomiting in dogs if ingested.

    Interesting Facts

    • Salamanders have smooth, moist skin with no scales, which is an easy way of identifying them, and distinguishing from lizards whose bodies are always covered in scales.
    • These amphibians are believed to be able to withstand extreme colds, with some species like theSiberian salamander, being able to remain frozen for years and then become active again upon thawing.
    • One Chinese giant salamander found in a cave in China was claimed to be over 200 years old, making it the longest-living specimen of this order. However, this fact needs further verification to make it reliable.
    • As a defense mechanism, some salamanders can flex their muscles in a way that their spiny ribs protrude out the sides of their body and into the flesh of any animal trying to catch it.

    Salamanders: Facts and List of Different Types With Pictures (1)Southern Two-lined Salamander

    Salamanders: Facts and List of Different Types With Pictures (2)Jollyville Plateau Salamander

    Salamanders: Facts and List of Different Types With Pictures (3)Tennessee Cave Salamander

    Salamanders: Facts and List of Different Types With Pictures (4)Cheat Mountain Salamander

    Salamanders: Facts and List of Different Types With Pictures (5)Northern Two-lined Salamander

    Salamanders: Facts and List of Different Types With Pictures (6)Jemez Mountain Salamander

    Salamanders: Facts and List of Different Types With Pictures (7)Red Hills Salamander

    Salamanders: Facts and List of Different Types With Pictures (8)Barton Springs Salamander

    Salamanders: Facts and List of Different Types With Pictures (9)Seal Salamander

    Salamanders: Facts and List of Different Types With Pictures (10)Austin Blind Salamander

    Salamanders: Facts and List of Different Types With Pictures (11)Northern Dusky Salamander

    Salamanders: Facts and List of Different Types With Pictures (12)Many-lined Salamander

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    Salamanders: Facts and List of Different Types With Pictures (2024)
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