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Description

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A. mavortium is a very large salamander, among the largest known in North America. It has a broad head and a stout body. There is substantial geographic variation in color and pattern. Typically a light gray to grayish black dorsum is overlain with scattered black or dirty yellow dots or a network of yellow bars and lines. Venter varies from light to as dark as the dorsum. Hatchlings display alternating dark and light middorsal blotches and a pale lateral stripe.Ambystoma mavortium consists of a number of former subspecies of Ambystoma tigrinum. A. tigrinum now solely refers to the subspecies A. tigrinum tigrinum while A. mavortium includes ex-subspecies A. t. diaboli, A. t. mavortium, A. t. melanostictum, A. t. nebulosum, and A. t. stebbinsi. (Irschick & Shaffer 1997)

Reference

Harte, J., and Hoffman, E. (1989). ''Possible effects of acid deposition on a Rocky Mountain population of the tiger salamander Ambystoma tigrinum.'' Conservation Biology, 3, 9.

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Distribution and Habitat

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A wide distribution through most of the western half of the US, only occasionally in California and Nevada. It extends from the southernmost tip of Texas up to Canada. The range has a broad north-south distribution but extends no further east than the Dakotas and Oklahoma. Populations have been introduced into southern Arizona through the human use of larvae as fish bait.Habitat is diverse - it includes bottom land deciduous forests, coniferous forests and woodlands, open fields and bushy areas, alpine and subalpine meadow, grasslands, semideserts and deserts, and (rarely) in streams. Sandy or friable soils make for good breeding ground.
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Life History, Abundance, Activity, and Special Behaviors

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Cannabilistic larval morphs exist but show geographic variation in prevalence. Breeding takes place in practically every month of the year and is environmentally influenced, especially by such factors as rainfall and elevation. Breeding takes place in both temporary and permanent locations. Eggs are deposited singly or in very small clusters.
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Life History, Abundance, Activity, and Special Behaviors

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Declines in A. mavortium have been reported; deforestation and habitat loss in wetland and other areas are widely reported as causes. Introduction of predatory fish is not well-investigated but could potentially be an important cause of declines. Other possible causes for declines include acid-rain (Harte and Hoffman 1989), although that cause is contentious.
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Relation to Humans

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Often larvae are used as fish bait, thus commercial bait collectors have introduced non-native subspecies into some western regions of the US.
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Brief Summary

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The barred tiger salamander is an amphibian characterized by yellow to tannish vertical bars set upon a dark brown to black background color. The bars can vary in thickness depending on the metapopulation. The taxon distribution is defined as central Nebraska south to southern Texas and west to central Colorado and New Mexico. This species is a threat to the survival of the taxon Ambystoma tigrinum stebbinsi, the latter which has a more limited range and is classified as endangered. The two taxa are sufficiently similar in appearance, that genetic testing may be required to discriminate.
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bibliographic citation
C.Michael Hogan. 2012. ''Gila River. Encyclopedia of Earth, National Council for Science and the Environment, Washington DC ed. Peter Saundry; ed.in-chief C.M.Hogan
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Barred tiger salamander

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The barred tiger salamander or western tiger salamander (Ambystoma mavortium) is a species of mole salamander that lives in lower western Canada, the western United States and northern Mexico.[1][2]

Description

Development

The barred tiger salamander typically grows from 15 to 22 cm (5.9 to 8.7 in) but it can grow to 30.5 cm (12.0 in) long at the most and is one of the largest species of salamander in North America. It has a broad head and a sturdy body. The color is variable across its range. The dorsal surface is grey, dark brown or black with bars and spots of muddy yellow giving it a tiger-like coloring. The ventral surface varies from light to dark. Larvae have alternating dark and light blotches on the centre of the dorsal surface and pale stripes running along the sides.[1]

Behavior

Primarily nocturnal, barred tiger salamanders are opportunistic feeders, and will often eat anything they can catch, including various insects, slugs, and earthworms. They are primarily terrestrial as adults, but their juvenile, larval stage is entirely aquatic, having external gills. Breeding takes place during most months of the year. The eggs are laid in water and the developing larvae are exclusively aquatic.

Cannibalism

There are two main feeding morphologies for barred tiger salamanders, typical and cannibalistic. The cannibalistic form is characterized by large vomerine teeth, slim bodies and wider heads. The teeth give a better hold on prey, and the wider heads allow for eating larger organisms. In some areas, these include fathead minnows. Since the two species have similar diets, eating a competitor also reduces demand on their shared food.[3]

Cannibalistic tiger salamanders tend to metamorphosize earlier than the typical ones. Most often, cannibals are found in drier areas and shallow, more competitive waters, making earlier metamorphosis advantageous.[3]

Subspecies

The five recognized subspecies of Ambystoma mavortium are:

  • Gray barred tiger salamander, A. m. diaboli (Dunn, 1940)
  • Barred tiger salamander, A. m. mavortium (Baird, 1850)
  • Blotched tiger salamander, A. m. melanostictum (Baird, 1860)
  • Arizona tiger salamander, A. m. nebulosum (Hallowell, 1853)
  • Sonoran tiger salamander, A. m. stebbinsi (Lowe, 1954)
a.m. diaboli, salamander in residence at Living Prairie Museum, Winnipeg

Distribution and habitat

The barred tiger salamander lives in western Canada and the western half of the United States, but infrequently in California and Nevada. In Canada it is known from British Columbia, Alberta, Saskatchewan and Manitoba. Its range in the United States extends to the southernmost tip of Texas, but no further east than the Dakotas and Oklahoma.[1][2] It has been introduced into southern Arizona because its larvae are used as fish bait.[1]

It is a mainly terrestrial species, living in lowland deciduous forests, coniferous forests and woodlands. It also inhabits open fields, rough ground, upland meadows, grasslands, deserts, semideserts and streams.[1]

Status

The Sonoran tiger salamander was classified as an endangered species in 1997, due to increased human activity causing degradation and fragmentation of its habitat. It is also threatened by various disease outbreaks triggered by species not native to Arizona. Some introduced animals, such as crayfish, prey on it.[1]

In captivity

Tiger salamanders are frequently kept in captivity; they mostly hide and ambush their prey. It is illegal to sell adults in most parts of the United States. Their large size allows for ease of feeding, and their hardy nature makes them excellent captives. Their larval stage is often sold as fishing bait, marketed as "mud puppies" or "water dogs".[4]

Symbol

The tiger salamander is the state amphibian of Kansas. The second grade class of 1993 of O‑K Elementary in Wichita, Kansas, petitioned the governor; students Timothy Boyd and Kristofer Voorhees presented the initial idea for a state amphibian to their teacher.[5] It is also the state amphibian of Colorado after being recognized by the Colorado legislature on March 16, 2012.[6]

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f
    Petirs, Brian (2002-01-08). "Ambystoma mavortium". AmphibiaWeb. Retrieved 2013-12-05.
  2. ^ a b Johnson, Jarrett R.; Thomson, Robert C.; Micheletti, Steven J.; Shaffer, H. Bradley (2011). "The origin of Tiger salamander (Ambystoma tigrinum) populations in California, Oregon, and Nevada: Introductions or relicts?". Conservation Genetics. Netherlands: Springer. 12 (2): 355–370. doi:10.1007/s10592-010-0144-2. S2CID 16248640.
  3. ^ a b McLean, Kyle I.; Stockwell, Craig A.; Mushet, David M. (2016). "Cannibalistic-morph tiger salamanders in unexpected ecological contexts". The American Midland Naturalist. 175: 64–72. doi:10.1674/amid-175-01-64-72.1 – via researchgate.net.
  4. ^ Amorozov. Barred tiger salamander in captivity (photo). Retrieved 1 October 2016.{{cite AV media}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  5. ^ "Barred Tiger salamander". Kansaspedia. Kansas Historical Society. July 2011.
  6. ^ "State amphibian". Colorado State Archives. Retrieved 2019-12-04.
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Barred tiger salamander: Brief Summary

provided by wikipedia EN

The barred tiger salamander or western tiger salamander (Ambystoma mavortium) is a species of mole salamander that lives in lower western Canada, the western United States and northern Mexico.

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