TJ
New member
- Joined
- Oct 26, 2002
- Messages
- 4,471
- Reaction score
- 9
- Points
- 0
- Location
- Tokyo
- Country
- United States
- Display Name
- Tim Johnson
Hmmm...I'm not sure what to make of all this. Some of it doesn't jibe with my experience. As for the larvae, however, I found them very easy to raise and deaths were very rare. The morphs...well, that was something entirely different
Ed, thanks for the tips, and Paul, thanks for the link. When you say you found no difference between the C. cyanurus morphs and those of other Cynops species, do you mean also to suggest that the morphs/juvies were actively moving around in their container as is the case, in my experience, with C. ensicauda and C. pyrrhogaster within just a few days of their morphing? Were they not shy and...sluggish (for lack of a better word)?
And how about what Ed said about 1/3 of the eggs not developing or only partly developing before getting hit by fungus? Have others experienced this? I can't recall losing that proportion of eggs, but will try and keep track this time around.
It's not surprising to me what Ed said about the difficulty in getting C. ensicauda juvies to go aquatic. I've seen hundreds if not thousands of C. ensicauda in the wild (in the course of three trips) but I've surprisingly never come across an aquatic juvenile or subadult. While I've seen far, far less C. pyrrhogaster in the wild in terms of sheer numbers, I did once find an aquatic subadult....if all that means anything
It would be very interesting to know how C. cyanurus are in the wild. Do subadults grow to maturity on the land or in the water, or a combination of both? Do they opportunistically utilize the water to catch food? Do they reach sexual maturity as quickly as they do in captivity? There still seems to be almost no information on their life history....

Ed, thanks for the tips, and Paul, thanks for the link. When you say you found no difference between the C. cyanurus morphs and those of other Cynops species, do you mean also to suggest that the morphs/juvies were actively moving around in their container as is the case, in my experience, with C. ensicauda and C. pyrrhogaster within just a few days of their morphing? Were they not shy and...sluggish (for lack of a better word)?
And how about what Ed said about 1/3 of the eggs not developing or only partly developing before getting hit by fungus? Have others experienced this? I can't recall losing that proportion of eggs, but will try and keep track this time around.
It's not surprising to me what Ed said about the difficulty in getting C. ensicauda juvies to go aquatic. I've seen hundreds if not thousands of C. ensicauda in the wild (in the course of three trips) but I've surprisingly never come across an aquatic juvenile or subadult. While I've seen far, far less C. pyrrhogaster in the wild in terms of sheer numbers, I did once find an aquatic subadult....if all that means anything

It would be very interesting to know how C. cyanurus are in the wild. Do subadults grow to maturity on the land or in the water, or a combination of both? Do they opportunistically utilize the water to catch food? Do they reach sexual maturity as quickly as they do in captivity? There still seems to be almost no information on their life history....