Well, interesting discussion. For Pleurodeles, it has been described that, when eggs are exposed to high temperatures (> 30°C), females become males. This means that TSD does exist. Similar processes can be suspected in two cases I know of:
1) a captive breeding of Neurergus crocatus, with only a handful (2 if I recall well) of males and > 80 females.
2) a captive breeding of Eurycea lucifuga some years ago (in Germany, anyone of this forum?), also resulting in a high number of females. One might hypothesize that average incubation temperatures in the aquarium are significantly higher than in nature, possibly resulting in a disturbance of the normal sex ratio...