Newts:aquatic??

A

amy

Guest
are newts considered aquatic, b/c me and my friend were playing 20 questions and she said is the animal aquatic, and i said yes, and when she lost, she said that they are not aquatic, but are amphibians, which i knew. urg, i just need help.
 
if newts are anything like axolotls then yes newts are aquatic
 
Some newts are almostly completely aquatic, some newts are almost completely terrestrial, and most of them are somewhere in between.
 
Newts are actually ILLEGAL in Australia.
 
Dang oh well I will just have to get satisfaction out of axys then
 
that could probably be because of australia being an island, and introducing non-native species would ruin the ecosystem (think rabbit problem)
 
Hey MATT come live in USA. BUT not Oregon from (what i hear) I heard you can't even have kids. LOL

Anyways, Like Jennewt was saying they are both. Take these excerpts from different sources:

from: American Heritage® Dictionary
"living chiefly on land but becoming aquatic during the breeding season."

from: Webster's Revised
"Any one of several species of small aquatic salamanders"

from: WordNet Princeton University
"small usually bright-colored semiaquatic salamanders of North America and Europe"

So, It seems it's who you ask. I say BOTH, so you WON! LOL}
 
There are actually populations of T. vulgaris living in the wild in Australia.

~Aaron
 
Hi Aaron,

Have you got any more details of these introduced T. vulgaris in Australia? I'd be intrigued to know more. I corresponded for a while with a guy in Australia who kept T. vulgaris. He said he had to reverse the seasons to keep them- they were in the fridge over the summer, and he brought them out to breed in the winter.
 
I'll have to talk to Phil some more about them. I'll post whatever I turn up.

~Aaron
 
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