This guy washed in after the flood we got in east Tennessee---I didn't get too good of a shot, but do you think it's a red-backed salamander? The tail is a little short, that's the odd thing....
Its hard to tell what he is from that picture, but I can tell you that I have found red-backs with missing tails and with regenerated tails.
I am not going to lie; I have picked one up by the tail before, and it snapped off immediately. I've learned to never do that with them! I believe it is a defense for this species and very much a normal thing.
It's weird, but the tail looked like it was naturally short---no noticeable sever marks or abruptness in the tail's gradual slendering towards the end...? Shaun, tails aren't shed by caudata, but are sometimes broken off by accident, and at that point they will be regenerated.
Dear All, I would appreciate some help identifying P. waltl disease and treatment. We received newts from Europe early November and a few maybe 3/70 had what it looked like lesions under the legs- at that time we thought maybe it was the stress of travel- now we think they probably had "red leg syndrome" (see picture). However a few weeks later other newts started to develop skin lesions (picture enclosed). The sender recommended to use sulfamerazine and we have treated them 2x and we are not sure they are all recovering. Does anyone have any experience with P. waltl diseases and could give some input on this? Any input would be greatly appreciated! Thank you.
sorry I am having a hard time trying to upload the pictures- I have them saved on my hard drive... any suggestions-the prompts here are not allowing for downloads that way as far as I can tell. Thanks
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