Triturus vittatus cilicensis

S

sergé

Guest
Enclosed some pictures taken in the beginning of March of Triturus vittatus cilicensis from the Cukurova Delta, south of Adana, Turkey. These animals are the size of Common newts (Lissotriton vulgaris). They live in temporary winter rain filled pools, also used by Hyla savigny, Rana 'ridibunda', Bufo viridis.

56444.jpg

Females

56445.jpg

Habitat with my good friend Martijn van de Loo doing the dirty work ;-)

56446.jpg

Male

56447.jpg

Hyla savigny
 
Very nice photos.

Thanks for sharing those, Serge
biggrin.gif
 
Hello Sergé and anybody !

in one of your past post you've express the hypothesis that Ommatotriton vittatus cilicencis isn't really a dwarf species, and that his small reported size is in part due to the young age where breeding begin, about 1 year old.
I'd like to know if the cilicencis you described to be at the size of Lissotriton vulgaris came from the same place from where your others cilicencis originated, the ones you allready care for in 2003-2004 ? Were all the adults you and Martijn caught in 2006 at the size of Lissotriton vulgaris or was there some larger ones ? Did you bring back home some specimens from the Cukurova Delta to study their size evolution since then ? Did you notice size differences between separate cilicencis populations when you prospected in south Turkey ?

Make a lot of questions ! ;)

Vincent
from France



In the winter 2003-2004 my Triturus vittatus cilicensis from south Turkey bred, and juveniles that metamorphosed in March now already start with breeding! So barely one year old at a total length of 6,5 cm they are entering the water.
Like in southern populations of Triturus pygmaeus animals start at a small size with breeding. This leads to the idea that they are dwarf forms, which in fact they are not. To my opinion it is just a strategy to anticipate on breeding possibilities. Especially in those area's it does not rain enough every year, so they have to take very chance they have. These animals continue to grow however up to total sizes of 11-12 cm (see the pictures I placed on caudata central of the parents of this fellow).

25934.jpg
 
General chit-chat
Help Users
  • No one is chatting at the moment.
  • rreu:
    z
    +1
    Unlike
  • Dnurnberg:
    Hello. I just noticed two notches, white small bubbles on the hind legs of one of my male newts.
    +2
    Unlike
  • Dnurnberg:
    I'm trying to put the l
    +1
    Unlike
  • FragileCorpse:
    Hey everyone, just want a little advice. Its 55 - 60 celcius in my Salamanders tank. Hes curled up and tyring ti bury himself, Im assuming hes too cold. I was wondering if he would benefit from a heated rock cave (since he LOVES his cave) that I could set on low? I NEVER see him curled up and trying to bury himself unless his tank sits at 63 degrees celcius or lower. So I am assuming hes a little uncomfortable.
    +1
    Unlike
  • FragileCorpse:
    He also seems a little sluggish, again, assuming hes cold. Having heating trouble with the new house right now. What do we think? Was thinking of grabbing this for him since its got very low, medium, and higher medium heat settings that exude heat downward inside the rock cave but ALSO exudes it UPWARDS outside of the rock cave, effectively keeping the tank itself a little warm. Seems like it miiiight be a little small for him though, my guy is about 7 inches from tip of his nose tothe tip of his tail. What do we think? https://www.amazon.com/Reptile-Simulation-Adjustable-Temperature-Tortoise/dp/B0CH1DPGBC
    +1
    Unlike
  • FragileCorpse:
    I also asked this as an actual question in a thread in case anyone wants to answer it there instead of here
    +1
    Unlike
    FragileCorpse: I also asked this as an actual question in a thread in case anyone wants to answer it there... +1
    Back
    Top