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Green salamander

The green salamander (Aneides aeneus) is a species of lungless salamander in the family Plethodontidae.[2] It and the Hickory Nut Gorge green salamander (A. caryaensis) are the only currently-described members of the genus Aneides that inhabit any areas in the eastern half of United States (all other Aneides salamanders are found west of the Mississippi River). Rarely seen in the field,[3] the green salamander is an extremely habitat-specific species that is seldom found away from its preferred surroundings: moist, shaded rock crevices.

Green salamander
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Amphibia
Order: Urodela
Family: Plethodontidae
Subfamily: Plethodontinae
Genus: Aneides
Subgenus: Castaneides
Species:
A. aeneus
Binomial name
Aneides aeneus
(Cope & Packard, 1881)
Synonyms
  • Plethodon aeneus Cope and Packard, 1881

Description and taxonomy edit

 

The green salamander is small and notably flat. Green, lichen-like blotches against a darker dorsum make Aneides aeneus the only salamander in North America with green markings.[3] A. aeneus possesses squared toe-tips, large, conspicuous eyes, and a light blue to yellow ventral surface. The square toe-tips, as well as a prehensile tail, are morphological adaptations that help the salamander with climbing.[4] Adults range from 8–12 cm (3 to 5 in) with 14 to 15 costal grooves.[5]

Aeneus was formerly considered the only species of the Aneides genus found in the Eastern United States. However, some claimed that there could be up to four different species of Aneides between the Cumberland Plateau and Blue Ridge Escarpment populations.[6] A 2019 study found several A. aeneus populations to represent distinct taxonomic groups, supporting the presence of a possible species complex. At least one was found to represent a distinct species in its own right, the Hickory Nut Gorge green salamander (A. caryaensis). The subgenus Castaneides was created to contain all eastern species of Aneides, with caryaensis being the most basal member of the complex. Castaneides diverged from the Aneides hardii lineage between 27.2 and 32.3 million years ago.[7]

Members of Castaneides are the only salamanders in North America with green markings. Due also to their hyper-specific habitat, they are almost unmistakable when found in the field.[7]

Geographic distribution edit

Aneides aeneus is known to inhabit both the Alleghenies and Cumberland Plateau, reaching from southwestern Pennsylvania to northern Alabama and northeastern Mississippi. It is also commonly found in South-Central Ohio. Isolated populations are known at the Blue Ridge Escarpment at the junction of Georgia, North Carolina and South Carolina. The range of the Alleghenies and Cumberland Plateau extends southwest from Fayette County, Pennsylvania through eastern West Virginia, eastern Kentucky, the extreme western portions of Virginia, Tennessee, and Alabama. The population discovered in 1930 in the Great Smoky Mountains National Park has not been located since. There may be disjunct populations on Clinch Mountain, on Bays Mountain and the Appalachian Ridge and Valley, and in the Inner Central Basin of Tennessee (Redmond and Scott, 1996).[8]

Life history edit

Aneides aeneus is an extreme habitat specialist.[9] This species of Aneides is found almost exclusively in an environment following these guild-lines: A. aeneus prefers the crevices of rocks on the sides of cliffs or other outcroppings. Most crevices in which A. aeneus is observed, there is little to no sun light allowed in. This shade may be due to either vegetation outside of the crevice or outcroppings above the crevice.[5] While a number of instances of Aneides aeneus observations in arboreal situations have occurred,[5] most of these instances are in trees either adjacent to rock outcroppings and cliffs, or the specimen in question was located underneath the bark of the tree.

Males are extremely territorial toward other salamanders and would-be predators when disturbed or presented with any manner of threat.[10] Cupp observed aggressive behavior in 45 of 49 instances where a male was placed within an artificial territory of another. Such a high level of aggression is rare in salamanders,[10] and is observed in few other species, though hardly to the degree as observed in A. aeneus. This aggressive behavior, although in different forms, can also be observed in brooding of the female A. aeneus over her eggs.[5] While the male A. aeneus will attack would-be invaders with such actions as butting, snapping, biting or snout-pressing,[10] females will often snap at objects placed within the breeding crevice or near the eggs she guards.

Annual cycle edit

Breeding period edit

  • Aneides aeneus has been observed to begin its period of sex and courtship in late May to early June. For Aneides aeneus, the male will enter the breeding crevices and await the arrival of females.[5] These specialized crevices are considered the basis of a green salamander's territory, as they are defended by an individual throughout the breeding season. [11]Once a male and female meet, the courtship begins. Like some salamanders of genus Plethodon, A. aeneus begins courtship with the female straddling the base of the male's tail.[12] In this position, and with periodic nudging and encouragement from the male, the two will traverse a small circle within the rock crevice. After some time in this dance, the male will deposit a spermatophore[12] upon the ground and the female, still straddling the base of the male, eventually makes her way to it and “scoops” it up by lateral undulations and slow movements of the base of the tail of the female.[12]
  • Eggs are laid soon after courtship. The female A. aeneus lies on her back within the rock crevice, her ventral surface pressed against the ceiling. Egg-laying often takes a period of 20 to 30 hours, where the female will apply an adhesive substance to the surface of the rock, followed by a single egg. Clutches of eggs average 15-25 eggs. The female will stay with the eggs, usually wrapping her body around the cluster or at least pressed against it, guarding them for the entirety of development. When presented with a foreign object, be it a wire, stick, or a wandering insect, the female will attack, eating the invader if possible. Female A. aeneus are not known to feed during brooding. Individuals taken from their eggs had their stomachs and small intestines examined and were all found to be completely empty in Gordon's study in 1971. This guarding period usually lasts 3 months, where the eggs hatch in September.[5]

Dispersal and aggregation edit

  • Eggs of Aneides aeneus hatch throughout the month of September.[5] Aneides aeneus is a direct developing salamander, which means it does not have a larval stage and develops to its adult phase within the egg. Juvenile A. aeneus emerge from the eggs resembling their parents, and will likely leave the crevice in which they were born within 2 months.[5] Following the hatching of their young, the female A. aeneus no longer shows the hyper-aggressiveness expressed during guarding. In fact, it has been observed that the females will do little to stop the collection or otherwise disturbance of her brood after they have hatched from the eggs. Newborn A. aeneus almost always leave the crevice in which they were born and do not return.[5]

Hibernation edit

  • A period in the annual cycle of Aneides aeneus called the pre-hibernation aggregation takes place in which A. aeneus will disperse from the breeding crevices. It is during this period, throughout the month of November, that most specimens of A. aeneus can be observed wandering over and between rock crevices.[5] Following this dispersal, it is thought that A. aeneus ventures deep within the interconnected crevices of the cliffs and rock outcroppings to hibernate.[5] Attempts were made to find A. aeneus underground, beneath logs, within rotten logs, under rocks and under tree bark, but not a single specimen was produced.[5]

Post-hibernation aggregation and dispersal edit

  • Aneides aeneus emerges from hibernation around the month of May. During this period, A. aeneus is observed wandering about the rock crevices and outcroppings, often during light rains at night.

Conservation edit

Efforts aimed towards the conservation of such a secretive organism are proving complicated. While the fact that Aneides aeneus is such a habitat-specific salamander results in more vulnerability to habitat destruction, the cliffs and outcroppings it has chosen are relatively safe from harm. It has been speculated that A. aeneus inhabited the ancient chestnut forest that covered a large percentage of the Great Smoky Mountains National Park.[6] It is not known whether or not A. aeneus utilized these trees more or less than its currently preferred habitat, but it is certainly a possibility. When inhabiting arboreal habitats studies have found that green salamanders prefer hardwood trees to conifers.[13] In Indiana, the green salamander is listed as an endangered species.[14] Green Salamanders are listed as "imperiled" in Georgia and North Carolina as well as "critically imperiled" in South Carolina.[15]

References edit

  1. ^ IUCN SSC Amphibian Specialist Group (2022). "Aneides aeneus". IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. 2022: e.T200106367A118971788. Retrieved 24 December 2022.
  2. ^ Frost, Darrel R. (2013). "Aneides aeneus (Cope and Packard, 1881)". Amphibian Species of the World 5.6, an Online Reference. American Museum of Natural History. Retrieved 26 October 2013.
  3. ^ a b Conant, Roger et al. A Field Guide to Reptiles and Amphibians of Eastern and Central North America. Third Edition, Expanded. Houghton Mifflin Company, Singapore. 1998.
  4. ^ Patton, Austin; Apodaca, Joseph J.; Corser, Jeffrey D.; Wilson, Christopher R.; Williams, Lori A.; Cameron, Alan D.; Wake, David B. (2019-12-06). "A New Green Salamander in the Southern Appalachians: Evolutionary History of Aneides aeneus and Implications for Management and Conservation with the Description of a Cryptic Microendemic Species". Copeia. 107 (4): 748. doi:10.1643/CH-18-052. ISSN 0045-8511. S2CID 208942735.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Gordon, Robert E. A Contribution to the Life History and Ecology of the Plethodontid Salamander Aneides aeneus. American Midland Naturalist. Vol. 47, No. 3 (May 1952), pp. 666-701.
  6. ^ a b Dobb, Kenneth C. The Amphibians of Great Smoky Mountains National Park. University of Tennessee Press, Knoxville, TN. 2004.
  7. ^ a b Patton, Austin; Apodaca, Joseph J.; Corser, Jeffrey D.; Wilson, Christopher R.; Williams, Lori A.; Cameron, Alan D.; Wake, David B. (December 2019). "A New Green Salamander in the Southern Appalachians: Evolutionary History of Aneides aeneus and Implications for Management and Conservation with the Description of a Cryptic Microendemic Species". Copeia. 107 (4): 748–763. doi:10.1643/CH-18-052. ISSN 0045-8511.
  8. ^ Snyder, D.H. The Green Salamander Aneides aeneus in Tennessee and Kentucky, With Comments on the Carolina's Blue Ridge Populations. Journal of the Tennessee Academy of Science 66, 1991, pp. 165–169.
  9. ^ Gordon, Robert E. and Smith, Richard L. Notes on the Life History of the Salamander Aneides aeneus. Copeia. American Society of Ichthyologists and Herpetologists Vol. 1949, No. 3 (September 15, 1949), pp. 173-175.
  10. ^ a b c Cupp, Paul V. Jr. Territoriality in the Green Salamander, Aneides aeneus. Copeia. American Society of Ichthyologists and Herpetologists. Vol. 1980, No. 3 (September 6, 1980), pp. 463-468.
  11. ^ Rossell, C. Reed, Jr., et al. "Nest Success and Attributes of Brood Crevices Selected by Green Salamanders (Aneides aeneus) on the Blue Ridge Escarpment." The American Midland Naturalist, vol. 181, no. 1, Jan. 2019, pp. 40+. Gale Academic OneFile, link.gale.com/apps/doc/A574177910/AONE?u=clemsonu_main&sid=bookmark-AONE&xid=7654ddff. Accessed 19 Feb. 2024.
  12. ^ a b c Cupp, Paul V. Jr. Fall Courtship of the Green Salamander, Aneides aeneus Herpetologica. Herpetologists' League. Vol. 27, No. 3 (September 1971), pp. 308-310.
  13. ^ Waldron, Jayme L.; Humphries, W. Jeffrey (September 2005). "Arboreal Habitat Use by the Green Salamander, Aneides aeneus, in South Carolina". Journal of Herpetology. 39 (3): 486–492. doi:10.1670/228-04A.1. ISSN 0022-1511. S2CID 86170898.
  14. ^ Indiana Legislative Services Agency (2011), "312 IAC 9-5-4: Endangered species of reptiles and amphibians", Indiana Administrative Code, retrieved 28 April 2012
  15. ^ Newman, Jillian C., et al. “Green Salamander Estimated Abundance and Environmental Associations in South Carolina.” Journal of Herpetology, vol. 52, no. 4, 2018, pp. 438–44. JSTOR, https://www.jstor.org/stable/26792546. Accessed 19 Feb. 2024.

External links edit

  •   Data related to Aneides aeneus at Wikispecies
  •   Media related to Aneides aeneus at Wikimedia Commons

green, salamander, green, salamander, aneides, aeneus, species, lungless, salamander, family, plethodontidae, hickory, gorge, green, salamander, caryaensis, only, currently, described, members, genus, aneides, that, inhabit, areas, eastern, half, united, state. The green salamander Aneides aeneus is a species of lungless salamander in the family Plethodontidae 2 It and the Hickory Nut Gorge green salamander A caryaensis are the only currently described members of the genus Aneides that inhabit any areas in the eastern half of United States all other Aneides salamanders are found west of the Mississippi River Rarely seen in the field 3 the green salamander is an extremely habitat specific species that is seldom found away from its preferred surroundings moist shaded rock crevices Green salamanderConservation statusNear Threatened IUCN 3 1 1 Scientific classificationDomain EukaryotaKingdom AnimaliaPhylum ChordataClass AmphibiaOrder UrodelaFamily PlethodontidaeSubfamily PlethodontinaeGenus AneidesSubgenus CastaneidesSpecies A aeneusBinomial nameAneides aeneus Cope amp Packard 1881 SynonymsPlethodon aeneus Cope and Packard 1881 Contents 1 Description and taxonomy 2 Geographic distribution 3 Life history 3 1 Annual cycle 3 1 1 Breeding period 3 1 2 Dispersal and aggregation 3 1 3 Hibernation 3 1 4 Post hibernation aggregation and dispersal 4 Conservation 5 References 6 External linksDescription and taxonomy edit nbsp The green salamander is small and notably flat Green lichen like blotches against a darker dorsum make Aneides aeneus the only salamander in North America with green markings 3 A aeneus possesses squared toe tips large conspicuous eyes and a light blue to yellow ventral surface The square toe tips as well as a prehensile tail are morphological adaptations that help the salamander with climbing 4 Adults range from 8 12 cm 3 to 5 in with 14 to 15 costal grooves 5 Aeneus was formerly considered the only species of the Aneides genus found in the Eastern United States However some claimed that there could be up to four different species of Aneides between the Cumberland Plateau and Blue Ridge Escarpment populations 6 A 2019 study found several A aeneus populations to represent distinct taxonomic groups supporting the presence of a possible species complex At least one was found to represent a distinct species in its own right the Hickory Nut Gorge green salamander A caryaensis The subgenus Castaneides was created to contain all eastern species of Aneides with caryaensis being the most basal member of the complex Castaneides diverged from the Aneides hardii lineage between 27 2 and 32 3 million years ago 7 Members of Castaneides are the only salamanders in North America with green markings Due also to their hyper specific habitat they are almost unmistakable when found in the field 7 Geographic distribution editAneides aeneus is known to inhabit both the Alleghenies and Cumberland Plateau reaching from southwestern Pennsylvania to northern Alabama and northeastern Mississippi It is also commonly found in South Central Ohio Isolated populations are known at the Blue Ridge Escarpment at the junction of Georgia North Carolina and South Carolina The range of the Alleghenies and Cumberland Plateau extends southwest from Fayette County Pennsylvania through eastern West Virginia eastern Kentucky the extreme western portions of Virginia Tennessee and Alabama The population discovered in 1930 in the Great Smoky Mountains National Park has not been located since There may be disjunct populations on Clinch Mountain on Bays Mountain and the Appalachian Ridge and Valley and in the Inner Central Basin of Tennessee Redmond and Scott 1996 8 Life history editAneides aeneus is an extreme habitat specialist 9 This species of Aneides is found almost exclusively in an environment following these guild lines A aeneus prefers the crevices of rocks on the sides of cliffs or other outcroppings Most crevices in which A aeneus is observed there is little to no sun light allowed in This shade may be due to either vegetation outside of the crevice or outcroppings above the crevice 5 While a number of instances of Aneides aeneus observations in arboreal situations have occurred 5 most of these instances are in trees either adjacent to rock outcroppings and cliffs or the specimen in question was located underneath the bark of the tree Males are extremely territorial toward other salamanders and would be predators when disturbed or presented with any manner of threat 10 Cupp observed aggressive behavior in 45 of 49 instances where a male was placed within an artificial territory of another Such a high level of aggression is rare in salamanders 10 and is observed in few other species though hardly to the degree as observed in A aeneus This aggressive behavior although in different forms can also be observed in brooding of the female A aeneus over her eggs 5 While the male A aeneus will attack would be invaders with such actions as butting snapping biting or snout pressing 10 females will often snap at objects placed within the breeding crevice or near the eggs she guards Annual cycle edit Breeding period edit Aneides aeneus has been observed to begin its period of sex and courtship in late May to early June For Aneides aeneus the male will enter the breeding crevices and await the arrival of females 5 These specialized crevices are considered the basis of a green salamander s territory as they are defended by an individual throughout the breeding season 11 Once a male and female meet the courtship begins Like some salamanders of genus Plethodon A aeneus begins courtship with the female straddling the base of the male s tail 12 In this position and with periodic nudging and encouragement from the male the two will traverse a small circle within the rock crevice After some time in this dance the male will deposit a spermatophore 12 upon the ground and the female still straddling the base of the male eventually makes her way to it and scoops it up by lateral undulations and slow movements of the base of the tail of the female 12 Eggs are laid soon after courtship The female A aeneus lies on her back within the rock crevice her ventral surface pressed against the ceiling Egg laying often takes a period of 20 to 30 hours where the female will apply an adhesive substance to the surface of the rock followed by a single egg Clutches of eggs average 15 25 eggs The female will stay with the eggs usually wrapping her body around the cluster or at least pressed against it guarding them for the entirety of development When presented with a foreign object be it a wire stick or a wandering insect the female will attack eating the invader if possible Female A aeneus are not known to feed during brooding Individuals taken from their eggs had their stomachs and small intestines examined and were all found to be completely empty in Gordon s study in 1971 This guarding period usually lasts 3 months where the eggs hatch in September 5 Dispersal and aggregation edit Eggs of Aneides aeneus hatch throughout the month of September 5 Aneides aeneus is a direct developing salamander which means it does not have a larval stage and develops to its adult phase within the egg Juvenile A aeneus emerge from the eggs resembling their parents and will likely leave the crevice in which they were born within 2 months 5 Following the hatching of their young the female A aeneus no longer shows the hyper aggressiveness expressed during guarding In fact it has been observed that the females will do little to stop the collection or otherwise disturbance of her brood after they have hatched from the eggs Newborn A aeneus almost always leave the crevice in which they were born and do not return 5 Hibernation edit A period in the annual cycle of Aneides aeneus called the pre hibernation aggregation takes place in which A aeneus will disperse from the breeding crevices It is during this period throughout the month of November that most specimens of A aeneus can be observed wandering over and between rock crevices 5 Following this dispersal it is thought that A aeneus ventures deep within the interconnected crevices of the cliffs and rock outcroppings to hibernate 5 Attempts were made to find A aeneus underground beneath logs within rotten logs under rocks and under tree bark but not a single specimen was produced 5 Post hibernation aggregation and dispersal edit Aneides aeneus emerges from hibernation around the month of May During this period A aeneus is observed wandering about the rock crevices and outcroppings often during light rains at night Conservation editEfforts aimed towards the conservation of such a secretive organism are proving complicated While the fact that Aneides aeneus is such a habitat specific salamander results in more vulnerability to habitat destruction the cliffs and outcroppings it has chosen are relatively safe from harm It has been speculated that A aeneus inhabited the ancient chestnut forest that covered a large percentage of the Great Smoky Mountains National Park 6 It is not known whether or not A aeneus utilized these trees more or less than its currently preferred habitat but it is certainly a possibility When inhabiting arboreal habitats studies have found that green salamanders prefer hardwood trees to conifers 13 In Indiana the green salamander is listed as an endangered species 14 Green Salamanders are listed as imperiled in Georgia and North Carolina as well as critically imperiled in South Carolina 15 References edit IUCN SSC Amphibian Specialist Group 2022 Aneides aeneus IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2022 e T200106367A118971788 Retrieved 24 December 2022 Frost Darrel R 2013 Aneides aeneus Cope and Packard 1881 Amphibian Species of the World 5 6 an Online Reference American Museum of Natural History Retrieved 26 October 2013 a b Conant Roger et al A Field Guide to Reptiles and Amphibians of Eastern and Central North America Third Edition Expanded Houghton Mifflin Company Singapore 1998 Patton Austin Apodaca Joseph J Corser Jeffrey D Wilson Christopher R Williams Lori A Cameron Alan D Wake David B 2019 12 06 A New Green Salamander in the Southern Appalachians Evolutionary History of Aneides aeneus and Implications for Management and Conservation with the Description of a Cryptic Microendemic Species Copeia 107 4 748 doi 10 1643 CH 18 052 ISSN 0045 8511 S2CID 208942735 a b c d e f g h i j k l Gordon Robert E A Contribution to the Life History and Ecology of the Plethodontid Salamander Aneides aeneus American Midland Naturalist Vol 47 No 3 May 1952 pp 666 701 a b Dobb Kenneth C The Amphibians of Great Smoky Mountains National Park University of Tennessee Press Knoxville TN 2004 a b Patton Austin Apodaca Joseph J Corser Jeffrey D Wilson Christopher R Williams Lori A Cameron Alan D Wake David B December 2019 A New Green Salamander in the Southern Appalachians Evolutionary History of Aneides aeneus and Implications for Management and Conservation with the Description of a Cryptic Microendemic Species Copeia 107 4 748 763 doi 10 1643 CH 18 052 ISSN 0045 8511 Snyder D H The Green Salamander Aneides aeneus in Tennessee and Kentucky With Comments on the Carolina s Blue Ridge Populations Journal of the Tennessee Academy of Science 66 1991 pp 165 169 Gordon Robert E and Smith Richard L Notes on the Life History of the Salamander Aneides aeneus Copeia American Society of Ichthyologists and Herpetologists Vol 1949 No 3 September 15 1949 pp 173 175 a b c Cupp Paul V Jr Territoriality in the Green Salamander Aneides aeneus Copeia American Society of Ichthyologists and Herpetologists Vol 1980 No 3 September 6 1980 pp 463 468 Rossell C Reed Jr et al Nest Success and Attributes of Brood Crevices Selected by Green Salamanders Aneides aeneus on the Blue Ridge Escarpment The American Midland Naturalist vol 181 no 1 Jan 2019 pp 40 Gale Academic OneFile link gale com apps doc A574177910 AONE u clemsonu main amp sid bookmark AONE amp xid 7654ddff Accessed 19 Feb 2024 a b c Cupp Paul V Jr Fall Courtship of the Green Salamander Aneides aeneus Herpetologica Herpetologists League Vol 27 No 3 September 1971 pp 308 310 Waldron Jayme L Humphries W Jeffrey September 2005 Arboreal Habitat Use by the Green Salamander Aneides aeneus in South Carolina Journal of Herpetology 39 3 486 492 doi 10 1670 228 04A 1 ISSN 0022 1511 S2CID 86170898 Indiana Legislative Services Agency 2011 312 IAC 9 5 4 Endangered species of reptiles and amphibians Indiana Administrative Code retrieved 28 April 2012 Newman Jillian C et al Green Salamander Estimated Abundance and Environmental Associations in South Carolina Journal of Herpetology vol 52 no 4 2018 pp 438 44 JSTOR https www jstor org stable 26792546 Accessed 19 Feb 2024 External links edit nbsp Data related to Aneides aeneus at Wikispecies nbsp Media related to Aneides aeneus at Wikimedia Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Green salamander amp oldid 1208957443, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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