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Lesser siren

The lesser siren (Siren intermedia) is a species of aquatic salamander native to the eastern United States and northern Mexico. They are referred to by numerous common names, including two-legged eel, dwarf siren, and mud eel. The specific epithet intermedia denotes their intermediate size, between the greater siren, Siren lacertina, and the dwarf sirens, Pseudobranchus species.

Lesser siren
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Amphibia
Order: Urodela
Family: Sirenidae
Genus: Siren
Species:
S. intermedia
Binomial name
Siren intermedia
Barnes, 1826

Description edit

Lesser sirens have elongated bodies possessing only two limbs, a pair of four-toed legs located behind the base of the head, and range in length from 7 to 27 inches (17 – 69 cm). Unlike greater sirens, lesser sirens have less than 35 costal grooves.[2] Juvenile specimens have red to yellow banding on their heads and stripes running along the main length of the body, although these stripes are absent in Siren intermedia. Adults have plainer coloration; the dorsal side is typically olive green to blue-gray or black, while the ventral is usually light grey. Spotted patterns may also be present in adults.[3] In salamanders, sexual size dimorphism is usually female-biased, but in Siren intermedia, it’s the opposite. Males are the larger sex, and they also have significantly larger heads and enlarged masseter muscles than females.[4]

Lesser sirens are notably neotenic, and possess external gills throughout their lives.[3]

Taxonomy edit

 
Siren intermedia nettingi, the western lesser siren.

Sources disagree on the number of subspecies within S. intermedia. The majority of the sources in the field agree there are at least two: an eastern and a western variety. Many sources also include a third subspecies, the Rio Grande lesser siren, S. i. texana, but researchers disagree whether the Rio Grande variety belongs as a lesser siren, within S. intermedia, or as a greater siren, within S. lacertina, and some others even consider it to be its own species, as S. texana.[5][6]

  • Eastern lesser siren, S. i. intermedia Barnes, 1826
  • Western lesser siren, S. i. nettingi Goin, 1942
  • Rio Grande lesser siren, S. i. texana Goin, 1957

Habitat and distribution edit

Habitat edit

Sirens are likely to be found in ponds near other intermittent wetlands. They usually inhabit swamps and ponds, and can survive in dry ponds for up to two years by a process called “aestivating”. Sirens are considered poor overland dispersers because they rarely leave the water, so their geographical distribution is largely determined by pond connectivity and biotic interactions.[7]

Lesser sirens are aquatic salamanders, but their ability to withstand factors like dehydration allows them to have good survival skills in their ephemeral habitats. Sirens are able to osmoregulate and produce a mucoid cocoon during aestivation, which greatly reduces dehydration and electrolyte stress.[8] Their small legs enable them to move on dry land for short periods of time.[9]

Geographic distribution edit

The lesser siren is found in the United States and Mexico, primarily from Virginia to Florida, west to Texas, ranging into northeastern Mexico as far as Veracruz, and north to Illinois and southwest Michigan.[1][10] Multiple specimens have recently been rediscovered in Michigan after a 60-year absence.[11][12] Lesser sirens only occur in permanent wetlands, whereas other salamander and frog species can occupy a range of dry and wetlands. Lesser sirens are top predators in permanent wetlands.[13] They can quickly colonize and become dominant consumers in new ponds such as those constructed by beavers. Their ability to aestivate and burrow in soft sediments and live in dense aquatic vegetation in shallow waters facilitates their dominance. In addition, the species’ high productivity, high fecundity, and rapid growth to early sexual maturity allows it reach a high density quickly and easily, and thus establish dominance in the habitat.[14]

Conservation edit

The lesser siren is quite common through most of its range, but rarely seen due to its secretive nature. Like almost all species of amphibian, their numbers are believed to be declining due to general reductions in water quality caused by agricultural pesticide and fertilizer runoff. They are frequently collected and used as bait for fishing.

The species was once believed to be extirpated from Michigan,[11] but has been recently rediscovered in limited numbers.[15] The S. i. texana subspecies is listed as a threatened species in Texas. They are listed as Least concern on the IUCN Red List and a species with "Special Protection" in Mexico.[1]

Physiology edit

Vision edit

Western Lesser Sirens (Siren intermedia nettingi) have poor eyesight. They rely on their other senses to forage, hunt, and survive.[13]

Chemical sense edit

Sirens rely on chemical cues to detect prey and not on visual cues. The use of chemical stimuli in the detection of prey and predators are common in amphibians. [16]

Respiration edit

All species in the sirenidae family are paedomorphic, eel-shaped salamanders that live in aquatic environments. They respire through their gills, lungs and skin, and survive well in hypoxic environments low in oxygen. Siren intermedia is unique among amphibians in its ability to construct a mucoid cocoon that slows down dehydration during aestivation, and the lesser siren can withstand long periods of food deprivation without ill effects. During aestivation, respiration slows down significantly, and gills atrophy over the next 16 or more weeks.[8]

Acoustic behavior edit

The lesser siren is vocal, unlike most salamanders. The lesser siren is known to emit a series of clicks when it approaches others of its species, or a short screeching sound if handled. Acoustic behavior serves a functional service in S. intermedia, especially since it is nocturnal and it burrows in sediments, swims and crawls through densely vegetated waters. However, its visual and olfactory senses are very limited in this habitat, and thus the possibility of predation and other risks are high in this case. Nevertheless, acoustic behavior in lesser sirens is still infrequent, and becomes even less frequent with undisturbed habitat residency, perhaps because of their familiarity with the environment.[17]

Siren intermedia make and responds to underwater sounds that may have specific communicational significance. Resting sirens are usually silent, but they may produce trains of pulsed sounds or “clicks”.  Their tendency to click is greater in groups than in single specimens, which suggests that they are involved in intraspecific communication. These acoustic behaviors occur most often when other sirens are present. They are emitted at different pulse rates by specimens clicking simultaneously, and are associated with head-jerking motions. Head-jerking may offer visual reinforcement of an acoustically defended individual space, or it may be required for sound production. S. intermedia can produce clicks by moving the horny jaw coverings together rapidly, and head-jerking may be associated with such movement when it is particularly forceful. This means of sound production is similar to the upper and lower teeth of humans, clicking with the mouth open.[17]

Another frequently produced sound ("yelp") is associated with cases of distress, or alarm. When S. intermedia butt or bite each other in their habitat, the bitten or injured individuals may swim away quickly, emitting yelps at frequencies of 880 Hz. These yelp sounds could have communicational significance if they prevent further attack or signal to other individuals that one is injured.[17]

Osmoregulation edit

Animals that inhabit freshwater habitats have high-affinity sodium uptake systems. Therefore, the better an animal is adapted to freshwater, the lower the rate of sodium loss and uptake. Sirens have a high sodium affinity (around 0.2 peq/g per day), and thus are able to resist the harmful effects of low-sodium environments.[8]

Hormones edit

Insulin has been isolated from the pancreas of lesser sirens that is mostly conserved in sequence as compared to other amphibian orders. However, it does have some substitution differences that indicate that sirens diverged early from other salamanders.[18]

Diet edit

Lesser sirens are filter feeders. They sift through pond bottoms and aquatic vegetation for prey items.[13] They have heavily keratinized beaks and vomerine dental arrays that can inflict substantial wounds.[7] The diet of the lesser siren includes at least 10 different taxa, which includes primarily aquatic invertebrates, including tadpoles and snails. They also eat several insects and their larvae, crayfish, mollusks, amphibians, siren eggs, and algae, although the plant material may be an incidental result of their gape-and-suck feeding style.[19]

Reproduction and life cycle edit

Annual seasonal behavior changes edit

The lesser siren is nocturnal, spending its days hidden in the debris and mud at the bottom of slow-moving bodies of water. Sirens are most active in the fall and spring seasons, when water temperatures are close to 15 °C and there is no danger of drought.[20] During the summer months, the ponds and other habitats that the lesser siren live in go through periods of drought, which leads to low water levels and possibly dried-up ponds. The lesser siren’s strategy to withstand the rigors of these dry seasons is something called “aestivation”, or summer dormancy, which can last up to 35 weeks, depending on the severity of the drought. During the sixteen-week period from July to October, aquatic lesser sirens increase the osmotic concentration of their body fluids, and slow down bodily functions.[21]

They do this by burrowing themselves into the bottom of its drying pond in tube-like channels about the length and width of their bodies. For the rest of the aestivating process, they then secrete a mucous cocoon. That is then followed by a significant drop in their oxygen consumption and heart rate. The gills slowly atrophy and the body shrinks, and as a result the fat is metabolized at one-fifth the normal rate. As expected, large individuals store more fat and consume less oxygen per unit weight than small ones, and thus can survive much longer periods of aestivation. Some individuals, especially the smaller sirens during aestivation, die or suffer from dehydration as they are unable to store sufficient fat and the greater metabolic demand reduces their chance of survival.[21]

As the drought season comes to an end, lesser sirens become active within a day, and slowly regain the lost weight over the next 8–11 weeks.[21]

Mating edit

Mate choice edit

From November to January, males occupy a shelter as a nest site usually surrounded by vegetation or among plant roots, and actively equip it with moss from the surrounding nest site, plucking plant material and dragging it back to the nest site. They then defend their territory aggressively against others through biting.[4]

Courting edit

Though little is known about their courtship, it is believed to be quite violent, as many specimens collected have scarring from healed bite marks from other sirens. About 12-300 eggs are laid at a time, and several clutches may be laid over the course of the year. Hatchlings are only about 0.4 in (1.1 cm) in length, but grow quickly. Maturity is typically reached in approximately three to four years. Courtship includes several repeating behavioral patterns. Once the female approaches the nest site, the male and female start moving within the area, coiling around each other. The male pursues the female’s cloaca closely, sometimes rubbing his head against the flank and the cloacal region of the female. Both the male and the female wave their tail fins by undulating the tail tip.[4]

Parental care edit

Oviposition edit

During oviposition, the female turns on its back, positions the cloaca near the top of the nest cavity and halts for several seconds. Then the male positions his cloaca near the site of oviposition. Eggs are directly coiled into the moss that the male has prepared in the nest. Interlacing of the eggs into the plant material in the nest ensures that the eggs adhere to the nest as a compact mass, and facilitates external fertilization.[4]

Egg guarding edit

In S. intermedia, parental care is fulfilled by the males. Paternal care as observed in the lesser siren is very rare for salamanders. After the female completes oviposition and leaves the nest, the male stays in close proximity to the eggs and takes the responsibility of parental care. The total number of eggs can be around 120–130, with a diameter of about 3 mm. The male constantly moves the egg mass, circles around it, and aerates the eggs through vigorous tail fanning. The tail-fanning behavior of the male towards the eggs can enhance sperm dispersal. Additionally, the male continuously cleans the nest from sand and other materials, to improve hygienic conditions and possibly to prevent infections from pathogens and fungi. It is also likely that males remove dead or infected eggs, in order to prevent further infection of the viable eggs.[4]

The development of the larvae takes approximately 35 days. Paternal care does not end there however, it continues after the larvae hatch and the male continues to aggressively defend the larvae up to one week after hatching.[4]

Mutualisms edit

Siren intermedia has many important effects on community structure as it is one of the most important predators in temporary ponds, where it complements the keystone predator role of eastern newts (Notophthalmus viridescens).[22] S. intermedia reduces the total densities of the anuran larvae, and by doing that, it allows the eastern newts to act as keystone predators over a broad range of prey densities.[7]

Enemies edit

Adult mole salamanders (Ambystoma talpoideum) and lesser sirens (Siren intermedia), are the top two predators in temporary ponds of the southeastern United States. Siren intermedia competes with and is an intraguild predator of A. talpoideum, limiting its growth and controlling its recruitment.[7]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c Parra-Olea, G.; Wake, D.; Hammerson, G.A. (2008). "Siren intermedia". IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. 2008: e.T59491A11936674. doi:10.2305/IUCN.UK.2008.RLTS.T59491A11936674.en. Retrieved 19 November 2021.
  2. ^ Lesser siren (siren intermedia). Species Profile: Lesser Siren (Siren intermedia) | SREL Herpetology. (n.d.). Retrieved April 28, 2022, from https://srelherp.uga.edu/salamanders/sirint.htm
  3. ^ a b Caudata Culture Species Entry – Siren intermedia. Caudata.org. Retrieved on 2019-12-23.
  4. ^ a b c d e f Reinhard, Sandy, et al. “External Fertilisation and Paternal Care in the Paedomorphic Salamander Siren Intermedia Barnes, 1826 (Urodela: Sirenidae).” Zoologischer Anzeiger - a Journal of Comparative Zoology, vol. 253, no. 1, August 2013, pp. 1–5, 10.1016/j.jcz.2013.06.002. Accessed 25 March 2022.
  5. ^ Graham, Sean P.; Kline, Richard; Steen, David A.; Kelehear, Crystal (5 December 2018). "Description of an extant salamander from the Gulf Coastal Plain of North America: The Reticulated Siren, Siren reticulata". PLOS ONE. 13 (12): e0207460. Bibcode:2018PLoSO..1307460G. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0207460. ISSN 1932-6203. PMC 6281224. PMID 30517124.
  6. ^ Tipton, Bob L. (2012). Texas amphibians : a field guide (1st ed.). Austin. ISBN 978-0292737358.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  7. ^ a b c d Fauth, John E. “Interactions between Branchiate Mole Salamanders (Ambystoma Talpoideum) and Lesser Sirens (Siren Intermedia): Asymmetrical Competition and Intraguild Predation.” Amphibia-Reptilia, vol. 20, no. 2, 1 May 1999, pp. 119–132, 10.1163/156853899506942. Accessed 30 October 2020.
  8. ^ a b c Asquith, Adam, and Ronald Altig. “Osmoregulation of the Lesser Siren, Siren Intermedia (Caudata: Amphibia).” Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology Part A: Physiology, vol. 84, no. 4, January 1986, pp. 683–685, 10.1016/0300-9629(86)90387-7. Accessed 1 May 2021.
  9. ^ "Siren intermedia". amphibiaweb.org. AmphibiaWeb. Retrieved 26 December 2018.
  10. ^ "Siren intermedia". amphibiaweb.org. AmphibiaWeb. Retrieved 17 December 2018.
  11. ^ a b "Siren intermedia nettingi (Western lesser siren)". Michigan Herp Atlas. Herpetological Resource and Management / Michigan DNR. Retrieved 4 August 2019.
  12. ^ Williams, J. E. (2004). A first record of the Western Lesser Siren, Siren intermedia nettingi, from Michigan. (Fisheries research report: 1588).
  13. ^ a b c Anderson, Thomas L., et al. “Functional Responses of Larval Marbled Salamanders (Ambystoma Opacum) and Adult Lesser Sirens (Siren Intermedia) on Anuran Tadpole Prey.” Copeia, vol. 108, no. 2, 19 May 2020, p. 341, 10.1643/ce-19-212. Accessed 20 February 2022.
  14. ^ Gehlbach, Frederick R., and Stephen E. Kennedy. “Population Ecology of a Highly Productive Aquatic Salamander (Siren Intermedia).” The Southwestern Naturalist, vol. 23, no. 3, 10 August 1978, p. 423, 10.2307/3670250. Accessed 14 May 2021.
  15. ^ "Western Lesser Siren (Siren intermedia nettingi)". www.miherpatlas.org. Retrieved 2019-08-04.
  16. ^ •MARTIN, B. T., GOODDING, D. D., FORD, N. B., & PLACYK, J. . J. S. (2013). Sensory Mediation of Foraging Behavior in the Western Lesser Siren (Siren intermedia nettingi). Journal of Herpetology, 47(1), 75–77. https://doi.org/10.1670/11-209
  17. ^ a b c Gehlbach, Frederick R., and Braz Walker. “Acoustic Behavior of the Aquatic Salamander, Siren Intermedia.” BioScience, vol. 20, no. 20, 15 October 1970, pp. 1107–1108, 10.2307/1295417. Accessed 11 March 2021.
  18. ^ Conlon, J. Michael; Trauth, Stanley E.; Sever, David M. (1997-06-01). "Purification and Structural Characterization of Insulin from the Lesser Siren,Siren intermedia(Amphibia: Caudata)". General and Comparative Endocrinology. 106 (3): 295–300. doi:10.1006/gcen.1997.6912. ISSN 0016-6480. PMID 9204362.
  19. ^ Hampton, Paul M. “Ecology of the Lesser Siren, Siren Intermedia, in an Isolated Eastern Texas Pond.” Journal of Herpetology, vol. 43, no. 4, December 2009, pp. 704–709, 10.1670/08-168.1. Accessed 25 March 2022.
  20. ^ Martin, Bradley T., et al. “Sensory Mediation of Foraging Behavior in the Western Lesser Siren (Siren Intermedia Nettingi).” Journal of Herpetology, vol. 47, no. 1, March 2013, pp. 75–77, 10.1670/11-209. Accessed 25 March 2022.
  21. ^ a b c Gehlbach, Frederick R., et al. “Aestivation of the Salamander, Siren Intermedia.” American Midland Naturalist, vol. 89, no. 2, April 1973, p. 455, 10.2307/2424051. Accessed 25 March 2022.
  22. ^ Fauth, John E.; Resetarits, William J. (June 1991). "Interactions Between the Salamander Siren Intermedia and the Keystone Predator Notophthalmus Viridescens". Ecology. 72 (3): 827–838. doi:10.2307/1940585. JSTOR 1940585.
  • Animal Diversity Web: Siren intermedia
  • INHS Reptile & Amphibian Collection: Siren intermedia - Lesser Siren

lesser, siren, lesser, siren, siren, intermedia, species, aquatic, salamander, native, eastern, united, states, northern, mexico, they, referred, numerous, common, names, including, legged, dwarf, siren, specific, epithet, intermedia, denotes, their, intermedi. The lesser siren Siren intermedia is a species of aquatic salamander native to the eastern United States and northern Mexico They are referred to by numerous common names including two legged eel dwarf siren and mud eel The specific epithet intermedia denotes their intermediate size between the greater siren Siren lacertina and the dwarf sirens Pseudobranchus species Lesser siren Conservation status Least Concern IUCN 3 1 1 Scientific classification Domain Eukaryota Kingdom Animalia Phylum Chordata Class Amphibia Order Urodela Family Sirenidae Genus Siren Species S intermedia Binomial name Siren intermediaBarnes 1826 Contents 1 Description 2 Taxonomy 3 Habitat and distribution 3 1 Habitat 3 2 Geographic distribution 4 Conservation 5 Physiology 5 1 Vision 5 2 Chemical sense 5 3 Respiration 5 4 Acoustic behavior 5 5 Osmoregulation 5 6 Hormones 6 Diet 7 Reproduction and life cycle 7 1 Annual seasonal behavior changes 8 Mating 8 1 Mate choice 8 2 Courting 9 Parental care 9 1 Oviposition 9 2 Egg guarding 10 Mutualisms 11 Enemies 12 ReferencesDescription editLesser sirens have elongated bodies possessing only two limbs a pair of four toed legs located behind the base of the head and range in length from 7 to 27 inches 17 69 cm Unlike greater sirens lesser sirens have less than 35 costal grooves 2 Juvenile specimens have red to yellow banding on their heads and stripes running along the main length of the body although these stripes are absent in Siren intermedia Adults have plainer coloration the dorsal side is typically olive green to blue gray or black while the ventral is usually light grey Spotted patterns may also be present in adults 3 In salamanders sexual size dimorphism is usually female biased but in Siren intermedia it s the opposite Males are the larger sex and they also have significantly larger heads and enlarged masseter muscles than females 4 Lesser sirens are notably neotenic and possess external gills throughout their lives 3 Taxonomy edit nbsp Siren intermedia nettingi the western lesser siren Sources disagree on the number of subspecies within S intermedia The majority of the sources in the field agree there are at least two an eastern and a western variety Many sources also include a third subspecies the Rio Grande lesser siren S i texana but researchers disagree whether the Rio Grande variety belongs as a lesser siren within S intermedia or as a greater siren within S lacertina and some others even consider it to be its own species as S texana 5 6 Eastern lesser siren S i intermedia Barnes 1826 Western lesser siren S i nettingi Goin 1942 Rio Grande lesser siren S i texana Goin 1957Habitat and distribution editHabitat edit Sirens are likely to be found in ponds near other intermittent wetlands They usually inhabit swamps and ponds and can survive in dry ponds for up to two years by a process called aestivating Sirens are considered poor overland dispersers because they rarely leave the water so their geographical distribution is largely determined by pond connectivity and biotic interactions 7 Lesser sirens are aquatic salamanders but their ability to withstand factors like dehydration allows them to have good survival skills in their ephemeral habitats Sirens are able to osmoregulate and produce a mucoid cocoon during aestivation which greatly reduces dehydration and electrolyte stress 8 Their small legs enable them to move on dry land for short periods of time 9 Geographic distribution edit The lesser siren is found in the United States and Mexico primarily from Virginia to Florida west to Texas ranging into northeastern Mexico as far as Veracruz and north to Illinois and southwest Michigan 1 10 Multiple specimens have recently been rediscovered in Michigan after a 60 year absence 11 12 Lesser sirens only occur in permanent wetlands whereas other salamander and frog species can occupy a range of dry and wetlands Lesser sirens are top predators in permanent wetlands 13 They can quickly colonize and become dominant consumers in new ponds such as those constructed by beavers Their ability to aestivate and burrow in soft sediments and live in dense aquatic vegetation in shallow waters facilitates their dominance In addition the species high productivity high fecundity and rapid growth to early sexual maturity allows it reach a high density quickly and easily and thus establish dominance in the habitat 14 Conservation editThe lesser siren is quite common through most of its range but rarely seen due to its secretive nature Like almost all species of amphibian their numbers are believed to be declining due to general reductions in water quality caused by agricultural pesticide and fertilizer runoff They are frequently collected and used as bait for fishing The species was once believed to be extirpated from Michigan 11 but has been recently rediscovered in limited numbers 15 The S i texana subspecies is listed as a threatened species in Texas They are listed as Least concern on the IUCN Red List and a species with Special Protection in Mexico 1 Physiology editVision edit Western Lesser Sirens Siren intermedia nettingi have poor eyesight They rely on their other senses to forage hunt and survive 13 Chemical sense edit Sirens rely on chemical cues to detect prey and not on visual cues The use of chemical stimuli in the detection of prey and predators are common in amphibians 16 Respiration edit All species in the sirenidae family are paedomorphic eel shaped salamanders that live in aquatic environments They respire through their gills lungs and skin and survive well in hypoxic environments low in oxygen Siren intermedia is unique among amphibians in its ability to construct a mucoid cocoon that slows down dehydration during aestivation and the lesser siren can withstand long periods of food deprivation without ill effects During aestivation respiration slows down significantly and gills atrophy over the next 16 or more weeks 8 Acoustic behavior edit The lesser siren is vocal unlike most salamanders The lesser siren is known to emit a series of clicks when it approaches others of its species or a short screeching sound if handled Acoustic behavior serves a functional service in S intermedia especially since it is nocturnal and it burrows in sediments swims and crawls through densely vegetated waters However its visual and olfactory senses are very limited in this habitat and thus the possibility of predation and other risks are high in this case Nevertheless acoustic behavior in lesser sirens is still infrequent and becomes even less frequent with undisturbed habitat residency perhaps because of their familiarity with the environment 17 Siren intermedia make and responds to underwater sounds that may have specific communicational significance Resting sirens are usually silent but they may produce trains of pulsed sounds or clicks Their tendency to click is greater in groups than in single specimens which suggests that they are involved in intraspecific communication These acoustic behaviors occur most often when other sirens are present They are emitted at different pulse rates by specimens clicking simultaneously and are associated with head jerking motions Head jerking may offer visual reinforcement of an acoustically defended individual space or it may be required for sound production S intermedia can produce clicks by moving the horny jaw coverings together rapidly and head jerking may be associated with such movement when it is particularly forceful This means of sound production is similar to the upper and lower teeth of humans clicking with the mouth open 17 Another frequently produced sound yelp is associated with cases of distress or alarm When S intermedia butt or bite each other in their habitat the bitten or injured individuals may swim away quickly emitting yelps at frequencies of 880 Hz These yelp sounds could have communicational significance if they prevent further attack or signal to other individuals that one is injured 17 Osmoregulation edit Animals that inhabit freshwater habitats have high affinity sodium uptake systems Therefore the better an animal is adapted to freshwater the lower the rate of sodium loss and uptake Sirens have a high sodium affinity around 0 2 peq g per day and thus are able to resist the harmful effects of low sodium environments 8 Hormones edit Insulin has been isolated from the pancreas of lesser sirens that is mostly conserved in sequence as compared to other amphibian orders However it does have some substitution differences that indicate that sirens diverged early from other salamanders 18 Diet editLesser sirens are filter feeders They sift through pond bottoms and aquatic vegetation for prey items 13 They have heavily keratinized beaks and vomerine dental arrays that can inflict substantial wounds 7 The diet of the lesser siren includes at least 10 different taxa which includes primarily aquatic invertebrates including tadpoles and snails They also eat several insects and their larvae crayfish mollusks amphibians siren eggs and algae although the plant material may be an incidental result of their gape and suck feeding style 19 Reproduction and life cycle editAnnual seasonal behavior changes edit The lesser siren is nocturnal spending its days hidden in the debris and mud at the bottom of slow moving bodies of water Sirens are most active in the fall and spring seasons when water temperatures are close to 15 C and there is no danger of drought 20 During the summer months the ponds and other habitats that the lesser siren live in go through periods of drought which leads to low water levels and possibly dried up ponds The lesser siren s strategy to withstand the rigors of these dry seasons is something called aestivation or summer dormancy which can last up to 35 weeks depending on the severity of the drought During the sixteen week period from July to October aquatic lesser sirens increase the osmotic concentration of their body fluids and slow down bodily functions 21 They do this by burrowing themselves into the bottom of its drying pond in tube like channels about the length and width of their bodies For the rest of the aestivating process they then secrete a mucous cocoon That is then followed by a significant drop in their oxygen consumption and heart rate The gills slowly atrophy and the body shrinks and as a result the fat is metabolized at one fifth the normal rate As expected large individuals store more fat and consume less oxygen per unit weight than small ones and thus can survive much longer periods of aestivation Some individuals especially the smaller sirens during aestivation die or suffer from dehydration as they are unable to store sufficient fat and the greater metabolic demand reduces their chance of survival 21 As the drought season comes to an end lesser sirens become active within a day and slowly regain the lost weight over the next 8 11 weeks 21 Mating editMate choice edit From November to January males occupy a shelter as a nest site usually surrounded by vegetation or among plant roots and actively equip it with moss from the surrounding nest site plucking plant material and dragging it back to the nest site They then defend their territory aggressively against others through biting 4 Courting edit Though little is known about their courtship it is believed to be quite violent as many specimens collected have scarring from healed bite marks from other sirens About 12 300 eggs are laid at a time and several clutches may be laid over the course of the year Hatchlings are only about 0 4 in 1 1 cm in length but grow quickly Maturity is typically reached in approximately three to four years Courtship includes several repeating behavioral patterns Once the female approaches the nest site the male and female start moving within the area coiling around each other The male pursues the female s cloaca closely sometimes rubbing his head against the flank and the cloacal region of the female Both the male and the female wave their tail fins by undulating the tail tip 4 Parental care editOviposition edit During oviposition the female turns on its back positions the cloaca near the top of the nest cavity and halts for several seconds Then the male positions his cloaca near the site of oviposition Eggs are directly coiled into the moss that the male has prepared in the nest Interlacing of the eggs into the plant material in the nest ensures that the eggs adhere to the nest as a compact mass and facilitates external fertilization 4 Egg guarding edit In S intermedia parental care is fulfilled by the males Paternal care as observed in the lesser siren is very rare for salamanders After the female completes oviposition and leaves the nest the male stays in close proximity to the eggs and takes the responsibility of parental care The total number of eggs can be around 120 130 with a diameter of about 3 mm The male constantly moves the egg mass circles around it and aerates the eggs through vigorous tail fanning The tail fanning behavior of the male towards the eggs can enhance sperm dispersal Additionally the male continuously cleans the nest from sand and other materials to improve hygienic conditions and possibly to prevent infections from pathogens and fungi It is also likely that males remove dead or infected eggs in order to prevent further infection of the viable eggs 4 The development of the larvae takes approximately 35 days Paternal care does not end there however it continues after the larvae hatch and the male continues to aggressively defend the larvae up to one week after hatching 4 Mutualisms editSiren intermedia has many important effects on community structure as it is one of the most important predators in temporary ponds where it complements the keystone predator role of eastern newts Notophthalmus viridescens 22 S intermedia reduces the total densities of the anuran larvae and by doing that it allows the eastern newts to act as keystone predators over a broad range of prey densities 7 Enemies editAdult mole salamanders Ambystoma talpoideum and lesser sirens Siren intermedia are the top two predators in temporary ponds of the southeastern United States Siren intermedia competes with and is an intraguild predator of A talpoideum limiting its growth and controlling its recruitment 7 References edit a b c Parra Olea G Wake D Hammerson G A 2008 Siren intermedia IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2008 e T59491A11936674 doi 10 2305 IUCN UK 2008 RLTS T59491A11936674 en Retrieved 19 November 2021 Lesser siren siren intermedia Species Profile Lesser Siren Siren intermedia SREL Herpetology n d Retrieved April 28 2022 from https srelherp uga edu salamanders sirint htm a b Caudata Culture Species Entry Siren intermedia Caudata org Retrieved on 2019 12 23 a b c d e f Reinhard Sandy et al External Fertilisation and Paternal Care in the Paedomorphic Salamander Siren Intermedia Barnes 1826 Urodela Sirenidae Zoologischer Anzeiger a Journal of Comparative Zoology vol 253 no 1 August 2013 pp 1 5 10 1016 j jcz 2013 06 002 Accessed 25 March 2022 Graham Sean P Kline Richard Steen David A Kelehear Crystal 5 December 2018 Description of an extant salamander from the Gulf Coastal Plain of North America The Reticulated Siren Siren reticulata PLOS ONE 13 12 e0207460 Bibcode 2018PLoSO 1307460G doi 10 1371 journal pone 0207460 ISSN 1932 6203 PMC 6281224 PMID 30517124 Tipton Bob L 2012 Texas amphibians a field guide 1st ed Austin ISBN 978 0292737358 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link a b c d Fauth John E Interactions between Branchiate Mole Salamanders Ambystoma Talpoideum and Lesser Sirens Siren Intermedia Asymmetrical Competition and Intraguild Predation Amphibia Reptilia vol 20 no 2 1 May 1999 pp 119 132 10 1163 156853899506942 Accessed 30 October 2020 a b c Asquith Adam and Ronald Altig Osmoregulation of the Lesser Siren Siren Intermedia Caudata Amphibia Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology Part A Physiology vol 84 no 4 January 1986 pp 683 685 10 1016 0300 9629 86 90387 7 Accessed 1 May 2021 Siren intermedia amphibiaweb org AmphibiaWeb Retrieved 26 December 2018 Siren intermedia amphibiaweb org AmphibiaWeb Retrieved 17 December 2018 a b Siren intermedia nettingi Western lesser siren Michigan Herp Atlas Herpetological Resource and Management Michigan DNR Retrieved 4 August 2019 Williams J E 2004 A first record of the Western Lesser Siren Siren intermedia nettingi from Michigan Fisheries research report 1588 a b c Anderson Thomas L et al Functional Responses of Larval Marbled Salamanders Ambystoma Opacum and Adult Lesser Sirens Siren Intermedia on Anuran Tadpole Prey Copeia vol 108 no 2 19 May 2020 p 341 10 1643 ce 19 212 Accessed 20 February 2022 Gehlbach Frederick R and Stephen E Kennedy Population Ecology of a Highly Productive Aquatic Salamander Siren Intermedia The Southwestern Naturalist vol 23 no 3 10 August 1978 p 423 10 2307 3670250 Accessed 14 May 2021 Western Lesser Siren Siren intermedia nettingi www miherpatlas org Retrieved 2019 08 04 MARTIN B T GOODDING D D FORD N B amp PLACYK J J S 2013 Sensory Mediation of Foraging Behavior in the Western Lesser Siren Siren intermedia nettingi Journal of Herpetology 47 1 75 77 https doi org 10 1670 11 209 a b c Gehlbach Frederick R and Braz Walker Acoustic Behavior of the Aquatic Salamander Siren Intermedia BioScience vol 20 no 20 15 October 1970 pp 1107 1108 10 2307 1295417 Accessed 11 March 2021 Conlon J Michael Trauth Stanley E Sever David M 1997 06 01 Purification and Structural Characterization of Insulin from the Lesser Siren Siren intermedia Amphibia Caudata General and Comparative Endocrinology 106 3 295 300 doi 10 1006 gcen 1997 6912 ISSN 0016 6480 PMID 9204362 Hampton Paul M Ecology of the Lesser Siren Siren Intermedia in an Isolated Eastern Texas Pond Journal of Herpetology vol 43 no 4 December 2009 pp 704 709 10 1670 08 168 1 Accessed 25 March 2022 Martin Bradley T et al Sensory Mediation of Foraging Behavior in the Western Lesser Siren Siren Intermedia Nettingi Journal of Herpetology vol 47 no 1 March 2013 pp 75 77 10 1670 11 209 Accessed 25 March 2022 a b c Gehlbach Frederick R et al Aestivation of the Salamander Siren Intermedia American Midland Naturalist vol 89 no 2 April 1973 p 455 10 2307 2424051 Accessed 25 March 2022 Fauth John E Resetarits William J June 1991 Interactions Between the Salamander Siren Intermedia and the Keystone Predator Notophthalmus Viridescens Ecology 72 3 827 838 doi 10 2307 1940585 JSTOR 1940585 Animal Diversity Web Siren intermedia INHS Reptile amp Amphibian Collection Siren intermedia Lesser Siren Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Lesser siren amp oldid 1198201235, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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