Marbled Salamander egg clutch under a log |
Two friends from the Museum, Megan and Melissa, invited me
to tag along with them yesterday, as did some fieldwork for a future workshop.
Megan made a great find as she and Melissa were turning over logs at the edge
of a vernal pool, looking for salamanders – some viable Marbled Salamander
eggs. It seemed really late to us for this species to still have viable eggs (when we looked closely, they could see the well-developed embryo
moving inside the eggs) so she grabbed a couple to photograph.
Marbled Salamanders have an unusual reproductive strategy
compared to many other species in that the eggs are laid in the fall (usually
October and November I think in this area). The female often scrapes out a
little area near or at the edge of a vernal pool. Vernal pools are fascinating and important habitats that may
be dry much of the year and then fill with autumn and winter rains. The key is
they have no fish, which makes them critical habitats for a number of species
of amphibians, invertebrates and other animals. She then will stay with the
eggs for some time (often a month or more) waiting for the water to rise so the
eggs will hatch. If it remains dry for an extended length of time, she may
abandon them and return to her underground burrows in the nearby woods until
the next breeding season. Studies suggest that egg clutches where the female remains
with them until they are covered by water have a higher offspring survival,
perhaps because she helps protect them from predation or getting too dry.
Marbled Salamander eggs |
The 50 or 60 eggs Megan found were under a log at the edge
of a large vernal pool. It was very moist but the standing water was still a
few inches away from the eggs. Embryos develop to the hatching stage within a
couple of weeks after being laid, but do not hatch until covered by rising
water. So these eggs were very well developed. You can see the front legs and
feet, the larval gills, some of the diagnostic lateral spots, and the eyes in
the waiting “larvae”. My salamander reference (Salamanders of the United States
and Canada by James W. Petranka) states, “when covered by water the embryos
become oxygen stressed…this triggers the release (from hatching glands on the
snout) of digestive enzymes that dissolve the egg capsule and allow the embryo
to escape”. Amazing!
A closer look |
We put a couple of eggs in some water in a bug box so I
could photograph them. Megan called Jeff Beane, a herpetologist at the Museum,
and told him about the find. He said he did not recall seeing any viable eggs
this late in the spring so he wanted to document the location. We walked down into
the woods to show him, photographed the eggs and then walked back to the car.
In those 40 minutes or so, the two eggs had hatched. The reference said it usually
takes a few hours to a couple of days after flooding for the eggs to hatch.
Guess these guys had waited long enough. The last picture is one of a larva
from last year that I pulled from another pool. It was much older and larger
than the ones from yesterday.
Large Marbled Salamander larva |