Premium Only Content
Spotted salamander spring migration is an incredible event to witness
Spotted salamanders are fascinating creatures that live in most forests throughout central and eastern United States and Canada. They are abundant yet we rarely see them. Like other salamanders, they live under leaves and logs, and in the burrows of small rodents and mammals, spending a great deal of the year underground. They eat worms and insects and keep to themselves.
But every year, these salamanders move in unison in great numbers, seeking the closest pond or vernal pool for breeding.
They prefer small bodies of water without fish, which would eat their eggs. The salamanders can journey considerable distances to find their breeding grounds. This migration takes place at night in the early spring when the snow and ice have just begun to melt. Signaled by their hormones, they wait for the first rainy night that is more than 7°C (45°F) to make their trek to the water. The males arrive first and deposit sperm on the leaf litter in the pond. The females arrive soon after and gather the sperm pouches, taking them inside their bodies to fertilize their eggs. They lay the eggs in masses of up to 100 eggs, attached to submerged sticks near the water's edge.
Salamanders have an amazing regenerative ability that allows them to regrow limbs, organs, and even portions of their brains if they are injured. Scientists are particularly interested in understanding this ability and how it might benefit humans.
Spotted salamanders are unique from other species in several ways. They are the only vertebrate animal in the world that hosts another organism in a symbiotic relationship. Typically, when a vertebrate is a host to another organism, it is a parasitical relationship, having no benefit to the host. In this case, the salamander eggs contain an algae that uses sunlight to create energy and oxygen. This benefits the eggs by helping to sustain them as they grow and develop. The algae benefits from the stability and protection of the egg and also from the carbon dioxide that it consumes, which is produced by the eggs.
The spotted salamander also lays eggs that are coated with a unique outer jelly to prevent the eggs from drying out. On some eggs, the jelly morphs into a water soluble, protein based substance, and on other eggs, it becomes a crystalline protein that repels water. The fact that it develops into two different types allows for the survival of eggs when wood frog larvae are present. The wood frogs would eat the water soluble eggs and deplete the population of salamanders. This is where the algae in the eggs is crucial because the crystalline jelly prevents oxygen absorption from the water.
Nature can be complex and fascinating beyond our expectations. The world around us is more of a wonder than we once realized and we would not even realize it if we did not take a close look at some of the small creatures that are right under our feet.
-
1:45
WildCreatures
1 month ago $1.13 earnedGiant manta rays surround scuba divers in Galapagos Islands
3.43K2 -
57:22
barstoolsports
17 hours agoHardest Puzzle Breaks Brains | Surviving Barstool S4 Ep. 8
247K12 -
9:02:15
Dr Disrespect
21 hours ago🔴LIVE - DR DISRESPECT - MARVEL RIVALS - RANKED
383K64 -
1:00:46
The StoneZONE with Roger Stone
12 hours agoFake News Attack on Tulsi Gabbard! | The StoneZONE w/ Roger Stone
71.2K24 -
2:24:08
WeAreChange
15 hours agoElon Musk & Donald Trump: The Emergency Halt That Saved Us
94.9K63 -
1:13:11
Flyover Conservatives
1 day agoWARNING! Is Bitcoin CIA-Controlled? – The Shocking Reality of Digital Assets - Clay Clark | FOC Show
45.3K12 -
2:00:37
Space Ice
18 hours agoSpace Ice & Redeye Try To Figure Out Seagal's Most Incoherent Movie
169K7 -
1:00:36
PMG
1 day ago $15.50 earned"Santa Trump is Giving Us Hope - But Will Johnson Stand Strong?"
122K17 -
54:30
LFA TV
1 day agoThe German Strongman’s Arrival Is Imminent | Trumpet Daily 12.18.24 7PM EST
89.3K8 -
2:04:11
Melonie Mac
15 hours agoGo Boom Live Ep 32! Soul Reaver Remastered!
73.7K11