The new-born salamanders have three pairs of long external gills, a long tail furnished with a broad dorsal and ventral fin, and four limbs, although these are small. The total length is about 25 mm. or 1 inch. The general colour is blackish with a pretty metallic golden and greenish lustre. The little creatures are very active, and at once eat living or dead animal matter. In captivity they are liable to nibble each other's gills and tails. During the first six or eight weeks they assume a row of dark spots on the sides; these spots enlarge, and the whole skin becomes darker. Yellow spots appear next, first above the eyes and on the thighs, later upon the back; the ground-colour at the same time becomes black, until at the beginning of the fourth month they look like the parents.
The metamorphosis is very gradual. The tail-fin diminishes first, but the gills grow until shortly before the little creatures leave the water. Darkness, cold, and insufficient food retard the metamorphosis, sometimes until October. It is easy to rear them artificially provided they are well fed, kept in a light place, and in clean, well aerated water. If prevented from leaving the latter, for instance when kept in a glass vessel with vertical walls, or if hindered by a piece of gauze from rising to the surface and taking in air, they can be kept as larvae well into the winter.
Very young, perfect little salamanders, of from 1 to 2 inches in length, are excessively rare; even specimens of 3 inches are far from common. They probably spend the first two or three years of their life in careful seclusion.
A few adults can be easily kept for many years in shady places provided with moss, rotten stumps and stones, to afford them suitable moist and cool hiding-places, and they readily take earthworms, larvae of beetles, snails, woodlice, etc. But any attempt to keep them in large numbers ends in failure. They congregate together in clumps, all making for the same cavity or recess, as if that were the only one in existence (very likely they are right in so far as that place is probably the best), and they get rapidly enlarging sores, chiefly on the elbows and knees. These are soon infested with fungoid growths, and this disease spreads like an epidemic and soon carries them off.
S. atra.–The Alpine Salamander differs from the Spotted Salamander by its uniform black colour and smaller size, which averages between 7 and 5 inches. It is restricted to the Alps of Europe, from Savoy to Carinthia, at from 2000 to as much as 9000 feet elevation, living with predilection near waterfalls, the spray of which keeps the neighbourhood moist, or in mossy walls, in the shade of forests near brooks, or under flat stones on northern slopes. The most interesting feature of this species is that it produces only two young at a time. These are nourished at the expense of the partially developed eggs in the uterus, and they undergo their whole metamorphosis before they are born. By far the best and most complete account of this mode of propagation has been given by G. Schwalbe.[[58]] The length of the ripe embryos is about 45 mm.; they lie mostly bent up, with their heads and tails turned towards the head of the mother. The gills are beautiful, delicate red organs, the first pair being generally directed forwards and ventralwards, the second upwards, the third backwards; they are longest when the creature is about 32 mm. long, while there is still much yolk present. At this stage the gills are so long as to envelop nearly the whole embryo. There is rarely a second embryo in the same uterus, and an extra foetus is generally smaller, frequently a monstrosity not fit to live; it is probable that it is not used as food, but that it is expelled at parturition. The embryo passes through three stages, (1) still enclosed within its follicle and living on its own yolk, (2) free within the vitelline mass which is the product of the other eggs, (3) there is no more vitelline mass, but the embryo is possessed of gills 10-12 mm. in length, and is still growing. During the second stage the yolk is directly swallowed by the mouth. The walls of the maternal uterus are rather red. The exchange of nutritive fluid takes place through the long external gills, which thereby function in the same way as the chorionic villi of the Mammalian egg. Each gill contains a ventral artery and a dorsal vein, each of which looks like the midrib of a pinnate leaf; there is also a fine nerve and a weak bundle of striped muscular fibres. Each gill-filament receives a capillary artery which extends to the epithelium of the tip, where it turns into a capillary vein. The epithelium of these filaments, which are full of blood, is ciliated, the resulting current being directed from the base towards the tip. In older larvae this ciliation becomes restricted to the tips. The body of the gills is furnished with flat epithelium, these non-ciliated portions alone are closely appressed to the uterine wall, and it is here that the exchange of gas takes place between mother and larva. The nutrition takes place through the gills, as they are bathed by the yolk-mass.
Schwalbe also explains the whole question of the reduction of the number of embryos. He says rightly that in S. maculosa, which gives birth to many young, there are in the oviduct many eggs which have only partly developed into embryos, and these, perhaps from want of room and nourishment, degenerate into the irregularly shaped whitish-yellow bodies which are occasionally found packed in between the developing embryos. Consequently all those eggs had been fertilised near the ovaries. S. atra exhibits a further stage in so far as most of the eggs, fertilised above in the oviduct, degenerate, and only two or three become fully developed. These few embryos live on the degenerating eggs, which together produce the vitelline material spoken of above. The two full-grown and metamorphosed embryos, each measuring about 50 mm. in length, are equivalent to the numerous new-born larvae of S. maculosa, especially if the smaller size of the adult Alpine Salamander is taken into consideration.
Mlle. von Chauvin[[59]] has experimented with the unborn larvae of this Salamander. She cut out 23 larvae and put them into water. One of them, already 43 mm. long, took earthworms on the next day, and the beautiful long, red gills became pale and shrunk, and on the third day were cast off close to the body. New gills sprouted out on the same day, first in the shape of three tiny knobs on either side. After three weeks they had become round globes, which gradually sprouted out into several branches, far shorter and more clumsy than the original gills. During the whole time the larva was lying quietly at the bottom, in the darkest corner, but showed a good appetite. The fin of the tail disappeared and was supplanted by a stronger one. In the sixth week the skin was shed in flakes, and this process took fifteen days. This larva lived in the water for fourteen weeks and grew to 6 cm. in length! When the new gills gradually shrank, the compressed and finny tail assumed a round shape, the skin became darker and shinier, and after the larva had again shed its skin, there appeared the dark rugose skin of the typical S. atra. The gills were reduced to useless appendages–not cast off–and the creature crawled out of the water. A fortnight later the gill-clefts were closed. A second larva behaved similarly, first casting off the feathery gills, substituting a new and stronger set, which, however, fourteen days after excision from the uterus, shrank again, and on the nineteenth day the gill-clefts were closed. The lady also observed that nearly ripe larvae, when cut out, rushed about in the water and ate, just like the new-born larvae of the Spotted Salamander.
A third species, S. caucasica, is found in the Caucasus. It rather resembles the Spotted Salamander in coloration, but has a larger tail and lacks the lateral warts. The male is remarkable for the possession of a soft permanent knob or hook at the top of the root of the tail. This pommel possibly prevents the slipping off during the amorous amplexus, provided the sexes then entwine like certain Tritons.
Chioglossa lusitanica.–The only species of this genus is restricted to the north-western third of the Iberian peninsula. This graceful, slenderly-proportioned and beautiful Salamander is apparently very rare and local, having hitherto been found at a few places, namely, near Coimbra, Oporto and Coruña. It lives under moss, and runs and climbs with an agility surprising in a Urodele. The tongue is long, ending in a fork, and is supported by a median pedicle so that the tip can be quickly protruded to the distance of more than an inch. The whole length of the animal is about 5 to 6 inches, two-thirds of which belong to the long tail, which is compressed at the end. The skin is smooth and shiny, with a gular fold and large parotoids. The general colour is a rich dark brown, with a pair of broad reddish-golden bands along the back and tail, the bands being separated by an almost black vertebral line.
The few specimens which I have been lucky enough to observe made little holes or passages in the moist moss of their cage, peeping out with their heads in wait for little insects, which they caught with flash-like quickness. They seem to be crepuscular.