Salamandrina perspicillata.–This genus, represented by one species, a native of Liguria and Northern Italy, possibly extending into Dalmatia, is the only Salamander which has but four toes. The skin is not shiny and smooth, but is finely granular and dry, forms no gular fold, and is devoid of parotoid glands. The tail is more than half the length of the animal, which measures from 3 to 4 inches. The general colour is black-brown with a broad V-shaped orange-yellow mark extending from eye to eye over the occiput. A faint irregular yellowish line extends along the middle of the back and tail. The throat is black, with a diffused white patch in the middle; the belly is white, with black dots; the anal region, the inner sides of the legs and the under side of the tail are carmine-red.

This slender and pretty Salamander is diurnal, and feigns death when discovered. Only the female goes into the water, in March, to glue the eggs on to submerged rocks or water-plants. The young finish their metamorphosis by the month of June, and reach full size during the winter, the climate of their home being sufficiently genial to make hibernation scarcely necessary.

Triton s. Molge.–The tail is strongly compressed and frequently has a permanent fin. The fronto-squamosal arch is variable, it being either bony as in the South European, Eastern and American species, or reduced to a ligament, or lastly absent as in T. cristatus. The males of all the English Newts, of T. vittatus and of T. marmoratus, develop a high cutaneous crest on the back and tail during the breeding season, and this crest acts not only as a swimming organ and ornament, but also as a sensory organ.

The whole genus comprises some eighteen species, twelve of which are European, although some of these extend into Western Asia; T. pyrrhogaster and T. sinensis are found in N.E. China, the former also in Japan; T. poireti and T. hagenmuelleri live in Algeria, and only two, T. torosus and T. viridescens, are North American. Some of the species have a limited range; thus T. montanus is confined to Corsica, T. rusconii to Sardinia, T. boscai to the north-west of the Iberian peninsula and T. asper to the Pyrenees.

Newts all prefer moisture without heat. During the pairing season they take to the water, mostly to stagnant pools, which sometimes implies long migrations. During this period, which is in some cases rather prolonged, they become thoroughly aquatic and undergo some important changes. The tail-fins are much enlarged; in the males of some species a high cutaneous fold grows out on the back, devoid of muscles, but rich in sense-organs. The whole skin, instead of being dry, possesses numerous mucous glands and, what is of more importance, specialised sensory apparatuses which are arranged chiefly along the lateral lines of the body and part of the tail.

After the breeding season Newts become terrestrial, hiding in cracks, trees, or in the sandy soil. Some species aestivate during the hot and dry season. They hibernate either in the ground, or occasionally in ponds. T. vulgaris is difficult to keep in the water beyond the pairing season, while this is easily done with T. alpestris and T. cristatus; T. waltli can live in the water for years. The food consists of all kinds of insects, centipedes, worms, snails, etc., which are searched for chiefly at night. It is astonishing to see a little Triton getting hold of and gradually swallowing a wriggling earthworm almost as thick and as long as itself. When two newts seize the same worm, as these voracious and jealous creatures often do, each gets hold of one end, and swallowing as much as it can, twists and rolls round in a direction opposite to that of its rival, until the worm breaks, or until the jaws of the two newts meet and the stronger of the two draws it out of the weaker one and swallows the whole worm. They do not drink, but soak themselves in the water.

The skin is shed periodically, and rather often by the rapidly growing young; by the adult, during the life in the water, rarely during the sojourn on dry land. The skin breaks round the mouth; assisted by the fingers and by contortions of the body, it is then slipped backwards over the trunk and tail, whereupon the newt seizes the skin with the mouth, draws the shirt off entirely, and–swallows it. Such freshly shed skins are very delicate and pretty objects when suspended in water or some preserving fluid. The shed skin, consisting only of the outermost layer of the epidermis, is entire, but turned inside out, with fingers and toes complete, the only holes being those for the mouth, eyes, and vent.

None of the Tritons are viviparous. The eggs, which are glued singly or in small numbers on to stones or water-plants, are hatched in about a fortnight, sooner or later according to the species and the prevailing temperature. The larvae are always provided with three pairs of branched external gills; the fore-limbs appear much earlier than the hind-limbs. Most, perhaps all, larvae develop two pairs of thread-like protuberances on the sides of the upper jaw, by means of which they attach or anchor themselves on to water-plants shortly after they are hatched. Thus moored they remain motionless in a slanting position, now and then wriggling their tails and shifting their place, or sinking to the bottom. The metamorphosis is finished during the first summer, and the little newts, often partially transparent, leave the water to hide under stones. Not unfrequently the metamorphosis is retarded and not finished by the autumn. The larvae of T. cristatus, especially when reared in ponds with abrupt or overhanging banks, so that they cannot leave the water, retain considerable remnants of the gills, still more frequently the clefts, although breathing chiefly by the lungs. Such individuals reach a length of 3 inches, and are larvae so far as the finny tail and the gills are concerned. They hibernate in this condition, and in exceptional cases reach sexual maturity;–at least the females, which develop ripe eggs; the males are not known to produce spermatozoa.

Much has been written on the amorous games of newts, but it is only recently that the mode of fecundation has been actually observed. Gasco[[60]] placed the newts in glass vessels suspended from the ceiling of his laboratory. The antics of the enamoured male around the female, rubbing the latter with its head, or lashing it gently with the tail, and playing around it in its often beautiful nuptial dress, are meant to excite the female. The male then at intervals emits spermatophores, which sink to the bottom, and the female takes them up into its cloaca. For further information see p. [54].

Triton cristatus.–The Crested Newt has a slightly tubercular skin with distinct pores on the head, on the parotoid region and on a line along the side of the trunk. There is a strong gular fold. The general colour above is dark or black-brown with an olive tinge, interspersed with darker spots; the sides of the body bear irregular white spots. The under parts are yellow, almost always with large black spots. The iris is golden yellow.–The nuptial dress of the male is very striking. A high, serrated crest occurs on the head and body; the upper surface of the head is marbled with black and white; the under parts are orange-yellow with black spots, and the sides of the tail are adorned with a bluish-white band.–The female, always devoid of a crest, generally exhibits a yellow line along the middle of the back.–The average length of fully adult specimens is about 5-6 inches or 13-15 cm.; the females are as usual larger than the males; 144 and 162 mm. for an English male and female respectively are exceptional records.