The Webbed Newt is a native of Western middle Europe, ranging from Great Britain and Northern Spain to Switzerland and Western Germany.

Closely allied to the last species are T. boscai of Spain and Portugal, T. italicus, T. montadoni of Moldavia, and the beautiful T. vittatus of Asia Minor. From China and Japan are known T. pyrrhogaster and T. sinensis.

The North American species are T. torosus and T. viridescens. The former, of Western North America, is one of the largest newts, reaching a length of more than six inches. The head is much depressed and broad, and has very prominent parotoid and other glands. The limbs are strong, especially in the male. The skin of the upper parts is very granular, uniform dark brown, without a crest. The tail, which is larger than the head and body, is strongly compressed, with a low dorsal and ventral fin. The under parts and the lower edge of the tail are uniform yellow or orange red. The iris is green. A specimen in my keeping spends most of its time in the cracks of rotten stumps or on the top of moss in the darkest shade. It lives on earthworms but despises insects. Like most of the other newts it becomes lively at dusk.

Fig. 24.–Triton viridescens. 1, Egg just after deposition, with the outer membrane opened, × 6; 2, a spermatophore just discharged showing its gelatinous base with a projecting spike which bears a tuft of spermatozoa, × 2. (After Jordan.)

T. viridescens is common throughout the Northern and Eastern parts of the United States. Large females are about 11 cm. long, the males 1 cm. less. The general colour above is brown, with a tinge of green; on each side of the trunk, with a row of bright vermilion spots; the under parts are orange, studded with small black dots. Half-grown specimens are brownish red, with the same lateral red spots as the adult. According to Jordan,[[61]] this voracious species lives chiefly on the larvae of insects, on small molluscs such as Cyclas and Planorbis, on earthworms and on small Crustacea. It is eminently aquatic in the adult stage. The eggs are laid from April to June, the period lasting for one individual four to six weeks, or even longer. One female laid 108 eggs in all from 20th April to 30th May. After having selected a suitable plant, for instance an Anacharis or a bunch of Fontinalis leaflets, she bestrides the plant and gathers in the surrounding shoots with her hind-limbs, pressing the leaves closely around the cloaca. She next turns on her side, or occasionally on her back; with fore-limbs outstretched and rigid, with hind-limbs and leaves completely hiding the cloaca, she remains perfectly motionless for six to eight minutes. Then she slowly leaves the "nest," which now holds an egg well protected by a tangle of shoots glued together by the gelatinous secretion poured out of the cloaca. Jordan concludes, from the fact that he never found spermatozoa in the oviducts, that the eggs are fertilised just before they are expelled, when passing the receptaculum seminis.

The metamorphosed young pass their life on land under stones and logs as the so-called red variety, which is merely a stage in the life-history of the species. It seems to take them several years to reach maturity, and to become again typically aquatic. Young, red individuals which I have myself kept, have behaved for more than a year like the young of other newts, spending their time under moss and bark without going into the water.

The change from the red-spotted stage has been exhaustively studied by Gage.[[62]] He remarks that this species is very common near Ithaca, in an upland forest and along the head-waters of the Susquehannah. The transformation takes place either in the autumn or in the spring, either while the newt is still on land, or after entering the water.

Of two which were kept in a jar with moist wood, one was especially brilliant, but within two weeks it assumed, in the middle of September, the characteristic coloration of the viridescent form. The two specimens were in the jar until the following July, when they were placed where they could enter the water. This they did with great readiness, and they remained submerged for a considerable time at first. The time under water increased in length, until within two or three days the pharyngeal respiration under water was fully established. On the other hand, viridescent specimens never reassume the red garb when kept out of the water.

Red specimens entering the water in the spring, changed into the greenish form within a few weeks, and established the pharyngeal respiration, losing the ciliated oral epithelium. Branchiate larvae and the adult aquatic forms have non-ciliated epithelium, and the cilia are re-established when a green specimen is forced again to live on land. Ciliation always exists in the red stage, and in the green stage before the newt has taken to the water. The cilia sweep towards the stomach.