Caudata     Hemidactylium scutatum -- Four-toed Salamander

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Purple shade indicates vouchered specimens. Light blue (cyan) shade indicates photographic records. Yellow shade indicates verified sighting.
Slanted hatch indicates pre-1980 records only

NOTE: Not all specimens upon which these maps are based have been verified.

 

Key Characters: 4 rather than 5 toes on hind feet; circular constriction at base of tail.

Similar Species: Juvenile eastern newt, juvenile dusky salamander, redback salamander, zigzag salamander.

Description: A small (up to 10 cm TL), slender, reddish brown salamander with a black-spotted ivory-white belly. Costal grooves extend to midline of back. Snout distinctly pale brown. Some individuals have a broad pale brown stripe down midback. Tail breaks off easily.

Habitat: Boggy pools or spring-fed ravines in undisturbed or mature deciduous forests. Several localities are second-growth woods in soggy soil below dams of man-made lakes.

Natural History: Terrestrial adults occupy moist, rotten logs and feed on a variety of arthropods on forest floor. Mating occurs in autumn, before hibernation. During April&endash;May, female broods 20-60 moderately large (2.5-3 mm diameter) eggs laid in a cavity a few inches above water within mats of moss or leaves, within logs, under rocks, or along spring-fed streams or pools. Within two months, hatchlings fall or wriggle into water where they develop into high-finned aquatic larvae.

Status: Threatened in Illinois. A few scattered localities are relics of post-glacial times when range was more continuous and northern forests covered much of Illinois. Populations in Cook and Lake counties probably extirpated by habitat destruction (see distribution map, above).

©Illinois Natural History Survey
Send Questions and Comments to:cbdadmin@inhs.uiuc.edu.
Last updated Friday, 23-Jul-2004 16:41:34 CDT