LOCAL SALAMANDER LIFE CYCLES
Salamanders are slim, moist-skinned amphibians that shelter in water, or under rocks, fallen logs or leaf litter on woodland floors, depending on each species' life cycle. Their clammy skins soak up water, and salamanders must stay moist, or they will die. As adults, they all consume small invertebrates. And each kind of salamander is attractive in its own, camouflaged way, though few people see them because they hide out so well. Four common species of salamanders living in Lancaster County, Pennsylvania, represent four interesting life cycles of these amphibians. Like all species of life, these kinds of salamanders, each finding a niche of its own, reduces competition for resources with other kinds of life, especially with close relatives. Red-spotted newts are a kind of salamander that live as adults in ponds, and court and lay eggs on plants in those ponds. The larvae h...