Environments-
Australia
Belize
Costa Rica
Cambodia
East Malaysia (Sabah, Borneo)
Grenada & the Grenadines
Thailand
Trinidad & Tobago
Sri Lanka (Ceylon)
Amphibians-
Aromobatidae Fragrant Frogs
Arthroleptidae -Squeakers & Relatives
Bombinatoridae - Firebellied Toads
Bufonidae-True Toads
North American Toads
Neotropical Toads
Centrolenidae-Glass Frogs
Ceratophryidae-Horned Frogs, Etc
Dendrobatidae-Poison Frogs
Dicroglossidae-Forked Tongued Frogs
Eleutherodactylidae - Free-toed Frogs
Hemiphractidae-Marsupial Frogs
Hylidae –Treefrogs
North American Hyla
Neotropical Hypsiboas
Cricket Frogs & Chorus Frogs
Pelodryadinae: Australian Treefrogs
Phyllomedusinae, Monkey Treefrogs
Scinax, Snouted Treefrogs
Central American Treefrogs, Smilisca
Leiuperidae-Puddle Frogs
Leptodactylidae-Delicate Toed Frogs
Mantellidae - Malagasy Frogs
Megophryidae-Litter Frogs
Microhylidae-Narrowmouth Toads
Petropedetidae, African Water Frogs
Pipidae-Tongueless Frogs
Pyxicephalidae-African Box Headed Frogs
Ranidae-True Frogs
Ranidae - Asian Species
Rhacophoridae-Afro-Asian Treefrogs
Scaphiopodidae-American Spadefoots
Strabomantidae- Squinting Prophet Frogs
Order Caudata - Salamanders & Newts
Ambystomatidae-Mole Salamanders
Amphiumidae-Amphiumas/ Congo Eels
Plethodontidae-Lungless Salamanders
Proteidae-Waterdogs & Mudpuppies
Salamandridae-Newts
Sirenidae-Sirens
Order Gymnophiona –
Common Caecilians
Caeciliidae
 
REPTILES

Turtles & Tortoises
Carretochelidae-Pignosed Turtles
Chelidae-Austro-American Sidenecks
Cheloniidae-Sea Turtles
Chelydridae-Snapping Turtles
Dermochelyidae-Leatherback Turtles
Emydidae-Common Turtles
Geoemydidae-Asian River Turtles, Etc.
Kinosternidae-Mud and Musk Turtles
Pelomedusidae - Afro-American Sidenecks
Testudinidae-Tortoises
Trionychidae-Softshell Turtles
Alligators, Crocodiles & Relatives

 

 

 

Squamates-

Agamidae -Agamas
Acanthosaura- Tree Lizards
Calotes, Crested Lizards
Draco, Gliding Lizards
Leiolepsis & Uromastyx, Keeld Tail Lizards
Gonocephalus, Anglehead Lizards
Pogona, Bearded Dragons
Amphisbaenidae-Worm Lizards
Anguidae-Glass Lizards & Relatives
Chamaeleonidae-Chameleons
Corytophanidae-Casquehead Lizards
Crotaphanidae -Collared & Leopard Lizards
Diplodactylidae-Southwest Pacific Geckos
Eublepharidae-Laurasian Eyelash Geckos
Gekkonidae- Common Geckos
Cyrtodactylus, Bent-Toed Geckos
Gekko gecko Page
Hemidactylus Gecko Page
Phelsuma Gecko Page
Uroplatus, Flat-tailed Geckos
Sphaerodactylidae, Dwarf Geckos
Gymnopthalmidae-Spectacled Lizards
Helodermatidae-Gila Monsters
Iguanidae-Iguanas & Relatives
Lacertidae-Wall Lizards
Opluridae - Malagasy Iguanid Lizards
Phrynosomatidae-Horned Lizards & Relatives
Phyllodactylidae-Trans-Atlantic Geckos
Polychrotidae-Anoles
Pygopodidae - Flap Footed Lizards
Scincidae-Skinks
Skinks of the Genus Plestiodon
Shinisauridae-Chinese Crocodile Lizard
Teiidae-Whiptails & Tegus
Tropiduridae-Neotropical Ground Lizards
Varanidae-Monitor Lizards
Xantusiidae-Night Lizards

Snakes-

Acrochordidae-File Snakes
Boidae-Boas
Colubridae-Common Snakes
North American Colubrids
Lampropeltis, Kingsnakes
Pantherophis, North American Rat Snakes
Pituophis, Bullsnakes, Gopher snakes, etc
Green Snakes, Opheodrys
Central & South American Colubrids
Asian Colubrids
Cylindrophiidae-Asian Pipe Snakes
Dipsididae-New World Thirst Snakes
N. A. Thirst Snakes Heterodontinae
Central American Thirst Snakes Dipsadinae
South American Thirst Snakes, Xenodontinae
Elapidae-Cobras, Coral Snakes, Kraits, Etc.
The Kraits, Bungarus
The Coral Snakes, Micrurus, Etc.
Cobras, Naja & Ophiophagus
Erycidae-The Sand Boas
Homalopsidae-Oriental-Australian Mud Snakes
Hydrophiinae-Sea Snakes & Their Relatives
Natricidae-Water Snakes
Asian Natricinae

Thamnophiinae-New World Natricids
Nerodia-North American Watersnakes
Thamnophis-Garter & Ribbon Snakes
Pareatidae-Oriental Slug Eating Snakes
Pythonidae-Pythons
Tropidophiidae-Wood Snakes
Ungaliophiidae-Dwarf Boas
Viperidae-Vipers & Pit Vipers
Crotalinae - The Pit Vipers
The Rattlesnakes - Crotalus & Sistrurus
Lanceheads - Bothrops Etc.
The Pit Vipers of the Agkistrodon Complex
Asian Pit Vipers - Cryptelytops, Trimeresurus
Viperinae - The Vipers
Xenodermatidae-The Strange Scaled Snakes Xenopeltidae-Sunbeam Snakes

 

Ringed Salamander
Ringed Salamander, Ambystoma annulatum Cope, 1886. Photograph of a captive. This species inhabits the Ozark Plateau and the Ouachita Mountains of Missouri, Arkansas and Oklahoma. Adults reach 180 mm.
 
Blue-spotted salamander
Blue-Spotted Salamander, Ambystoma laterale Hallowell, 1856. Photographed in Monroe Co., Wisconsin. Adults reach 100 mm. It inhabits the northeastern USA and eastern Canada. This species hybridizes with Jefferson's Salamander (see below) over a large area of its distribution and the hybrids are often much larger.
 
Mabee's Salamander
Mabee's Salamander, Ambystoma mabeei Bishop, 1928. From Richmond Co. North Carolina. Mabee's Salamander inhabits the eastern coastal plain from Virginia to South Carolina. Adults may reach 100 mm.
 
Spotted Salamander
The Spotted Salamander, Ambystoma maculatum (Shaw, 1802). Photographed in Cook County, Illinois. Spotted Salamanders range from Nova Scotia and Manitoba, Canada southward to the Gulf Coast of the USA. It is a forest species, using forest ponds to reproduce. Adults can reach 248 mm.
 
Barred Tiger Salamander
Barred Tiger Salamander, Ambystoma m. mavortium Baird, 1850. From Falls River County, South Dakota (upper). And, the Gray Tiger Salamander, A. m. diaboli Dunn, 1940, from northeast Kansas (lower). Isolated populations can be found in eastern Washington (USA) and southern British Columbia (Canada). Otherwise it occurs from the Great Plains of Alberta, Saskatchewan, and Manitoba (Canada) southward through the Rocky Mountains from Utah to southeastern Arizona and eastward to South Dakota, Kansas, Oklahoma, and southward to South Texas and Chihuahua (Mexico). Adults may reach 327 mm.
 
Axolotol

The Axolotl, Ambystoma mexicanum. (Shaw and Nodder, 1798). Photographs of lab specimens. The Axolotl was original endemic to Lakes Xochimilco and Chalco and probably was in the connecting lakes of Texcoco and Zumpango in the Valley of Mexico. Currently it is known only from the southern remnants of Lake Xochimilco. Thomas Barbour wrote about these unusual animals in his 1926 book Reptiles & Amphibians:

"Urodele [=salamanders] amphibians exhibit occasionally a curious characteristic called neoteny; that is assuming sexual maturity during larval life. The edible axolotls of the lakes near Mexico City, often sold in the markets, are 'permanent larvae' and breed regularly in the gilled stage, never apparently transforming."

 
Marble Salamander
The Marbled Salamander, Ambystoma opacum (Gravenhorst, 1807). Specimen from Wake County, North Carolina. Adults may reach 127 mm. Females lay eggs in depressions and attend eggs until the depression fills with water. Marble salamanders range from southern New Hampshire and New York, southward to northern Florida, eastern Oklahoma and eastern Texas.
 
Mole Salamander
The Mole Salamander, Ambystoma talpoideum (Holbrook, 1838). Captive specimens from unknown localities. Adults may reach 122 mm. Inhabits the Gulf Coastal Plain from Texas to Florida and northward to southern Illinois and South Carolina. Isolated populations occur to the north of this region. Sherman Bishop wrote about this animal's habits in his 1943 book, Handbook of Salamanders, he said:
 
Hybrid Salamander
This is most likely a hybrid salamander between A. laterale x jeffersonianum from an unknown locality. It was about 300 mm in total length.
 
Family Information

Mole salamanders range from southeast Alaska and southern Canada (Labrador in the east) southward to the Mexican Plateau. They spend much of their lives underground, coming to the surface to breed, usually early in the spring. Species that retain their gills as adults are said to be neotenic, that is juvenile traits are retained in the adult. Breeding ponds usually lack fish and are often ephemeral; habitats are often the first to disappear as humans alter the landscape. The family contains two genera with about 35 species. Sever (1992, Journal of Morphology 212:305-322) suggested that Dicamptodon is the sister of Ambystoma based upon the morphology of cloacal glands. Molecular studies shows they last shared an ancestor with Dicamptodon about 115 Ma (170-107 Ma).

Several ambystomid salamanders have larvae that are polymorphic, with the heads of some individuals growing faster than others. These have become known as "cannibal morphs," a phenomenon first reported in 1907, but was not studied in any detail until the 1980's. Cannibal morphs have a larger body size, broader head, and enlarged vomerine teeth compared to the normal morphs. This morphology allows the cannibals to consume larger prey than the normal morphs, and the cannibal morph's prey often consists of their siblings, conspecifics, or large prey of other types.