| The dwarf salamander is
aptly named, as it is one of the smallest vertebrates in North America.
Full-grown adults frequently weigh less than one gram and may be
less than 2 inches long from snout to tail tip. Superficially, the
dwarf salamander may look like a tiny southern two-lined salamander,
but there is one sure character for diagnosis: The dwarf salamander
has only four toes on each of its back feet, whereas all other Eurycea
have five (as do most other salamanders). Recent genetic and morphological
studies have revealed that there may be as many as four species
of dwarf salamanders. One species is bronze-brown colored while
the other is yellow. Dwarf salamanders inhabit the edges of Carolina
bays, migrating to the bays in spring (in some permanent bays) or
fall (for more temporary bays) in order to breed. Larval development
is completed in the bays in five to six months. Males mature at
less than one year of age, but females take twice as long to reach
first reproduction.
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