California Giant Salamanders (Dicamptodon ensatus), NEOTENIC, family Ambystomatidae, CA, USA
Neotenic (or Paedomorphic) salamanders retain larval traits into adulthood, such as gills, and stay in the water as adults.
photograph by Anton Sorokin


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seen from Malaysia
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seen from Australia
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seen from Brazil

seen from Malaysia
seen from China
seen from China
seen from China
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seen from Yemen

seen from Singapore

seen from China
seen from China

seen from Germany
seen from Japan

seen from Jamaica

seen from Russia
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seen from United States
California Giant Salamanders (Dicamptodon ensatus), NEOTENIC, family Ambystomatidae, CA, USA
Neotenic (or Paedomorphic) salamanders retain larval traits into adulthood, such as gills, and stay in the water as adults.
photograph by Anton Sorokin
Inked Dicamptodon with stylized Calochortus tolmiei, a flower common to our redwoods forests.
fFucking creatures post
fun fact theres no picture here of the American Dipper (bird) but the last picture is of its nest- dippers are so sick they can like jump into fast-moving streams and angle their wings downward to use the water pressure to hold them at the bottom while they walk along and look for aquatic arthropods
also any time they are standing around they kind of like... bounce??? like theyll sort of bend and unbend their knees and just do a little pop squat every couple seconds
extremely good bird
hehe little chubby man
This Coastal Giant salamander larva (Dicamptodon tenebrosus) may not be all that giant now, but give it a few years and it could grow to thirteen inches in length -- the largest terrestrial salamander in the world.
Van Damme State Park, Mendocino County, California, September 2017.
California Giant Salamander (Dicamptodon ensatus), family Ambystomatidae, Santa Cruz, CA, USA
photograph by Matthias Lemm
Coastal Giant Salamander (Dicamptodon tenebrosus), family Ambystomatidae, Oregon, USA
This large salamander can reach a length of up to 34 cm (13 inches) total length.
photograph by Dave Huth
Drafting drafting 1 2 3. Thinking about a nice chunky Dicamptodon clambering down a slope at night to forage.