CaliforniaHerps.com

A Guide to the Amphibians
and Reptiles of California




Long-toed Salamander - Ambystoma macrodactylum

Santa Cruz Long-toed Salamander -
Ambystoma macrodactylum croceum

Russell and Anderson, 1956
Click on a picture for a larger view


Bright Green
: Range of this subspecies in California
Ambystoma macrodactylum croceum -
Santa Cruz Long-toed Salamander

Range of other subspecies in California:

Red: Ambystoma macrodactylum sigillatum -
Southern Long-toed  Salamander



Click on the top map for a topographical view.
Click on the bottom map for a larger view.

Map with California County Names



Dark Blue
: Close-up range of this subspecies




observation link





Santa Cruz Long-toed Salamander
Adult, Santa Cruz County
Santa Cruz Long-toed Salamander Santa Cruz Long-toed Salamander Santa Cruz Long-toed Salamander Santa Cruz Long-toed Salamander
Adult, Santa Cruz County
Adult, Santa Cruz County
© Spencer Riffle
Adult, Santa Cruz County © Zach Lim Adult, Santa Cruz County
© Brad Alexander
Santa Cruz Long-toed Salamander Santa Cruz Long-toed Salamander Santa Cruz Long-toed Salamander Santa Cruz Long-toed Salamander
Adult, Santa Cruz County
Adult, Monterey County © Zach Lim Adult, Monterey County © Zach Lim Adult, Monterey County © Zach Lim
Santa Cruz Long-toed Salamander Santa Cruz Long-toed Salamander Santa Cruz Long-toed Salamander
Adult, Santa Cruz County © Ryan Sikola
Santa Cruz Long-toed Salamander Santa Cruz Long-toed Salamander Santa Cruz Long-toed Salamander Santa Cruz Long-toed Salamander
Adult, Santa Cruz County
© Spencer Riffle
Adult, Monterey County © Dave Feliz Adult, Santa Cruz County
© Spencer Riffle
Adult, Santa Cruz County
© Spencer Riffle
Santa Cruz Long-toed Salamander Santa Cruz Long-toed Salamander Santa Cruz Long-toed Salamander Santa Cruz Long-toed Salamander
This dark and nearly unmarked adult was found in Santa Cruz County.
© James Maughn
This Santa Cruz County salamander was found climbing some grass at night, apparently hunting for food, probably small slugs. © Jared Heald This Santa Cruz County salamander is displaying a defensive posture after being disturbed by bright light at night.
© Jared Heald
Santa Cruz Long-toed Salamander Santa Cruz Long-toed Salamander Santa Cruz Long-toed Salamander Santa Cruz Long-toed Salamander
Adults found on a rainy night in Santa Cruz County © Adam Gitmed This Santa Cruz County salamander was discovered eating an earthworm.
© Jared Heald
Santa Cruz Long-toed Salamander Santa Cruz Long-toed Salamander Santa Cruz Long-toed Salamander Santa Cruz Long-toed Salamander
Adult, Santa Cruz County
© Ryan Sikola
Adult, Santa Cruz County
© Ryan Sikola
Adult, Santa Cruz County
© Ryan Sikola
Adult, Santa Cruz County
© Ryan Sikola
Santa Cruz Long-toed Salamander Santa Cruz Long-toed Salamander Southern Long-toed Salamander Santa Cruz Long-toed Salamander
Adult, Santa Cruz County
© Zeev Nitzan Ginsburg
Adult, dorsal pattern close-up, Santa Cruz County © Ryan Sikola An elongated toe (number 4) on each hind foot is the "long toe" that gives this species its common name. © Spencer Riffle
Santa Cruz Long-toed Salamander Santa Cruz Long-toed Salamander    
Looking at the salamander on the left and the willow leaf on the right you can see how the pattern on the salamander helps it blend into its environment to remain undetected. © Ryan Sikola Recently-metamorphosed juvenile, Santa Cruz County, with native willow leaves they blend in with that are common in the breeding area.
© Leyna Stemle
   
       
Transformed Juveniles
Santa Cruz Long-toed Salamander Santa Cruz Long-toed Salamander
Two recently-metamorphosed juveniles, Monterey County © Dave Feliz Recently-metamorphosed juvenile, Monterey County © Dave Feliz
Santa Cruz Long-toed Salamander Santa Cruz Long-toed Salamander Santa Cruz Long-toed Salamander Santa Cruz Long-toed Salamander
Metamorph, Santa Cruz County
© Leyna Stemle
Metamorph, Santa Cruz County
© Leyna Stemle
Metamorph, Santa Cruz County
© Leyna Stemle
Metamorph, Santa Cruz County
© Leyna Stemle
Santa Cruz Long-toed Salamander Santa Cruz Long-toed Salamander    
Juvenile © Jon Hirt Juvenile, Santa Cruz County
© Jon Hirt
   
       
Larvae
Southern Long-toed Salamander Southern Long-toed Salamander Southern Long-toed Salamander
Larva in water, Monterey County © Dave Feliz Larva in water, Monterey County
© Dave Feliz
Larva, Santa Cruz County
© Aidan O'Brien
Southern Long-toed Salamander Southern Long-toed Salamander Southern Long-toed Salamander  
Aquatic Larvae, Santa Cruz County © Leyna Stemle Aquatic Larvae, Santa Cruz County
The second larva from the left has almost completed metamorphosis, having reabsorbed most of its gills and excess dorsal tail. The others show no signs of metamorphosis yet.
© Leyna Stemle
 
Southern Long-toed Salamander Southern Long-toed Salamander    
Aquatic Larva, USFWS Aquatic Larva, USFWS    
       
Sympatric Salamander Larvae
  Southern Long-toed Salamander larva  

 

Taricha granulosa

There are large dark areas on either side of the light coloring around the pupil
Ambystoma macrodactylum croceum

There are no large dark areas in the light coloring around the pupil
 
CA Tiger Salamander Egg CA Tiger Salamander Egg Southern Long-toed Salamander Southern Long-toed Salamander
Ambystoma californiense

Snout is broader, more shovel-shaped

Color is mostly gray, or with a little green or blue

Toe is more wedge-shaped
Ambystoma macrodactylum croceum

Snout is more rounded

Color ranges from black to motted green and tan to gray

Toe is a little more skinny and long
 
More Pictures of Eggs, Larvae, and Young of Other Subspecies of Long-toed Salamanders
       
Habitat
Santa Cruz Long-toed Salamander habitat Santa Cruz Long-toed Salamander habitat Santa Cruz Long-toed Salamander habitat Santa Cruz Long-toed Salamander habitat
Dry breeding pond in November,
Santa Cruz County
Breeding pond, winter,
Santa Cruz County
Breeding pond, late winter
Santa Cruz County
Wildlife refuge habitat (name removed)
Santa Cruz County
Santa Cruz Long-toed Salamander habitat Santa Cruz Long-toed Salamander habitat Santa Cruz Long-toed Salamander habitat Santa Cruz Long-toed Salamander habitat
Dried wetland breeding habitat in August, Santa Cruz County © Leyna Stemle Upland habitat, Santa Cruz County
© Leyna Stemle
Breeding pond habitat, Santa Cruz County © Leyna Stemle Upland habitat, Monterey County
© Leyna Stemle
Santa Cruz Long-toed Salamander habitat Santa Cruz Long-toed Salamander habitat    
Breeding pond in late summer, Santa Cruz County © Leyna Stemle Habitat, Monterey County
© Dave Feliz
   
     
Description
 
Size
Adults are 1 3/5 - 3 1/2 inches long (4.1 - 8.9 cm) from snout to vent, 4 - 6 2/3 inches (10 - 17 cm) in total length.

Appearance
A medium-sized salamander.
The body is stout with 12 - 13 costal grooves and a broad rounded head, a blunt snout, small protuberant eyes, and no nasolabial grooves. 
The tail is flattened from side to side to facilitate swimming.
Color and Pattern
Black above with an orange dorsal stripe, broken into spots and bars.
The sides are sprinkled with whitish specks.
The venter is grey or black.
Young
Larvae have broad heads, three pairs of bushy gills and broad caudal fins that extend well onto the back.

Life History and Behavior
A member of the Mole Salamander family (Ambystomatidae) whose members are medium to large in size with heavy, stocky bodies.

Ambystomatid salamanders have two distinct life phases:
- Larvae hatch from eggs laid in water where they swim using an enlarged tail fin and breathe with filamentous external gills. - Aquatic larvae transform into four-legged salamanders that live on the ground and breathe air with lungs.

Transformed adults are terrestrial and breathe with lungs but some gilled adults remain in the water and grow to a large size before transforming. However, neotenic adults have not been reported.
Activity
Adults spend much of their lives underground, often utilizing the tunnels of burrowing mammals such as moles and ground squirrels.

Transformed adults are rarely found outside of the breeding season.
They are mostly found under wood, logs, rocks, bark and other objects near breeding sites, or when they are breeding in the water. At other times of the year they stay in rotten logs or moist places underground such as animal burrows.

Adults migrate to breeding sites, then return to terrestrial habitats.
Longevity
Adults live to about 10 years of age.
Defense and Sound
Adults produce sticky skin secretions to deter predators, and they can vocalize with squeaks and clicks, which might startle predators who capture them. (Hossack, B. R. 2002. natural history notes: Ambystoma macrodactylum krausei (northern long-toed salamander). Vocalization. Herpetological Review 33:121.)
Diet and Feeding
Carnivorous.
Transformed adults eat small invertebrates, including worms, mollusks, insects, and spiders.
Larvae start by eating small crustaceans. As they increase in size, they gradually consume larger prey items, including crustaceans, worms, mollusks, and frog tadoles.
Larger larvae may cannibalize smaller larvae.
Young larvae feed by sitting and waiting for prey, while larger larvae also stalk and pursue prey.
Reproduction
Reproduction is aquatic. Adults become sexually mature at 1 - 3 years, and migrate overland to the breeding site during nights with heavy rain from October through February with breeding occurring in January and February. Males enter the ponds before females.
Adults remain in the ponds from several days to more than a month.
Eggs
Females lay from 90 - 400 eggs in clusters containing from 1 - 81 eggs in shallow water, attaching them singly or in loose clusters to the undersides of logs and branches, or leaving them unattached on the bottom.
Eggs hatch in 2 - 5 weeks.
Young
Drying of ponds triggers transformation.
Larvae transform in 4 - 5 months in temporary ponds.
Larvae may not transform the first season.
Young remain at the pond sites until the first rains in the fall.

Habitat
Found in dense riparian vegetation such as willows, thick coastal scrub, and oak woodland.

Geographical Range
The species Ambystoma macrodactylum - Long-toed Salamander, is widespread in the West, occurring in California, Oregon, Idaho, and Montana, western Canada, and Southeast Alaska.

This subspecies, Ambystoma macrodactylum croceum - Santa Cruz Long-toed Salamander, is endemic to California, inhabiting a very limited range with scattered populations in a reported 11 locations (U.S.F.W. 1999.) around the coast of Monterey Bay in southern Santa Cruz County and the northern edge of Monterey County. It is thought to be a relict population, now isolated from the rest of its species.



Full Species Range Map
Notes on Taxonomy
Five subspecies of Ambysoma macrodactylum are traditionally recognized, two occur in California:
A. m. sigillatum
A. m. croceum.

A 2015 study* has identified a sixth distinct group in the Central Oregon highlands, but suggested no changes in the taxonomy of the species.
(You can see this new group and my estimate of the ranges of all the subspecies described in the paper HERE.)

*(J. A. Lee-Yaw & D. E. Irwin, in The importance (or lack thereof) of niche divergence to the maintenance of a northern species complex: the case of the long-toed salamander (Ambystoma macrodactylum Baird)
Journal of Evolutionary Biology 28 (2015) 917-930)

Alternate and Previous Names (Synonyms)

Ambystoma macrodactylum croceum - Santa Cruz Long-toed Salamander (Stebbins 1966, 1985, 2003, 2012)
Ambystoma macrodactylum
- Long-toed Salamander (Storer 1925, Bishop 1943, Stebbins 1954)
Ambystoma macrodactyla (Baird 1850)

Conservation Issues  (Conservation Status)
This subspecies is listed as federally endangered and heavily protected due to its limited range combined with loss of habitat to land development.

A project to rehabilitate a drying breeding pond at a National Wildlife Refuge was undertaken in 2014. Larvae were captured and raised in aquariums and then successfully released back into the wild.

Taxonomy
Family Ambystomatidae Mole Salamanders Gray, 1850
Genus Ambystoma Mole Salamanders Tschudi, 1838
Species macrodactylum Long-toed Salamander Baird, 1849
Subspecies

croceum Santa Cruz Long-toed Salamander Russell and Anderson, 1956
Original Description
Ambystoma macrodactylum - Baird, 1849 - Journ. Acad. Nat. Sci. Philadelphia, Ser. 2, Vol. 1, p. 292
Ambystoma macrodactylum croceum - Russell and Anderson, 1956 - Herpetologica, Vol. 12, p. 137

from Original Description Citations for the Reptiles and Amphibians of North America © Ellin Beltz

Meaning of the Scientific Name
Ambystoma: anabystoma - to cram into the mouth. Possibly derived from Amblystoma: Greek - blunt mouth.
macrodactylum:
Greek: long toe
croceum
: Latin - saffron colored, referring to the dull orange dorsal stripe.

from Scientific and Common Names of the Reptiles and Amphibians of North America - Explained © Ellin Beltz

Related or Similar California Salamanders
Southern Long-toed Salamander
California Tiger Salamander

More Information and References
California Department of Fish and Wildlife

AmphibiaWeb

Thelander, Carl G., editor in chief. Life on the Edge - A Guide to California's Endangered Natural Resources - Wildlife. Berkeley: Bio Systems Books, 1994.

Stebbins, Robert C., and McGinnis, Samuel M.  Field Guide to Amphibians and Reptiles of California: Revised Edition (California Natural History Guides) University of California Press, 2012.

Stebbins, Robert C. California Amphibians and Reptiles. The University of California Press, 1972.

Flaxington, William C. Amphibians and Reptiles of California: Field Observations, Distribution, and Natural History. Fieldnotes Press, Anaheim, California, 2021.

Samuel M. McGinnis and Robert C. Stebbins. Peterson Field Guide to Western Reptiles & Amphibians. 4th Edition. Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company, 2018.

Stebbins, Robert C. A Field Guide to Western Reptiles and Amphibians. 3rd Edition. Houghton Mifflin Company, 2003.

Behler, John L., and F. Wayne King. The Audubon Society Field Guide to North American Reptiles and Amphibians. Alfred A. Knopf, 1992.

Powell, Robert., Joseph T. Collins, and Errol D. Hooper Jr. A Key to Amphibians and Reptiles of the Continental United States and Canada. The University Press of Kansas, 1998.

Bartlett, R. D. & Patricia P. Bartlett. Guide and Reference to the Amphibians of Western North America (North of Mexico) and Hawaii. University Press of Florida, 2009.

Bishop, Sherman C. Handbook of Salamanders. Cornell University Press, 1943.

Lannoo, Michael (Editor). Amphibian Declines: The Conservation Status of United States Species. University of California Press, June 2005.

Petranka, James W. Salamanders of the United States and Canada. Smithsonian Institution, 1998.

Conservation Status

The following conservation status listings for this animal are taken from the April 2024 State of California Special Animals List and the April 2024 Federally Listed Endangered and Threatened Animals of California list (unless indicated otherwise below.) Both lists are produced by multiple agencies every year, and sometimes more than once per year, so the conservation status listing information found below might not be from the most recent lists. To make sure you are seeing the most recent listings, go to this California Department of Fish and Wildlife web page where you can search for and download both lists:
https://www.wildlife.ca.gov/Data/CNDDB/Plants-and-Animals.

A detailed explanation of the meaning of the status listing symbols can be found at the beginning of the two lists. For quick reference, I have included them on my Special Status Information page.

If no status is listed here, the animal is not included on either list. This most likely indicates that there are no serious conservation concerns for the animal. To find out more about an animal's status you can also go to the NatureServe and IUCN websites to check their rankings.

Check the current California Department of Fish and Wildlife sport fishing regulations to find out if this animal can be legally pursued and handled or collected with possession of a current fishing license. You can also look at the summary of the sport fishing regulations as they apply only to reptiles and amphibians that has been made for this website.



Organization Status Listing  Notes
NatureServe Global Ranking G5
T1 T2
Species Secure.
Subspcies Criticially Imperiled - Imperiled
NatureServe State Ranking S2 Imperiled
U.S. Endangered Species Act (ESA) FE Listed as Endangered 3/11/67
California Endangered Species Act (CESA) SE Listed as Endangered 6/27/71
California Department of Fish and Wildlife FP Fully Protected
Bureau of Land Management None
USDA Forest Service None
IUCN
 

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