Northern Dwarf Siren

Northern Dwarf Siren
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Amphibia
Subclass: Lissamphibia
Order: Caudata
Suborder: Sirenoidea
Family: Sirenidae
Genus: Pseudobranchus
Species: P. striatus
Binomial name
Pseudobranchus striatus
(LeConte, 1824)

The Northern Dwarf Siren, Pseudobranchus striatus is a perennibranch salamander lacking hind legs. Found in the south-eastern United States, it one of two currently recognized species of dwarf sirens. Three subspecies are currently recognized; P. s. striatus, the Broad-striped Dwarf Siren, P. s. lustricolus, the Gulf Hammock Dwarf Siren, and P. s. spheniscus, the Slender Dwarf Siren.

Contents

Description

The Northern Dwarf Siren is the smallest siren known at only 4-9 7/8" (10.2-25.1 cm). Like other members of the Sirenidae the Northern Dwarf Siren is aquatic and gilled throughout its life. Being slender and almost eel-like it is noticeable because of the light stripes on its side compared to the brown or light grey dorsum. The siren has only one gill slit, a finned tail (tip compressed), costal grooves, and three toes on each of the two front feet. They are very secretive and dwell among water hyacinth roots and amid debris at pond bottoms. They feed on tiny invertebrates and during droughts encase themselves in mud beneath the pond bottom. When handled or caught they make faint yelping noises.

Breeding

Northern Dwarf Sirens breed in the spring and gather in large numbers at the pond or spring they were born in. Male and female sirens can not be determined through external examination. The sirens fertilize externally and lay a large number of membrane-encolsed eggs. The eggs are laid singly on roots of aquatic plants and the larvae hatch about a month after they have been laid at about 5/8" (14 mm).

Habitat & Range

This particular siren tend to live in shallow ditches, cypress swamps, and weed-choked ponds. They live on the coastal plain of South Carolina, Georgia, and Florida.

Subspecies

References