The Salamanders that Refuse to Grow Up
In a Wisconsin reservoir, these normally terrestrial animals have managed not only to survive but to thrive underwater
- By Erika Janik
- Smithsonian.com, August 29, 2011, Subscribe
(Page 3 of 3)
“The reservoir’s purpose was to hold water for a process that made gunpowder, a destructive process,” says Mossman. “And yet a whole living system developed behind our backs, without our knowledge and control.”
The reservoir population seems to prove that Eastern tiger salamanders are capable of surviving to adulthood in water; that they can become neotenic in the right conditions; and that they may have commonly lived in permanent bodies of water in the past. Casper, Mossman and Lannoo believe that the Badger salamanders may represent one of the last instances of a biological phenomenon that was once widespread.
“The salamanders adapted to what Badger gave them,” says Mossman. “The whole system is pretty unusual, but they’ve managed to thrive in this environment. It’s all theirs.”
The reservoir may not be theirs for long, however. It’s scheduled to be drained as early as this fall. Maintaining the reservoir requires work and money, and with the transition of the Badger property to civilian use, it just isn’t needed anymore.
The researchers are scrambling to learn as much as they can before the reservoir is gone. They also hope to find a home for the salamanders that will preserve their neotenic state. Once removed from the reservoir, the salamanders will metamorphose fairly quickly—within several weeks for most neotenic adults—so the habitat is just as important as the salamanders themselves for understanding neoteny and what happened at Badger. All of this is complicated by the many still unanswered questions about the salamanders’ biology. It’s hard to find the salamanders a home when the factors governing their neotenic status aren’t yet known.
“It really is an amazing educational opportunity,” says Mossman. “The Badger salamanders are a living testament to the persistence of life.”
Erika Janik is a writer and radio producer in Madison, Wisconsin.
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Comments (1)
Seems to me, that with such a rare find, that at least some of them could be sent to aquariums or zoos. Seems a waste to take them out and let them morph into what we think of as their normal adult state. My home state of SC has the Savannah River Ecology site, which has done many herptological studies. They would probably love to study them
Posted by Thomas DeVore on March 21,2013 | 01:44 PM