I knew Butano State Park was known for their newts based on our brief visit in the rain on
October 24, 2010. According to the brochure, February is a good month to spot newts. I didn't expect to find any in the middle of summer. We actually saw a few, both on land well away from any water and in Little Butano Creek. Andy pointed them out to me. I'm discovering he has quite the eye for finding
newts/salamanders.
Butano has two similar looking species of newts, the CA newt and the
rough-skinned newt (
Taricha granulosa). Based on the bumpy skin of the individual I photographed above, I figured I had a rough-skinned newt. Nope. Thankfully,
CaliforniaHerps.com has this handy-dandy Taricha ID guide. Both transform to a smoother skin during their aquatic reproductive phase - never heard of this before researching for this blog post. Plus, both have yellow patches in the eyes. What sold me on the
T. torosa ID was the light-colored lower eyelid.
I'll admit to picking up this fellow to keep him from sashaying into the water before I could get a couple of pictures. We later read that it has poisonous skin secretions. I need to learn to not pick up wild, unknown things, even if they're irresistibly cute. The toes totally get me laughing. Four in front and five in back. As a side note, it looks like this one still has its
nuptial pads. Shoot, forget
caterpillars and
tadpoles, I think I may want to raise a few newts, ones without poisonous secretions.
ps 02/17/14 - Given my
outing with fellow bloggers on February 10, 2014, I'm now wondering if this might be a rough-skinned newt intergrade. Erg.