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axolotl
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axolotl

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The rare axolotl Ambystoma mexicanum lives in mountain lakes in Mexico. The capture of specimens as pets and the introduction of predatory fish has led to a decline in numbers.

Aquatic larval form (‘tadpole’) of the Mexican salamander Ambystoma mexicanum, belonging to the family Ambystomatidae. Axolotls may be up to 30 cm/12 in long. They are remarkable because they can breed without changing to the adult form, and will metamorphose into adults only in response to the drying-up of their ponds. The adults then migrate to another pond.

Axolotls resemble a newt in shape, having a powerful tail, two pairs of weak limbs, and three pairs of simple external gills. They lay eggs like a frog's in strings attached to water plants by a viscous substance, and the young, hatched in two to three weeks, resemble the parents. See also neoteny.



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2 This is of course not entirely true, for early peoples did not know about the denizens of the dark like anaerobic bacteria, axolotls or the wriggling worms that dwell round fumaroles in the deep trenches of the oceans, all reproducing and surviving in total absence of flight.
Gardiner, both at the University of California, Irvine, have turned to salamanders called axolotls to study how a blastema transforms itself into a limb.
 
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