Salamander is the common name applied to approximately 500 species of amphibians typically with slender bodies, short legs, and long tails. The moist skin of these amphibians usually makes them reliant on habitats in or near water or under some protection on moist ground, often in a swamp. Some species are aquatic throughout life, some take to the water intermittently, and some are entirely terrestrial as adults. The Chinese Giant Salamander is fully aquatic and is the largest of all salamanders, growing up to 1.8 meters and really cool.
A salamander lives in America and temperate zones of Northern Africa. They will usually be found under stones by streams, or under logs (also in logs) or under leaves in moist forests.
salamanders live in warm, dark places such as the forest floor!
The Yonahlossee salamander is a particularly large woodland salamander from the southern Appalachian Mountains in the United States.
They live in Piedmont.
Yes it can
No. Mammals are warm-blooded creatures with fur, skin or hair, and they give birth to live young which they then feed with mother's milk. Like a mammal, a salamander is a vertebrate, but that is where the similarities virtually end. A salamander has moist skin, and is cold-blooded. It lays eggs and has to live in water for part of its life. The salamander is a member of the amphibian family, like frogs, toads, newts and axolotls.
A salamander is a legendary creature which can live in fire. The salamander used in cooking is so-called because it is, in domestic use, fireproof.
YES
About 5 years.
colorado
a swamp
Yes there are black salamanders that live in California.
Some people said that the fire salamander is made out of fire and can live forever in fire.But all of this is not true.
black-spotted ones