The Smooth Newt - Lissotriton vulgaris
(formerlyTriturus
vulgaris)

Copyright: Howard Inns
Our most widespread newt,
the Smooth Newt, is found throughout Britain and is the only newt species to be
found in Ireland. It can grow to
10cm and is most often found in ponds during the breeding season between
February and June. The Smooth Newt
is brown, the female being relatively plain whilst the male is spotty and
develops a continuous wavy crest along its back in the breeding season. The belly of both sexes is yellow to orange with black spots and the
spots on the throat provide a good way of telling this species apart from
Palmate Newts (which have no spots on their throat). Outside the breeding season newts come onto land and live in damp places;
they are most frequently encountered underneath logs and debris at this phase in
their annual cycle. Newts found in these circumstances are sometimes confused
with lizards but lizards are quick and active and have scaly rather than smooth
skin.
Newts eat small
invertebrates either on land or in the water. Like frogs and toads they have a tadpole stage; a newt tadpole is called
an eft. Unlike frogs and toads, the
tadpoles of newts develop their front legs before their back legs. Newt efts breathe through external feathery gills which sprout from
behind the head. Spawn is laid as
individual eggs each of which is carefully wrapped in a leaf of pond weed by the
female newt.
The Smooth Newt, like the
Common Frog is often found in garden ponds, frequently arriving of its own
accord. Like the frog its tadpoles
will be eaten by fish if they are present. Garden ponds have become extremely important for this species
especially as ponds in the wider countryside have become fewer and more
polluted.
Smooth Newts are protected
by law in Great Britain against being sold or traded in any way. In Northern Ireland they are fully protected this prohibiting killing,
injuring, capturing, disturbance, possession or trade.
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