Red Spots That Warn and Attract

Adult eastern newt swimming (photo from Wikimedia Commons)

10 March 2024

Last Thursday I went looking for fairy shrimp(*) at Todd Nature Reserve and found amorous red-spotted newts (Notophthalmus viridescens) instead. The newts attracted my attention because I had never seen adults before, let alone their courtship.

When you think “red-spotted newt” you probably visualize the red eft, the juvenile terrestrial, dry-skinned phase that lasts 1-3 years. Since red-spotted newts can live up to 15 years this phase is not a high percentage of its lifetime, but it is unforgettable.

Red eft, juvenile phase of the red-spotted newt (photo from Wikimedia Commons)

Red efts wander fearlessly overland because their bright orange color and red spots outlined in black are a warning to predators: “Don’t eat me! You’ll regret it.”

Red eft on a mossy rock (photo from Wikimedia Commons)

The skin of juveniles and adults secretes tetrodotoxin (TTX), the same neurotoxin found in pufferfish that causes paralysis and death.

According to Wikipedia, TTX “can enter the body of a victim by ingestion, injection, or inhalation, or through abraded skin.” But this hasn’t stopped anyone from holding red-spotted newts. Apparently this activity is just fine.

Red eft in hand at Dolly Sods (photo from Wikimedia Commons)
Adult red-spotted newt in hand (photo from Wikimedia Commons)

Fortunately people don’t eat newts except …

Poisonings from tetrodotoxin have been almost exclusively associated with the consumption of pufferfish.” … [In North America there is] at least one report of a fatal episode in Oregon when an individual swallowed a rough-skinned newt (Taricha granulosa) on a dare.

Wikipedia: Tetrotodoxin

The red spots warn predators. They also attract female newts during the breeding season.

Courtship in newts is fascinating. The male will lure and entice the female with his many red spots and wiggling tail, which releases pheromones (specialized chemicals). The male, with his hind legs, will grasp the female just behind her forelimbs and then rub his chin along her snout just prior to external fertilization.

Connecticut Dept of Energy and Environmental Protection: Red-spotted newt

She likes his red spots. He embraces her.

Courtship of red-spotted newts (photo by Judy Walls linked from Vermont Reptile and Amphibian Atlas)

It’s very sweet to see this in Spring.

(credits are in the captions)

(*) p.s. Click here to learn about fairy shrimp.

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