Title: CAECILIANS
1CAECILIANS
2Who are they?
- Order Gymnophiona
- Family 5 families
- Genus 26
- Species 124
- Habitat loose soil, leaf litter in tropical
forests or rivers and streams
- Length up to 2.4m
- shortest 3.5 in.
- Up to 2.2 lbs
- Life span up to 13
- yrs in zoos
- Offspring 30 60
- eggs 2 - 25 young
- born
3Range
Central Africa, Southeast Asia, Southern Mexico
to Argentina
4Description
- Caecilians are tropical amphibians that look like
large worms or slick snakes. They have no arms or
legs, and sometimes its hard to tell which end
is the head and which is the tail! Their shiny
skin is ringed with skin folds called annuli, and
they usually come in shades of gray, brown,
black, orange, or yellow. Some species have tiny,
fishlike scales (dermal scales) within the rings.
5(No Transcript)
6Annuli and Smooth
7Dermal Scale Present in Some Caecilians
8Oviparous Species
- Some female caecilians lay eggs in damp holes
near water. When the larvae hatch they have gills
and a short, finned tail to help them swim in the
water, feeding on plankton. Through a series of
changes the gills are replaced by a single lung,
the skin becomes thicker, the annuli develop, and
sensory tentacles appear. At this point the newly
developed adult returns to the land and goes
underground.
9Caecilian Embryo
Embryo removed from egg. Yolk is visible as well
as sensory structures along head and side of
body. These include mechano- and electrical
receptors of the lateral line. Eggs are laid
in burrows near streams. hatch, larval stage
lives in streams until metamorphosis a
year later.
Icthyophis kohtaoensis
10Viviparous Species
- Some species give birth to live young that are
fully developed inside the mother before they are
born.
11Larval Caecilian
Aquatic stage with gills that are transient.
12Senses
- A hard, thick, pointy skull helps these
amphibians dig in soft dirt. Because of their
underground lifestyle, caecilians have little
need to see or hear. Therefore, their eyes are
very tiny in some species, or hidden under the
skin or skull in other species, making just tiny
gray bumps for eyes. Some species in South
America spend their lives in water instead of on
land. Caecilians dont have ear openings, so it
is doubtful they can hear sounds.
13Tentacles
- Tentacles, located between the nostrils and the
eyes, are used to locate prey and detect
surroundings.
14Diet
- Inside a caecilians mouth are dozens of
needle-sharp teeth. The teeth are used to grab
worms, termites, beetle pupae, mollusks, small
snakes, frogs, lizards, and even other
caecilians. All food is swallowed whole.
15Eating tubifex worms
16Skin Glands
- Caecilians have toxic glands in their skin that
sometimes protect them from being eaten by other
animals.
Mucus glands
Toxic glands
17Fossorial
Adult caecilian can bury itself in a matter of
minutes. Fossorial animals spend most of their
time underground.
18Caecilian Head
19Families of Caecilians
- Rhinatrematidae South America
- Ichthyophiidae Southeast Asia
- Uraeotyphlidae Southern India
- Scolecomorphidae Subsahara Africa
- Caeciliaidae South and Central America,
- Subsahara Africa, Southern Asia
- Typhlonectidae South America
20Rhinatrematidae
- Small, terrestrial caecilian with aquatic larvae
_at_1998 Marvalee H. Wake
21Ichthyophiidae
- Large terrestrial caecilian with aquatic larvae
22Uraeotyphlidae
- 30cm, oviparous, all are gray brown in color
23Scolecomorphidae
- 45 cm, terrestrial, brown and black in color
- Ovoviviparous, possibly viviparous
- Eyes are very reduced
24Caeciliaidae
- Very varied with small (10cm) to large (1.5m)
organisms. - Terrestrial, aquatic, oviparous, viviparous.
- Most are gray black but some are more colorful.
25Typhlonectidae
- Aquatic caecilian, viviparous
- Larval gills
26Typhlonectes
Sometimes sold in fish stores. Aquatic. Female
with young.
27Aquatic Species