Yes, salamanders are cold blooded and cannot regulate their temperature without help from external heat sources. Their body temperature changes as the temperature around them changes.
Salamanders are cold-blooded, not warm-blooded. Salamanders are amphibians, and all amphibians are cold-blooded. no. they take on the temperature of the environment. salamanders need a heat source like a light when in captivity.
they have thick skin
fire salamanders will do well in normal room temperature 73-76 F.
Fire salamanders must stay within 60-74 degrees Fahrenheit in order to stay the regular temperature.
Yes, salamanders, like all vertebrates, have backbones.
Salamanders are amphibians. All amphibians are cold-blooded ectotherms-animals whose body temperature depends on their environment.
Salamanders are Poikilothermic. This means that their body temperature is determined by their environment.
Some salamanders eat crickets. Also, some salamanders eat very small fish. Oh and some other salamanders don't like to be kept as pets. Please don't drop them when some salamanders are out of the water. Thanks for listening! I have answered seven of these questions on Wikianswer.
Salamanders, like most amphibians, live in or near fresh bodies of water. However, chemicals like pesticides and weed killers are carried there by runoff. Unfortunately, like other amphibians, salamanders are very susceptible to such chemicals.
cause they like the water
Skin.