That's a left over from the Tadpole stage, it soon disappears.
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.
Salamanders are usually very small creatures with snake-like bodies, although unlike snakes their bodies have limbs and use quadrupedal motion to move. Salamanders naturally habitat darkly lit, damp, and densely wooded areas like the temperate forests in Northern America.
Salamanders are amphibians with slender bodies, long tails, and moist skin. They are usually found near water sources, as they require moisture to survive. Salamanders come in a variety of colors and sizes, and are known for their ability to regenerate lost limbs.
the side with the lines on it if it doesnt have lines it is either side
Amphibians with long slender bodies that keep their tails as adults are called salamanders. They differ from lizards in that they spend a portion of their lives in the water.
Lines that go side to side, but never touch, are known as parallel lines. The two railway lines on which a train runs along is a common example of parallel lines.
parallel lines
Adult salamanders keep their tails. Salamanders are a group of amphibians typically characterized by a lizard-like appearance, with slender bodies, blunt snouts, and short limbs. They look like between a frog and a lizard.
how do born salamanders come out adult salamanders
they are called lines of LONGITUDE ( the vertical or up and down lines) and LATITUDE (the horizontal or side to side lines)
Salamanders are anphibians
no paralle lines are side by side and will NEVER cross