The Asiatic salamanders (family Hynobiidae) are primitive salamanders found all over Asia, and in European Russia. They are closely related to the giant salamanders (family Cryptobranchidae), with which they form the suborder Cryptobranchoidea. About half of hynobiids currently described are endemic to Japan, but their range also covers parts of China, Russia, Afghanistan and Iran.
Hynobiid salamanders practice external fertilization, or spawning. And, unlike other salamander families which reproduce internally, male hynobiids focus on egg sacs rather than females during breeding. The female lays two egg sacs at a time, each containing up to 70 eggs. Parental care is common.
A few species have very reduced lungs, or no lungs at all. Larvae can sometimes have reduced external gills if they live in cold and very oxygen-rich water.
Fossils of hynobiids are known from the Miocene to the present in Asia and Eastern Europe, though fossils of cryptobranchoids more closely related to hynobiids than to giant salamanders extend back to the Middle Jurassic.
Phylogeny
Cladograms based on the work of Pyron and Wiens (2011) and modified using Mikko Haaramo
Classification
Currently, 100 species are known. These genera make up the Hynobiidae:
Subfamily Hynobiinae
- Genus Afghanodon
- Afghanodon mustersi <small>(Smith, 1940)</small>
- Genus Batrachuperus (Chinese stream salamanders)
- Batrachuperus karlschmidti <small>Liu, 1950</small>
- Batrachuperus londongensis <small>Liu and Tian, 1978</small>
- Batrachuperus pinchonii <small>(David, 1872)</small>
- Batrachuperus tibetanus <small>Schmidt, 1925</small>
- Batrachuperus yenyuanensis <small>Liu, 1950</small>
- Genus Hynobius - (Asian salamanders)
- Hynobius abei <small>Sato, 1934</small>
- Hynobius abuensis <small>Matsui, Okawa, Nishikawa, and Tominaga, 2019</small>
- Hynobius akiensis <small>Matsui, Okawa, and Nishikawa, 2019</small>
- Hynobius amabensis <small>Sugawara and Nagano, 2023</small>
- Hynobius amakusaensis <small>Nishikawa and Matsui, 2014</small>
- Hynobius amjiensis <small>Gu, 1992</small>
- Hynobius arisanensis <small>Maki, 1922</small>
- Hynobius bakan <small>Matsui, Okawa, and Nishikawa, 2019</small>
- Hynobius bambusicolus <small>Wang, Othman, Qiu and Borzée, 2023</small>
- Hynobius boulengeri <small>(Thompson, 1912)</small>
- Hynobius chinensis <small>Günther, 1889</small>
- Hynobius dunni <small>Tago, 1931</small>
- Hynobius formosanus <small>Maki, 1922</small>
- Hynobius fossigenus <small>Okamiya, Sugawara, Nagano, and Poyarkov, 2018</small>
- Hynobius fucus <small>Lai and Lue, 2008</small>
- Hynobius geiyoensis <small>Sugawara, Naito, Iwata, and Nagano, 2022</small>
- Hynobius geojeensis <small>Min and Borzée, 2021</small>
- Hynobius glacialis <small>Lai and Lue, 2008</small>
- Hynobius guabangshanensis <small>Shen, 2004</small>
- Hynobius guttatus <small>Tominaga, Matsui, Tanabe, and Nishikawa, 2019</small>
- Hynobius hidamontanus <small>Matsui, 1987</small>
- Hynobius hirosei <small>Lantz, 1931</small>
- Hynobius ikioi <small>Matsui, Nishikawa, and Tominaga, 2017</small>
- Hynobius iwami <small>Matsui, Okawa, Nishikawa, and Tominaga, 2019</small>
- Hynobius katoi <small>Matsui, Kokuryo, Misawa, and Nishikawa, 2004</small>
- Hynobius kimurae <small>Dunn, 1923</small>
- Hynobius kuishiensis <small>Tominaga, Matsui, Tanabe, and Nishikawa, 2019</small>
- Hynobius kunibiki <small>Sugawara, Iwata, Yamashita, and Nagano, 2021</small>
- Hynobius leechii <small>Boulenger, 1887</small>
- Hynobius lichenatus <small>Boulenger, 1883</small>
- Hynobius maoershanensis <small>Zhou, Jiang, and Jiang, 2006</small>
- Hynobius mikawaensis <small>Matsui, Misawa, Nishikawa, and Shimada, 2017</small>
- Hynobius miyazakiensis <small>Sugawara, Nagano, and Sueyoshi, 2023</small>
- Hynobius naevius <small>(Temminck and Schlegel, 1838)</small>
- Hynobius nagatoensis <small>Sugawara, Tahara, Matsukoji, and Nagano, 2022</small>
- Hynobius nebulosus <small>(Temminck and Schlegel, 1838)</small>
- Hynobius nigrescens <small>Stejneger, 1907</small>
- Hynobius nihoensis <small>Sugawara, Nagano, and Nakazono, 2022</small>
- Hynobius notialis <small>Min and Borzée, 2021</small>
- Hynobius okiensis <small>Sato, 1940</small>
- Hynobius oni <small>Kanamori, Nishikawa, Matsui, and Tanabe, 2022</small>
- Hynobius osumiensis <small>Nishikawa and Matsui, 2014</small>
- Hynobius oyamai <small>Tominaga, Matsui, and Nishikawa, 2019</small>
- Hynobius owariensis <small>Sugawara, Fujitani, Seguchi, Sawahata, and Nagano, 2022</small>
- Hynobius perplicatus <small>Min and Borzée, 2021</small>
- Hynobius quelpaertensis <small>Mori, 1928</small>
- Hynobius retardatus <small>Dunn, 1923</small>
- Hynobius sematonotos <small>Tominaga, Matsui, and Nishikawa, 2019</small>
- Hynobius sengokui <small>Matsui, Misawa, Yoshikawa, and Nishikawa, 2022</small>
- Hynobius setoi <small>Matsui, Tanabe, and Misawa, 2019</small>
- Hynobius setouchi <small>Matsui, Okawa, Tanabe, and Misawa, 2019</small>
- Hynobius shinichisatoi <small>Nishikawa and Matsui, 2014</small>
- Hynobius sonani <small>(Maki, 1922)</small>
- Hynobius stejnegeri <small>Dunn, 1923</small>
- Hynobius sumidai <small>Sugawara, Naito, Iwata, and Nagano, 2022</small>
- Hynobius takedai <small>Matsui and Miyazaki, 1984</small>
- Hynobius tokyoensis <small>Tago, 1931</small>
- Hynobius tosashimizuensis <small>Sugawara, Watabe, Yoshikawa, and Nagano, 2018</small>
- Hynobius tsuensis <small>Abé, 1922</small>
- Hynobius tsurugiensis <small>Tominaga, Matsui, Tanabe, and Nishikawa, 2019</small>
- "Hynobius" turkestanicus <small>Nikolskii, 1910</small>
- Hynobius unisacculus <small>Min, Baek, Song, Chang, and Poyarkov, 2016</small>
- Hynobius utsunomiyaorum <small>Matsui and Okawa, 2019</small>
- Hynobius vandenburghi <small>Dunn, 1923</small>
- Hynobius yangi <small>Kim, Min, and Matsui, 2003</small>
- Hynobius yiwuensis <small>Cai, 1985</small>
- Genus Liua (Wushan salamanders)
- Liua shihi <small>(Liu, 1950)</small>
- Liua tsinpaensis <small>(Liu and Hu, 1966)</small>
- Genus Pachyhynobius (stout salamanders)
- Pachyhynobius shangchengensis <small>Fei, Qu, and Wu, 1983</small>
- Genus Paradactylodon (Middle Eastern stream salamanders)
- Paradactylodon persicus <small>(Eiselt and Steiner, 1970)</small>
- Genus Pseudohynobius
- Pseudohynobius flavomaculatus <small>(Hu and Fei, 1978)</small>
- Pseudohynobius guizhouensis <small>Li, Tian, and Gu, 2010</small>
- Pseudohynobius jinfo <small>Wei, Xiong, and Zeng, 2009</small>
- Pseudohynobius kuankuoshuiensis <small>Xu and Zeng, 2007</small>
- Pseudohynobius puxiongensis <small>(Fei and Ye, 2000)</small>
- Pseudohynobius shuichengensis <small>Tian, Gu, Li, Sun, and Li, 1998</small>
- Genus Ranodon (Semirichensk salamanders)
- Ranodon sibiricus <small>Kessler, 1866</small>
- Genus Salamandrella (Siberian salamanders)
- Salamandrella keyserlingii <small>Dybowski, 1870</small>
- Salamandrella tridactyla <small>Nikolskii, 1905</small>
Subfamily Onychodactylinae
- Genus Onychodactylus (clawed salamanders)
- Onychodactylus fischeri <small>(Boulenger, 1886)</small>
- Onychodactylus fuscus <small>Yoshikawa and Matsui, 2014</small>
- Onychodactylus intermedius <small>Nishikawa and Matsui, 2014</small>
- Onychodactylus japonicus <small>(Houttuyn, 1782)</small>
- Onychodactylus kinneburi <small>Yoshikawa, Matsui, Tanabe, and Okayama, 2013</small>
- Onychodactylus koreanus <small>Min, Poyarkov, and Vieites, 2012</small>
- Onychodactylus nipponoborealis <small>Kuro-o, Poyarkov, and Vieites, 2012</small>
- Onychodactylus tsukubaensis <small>Yoshikawa and Matsui, 2013</small>
- Onychodactylus zhangyapingi <small>Che, Poyarkov, and Yan, 2012</small>
- Onychodactylus zhaoermii <small>Che, Poyarkov, and Yan, 2012</small>
- Onychodactylus sillanus <small>Min, Borzée, and Poyarkov, 2022</small>
- Onychodactylus pyrrhonotus <small>Yoshikawa et Matsui, 2022</small>
References
External links