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CRYPTOBRANCHUS , a genus of thoroughly aquatic, but See also: lung-breathing tailed See also: Batrachia, of the See also: family Amphiumidae, characterized by a heavy, flattened build, a very porous tubercular skin, with a frilled See also: fold along each See also: side, See also: short stout limbs with four very short fingers and five very short toes, and minute eyes without lids
.
The vertebrae are biconcave, and although the gills are lost in the adult, ossified gill-See also: arches, two to four in number, persist
.
A strong series of vomerine teeth extends across the palate
.
Three See also: species of this genus are known
.
One is the well-known fossil of Oeningen first described as Homo diluvii testis and shown by Cuvier to be nearly related to the gigantic See also: salamander of See also: Japan, Cry ptobranchus See also: maximus, which has since been found to inhabit See also: China also; the third is the hellbender, mud-puppy or See also: water-See also: dog of See also: North See also: America, C. alleghaniensis, also known under the name of Menopoma
.
Both the fossil C. scheuchzeri and C. maximus grow to a length of over 5 ft. and are by far the largest Urodeles known, whilst C. alleghaniensis reaches the respectable length of 18 in
.
The eggs are laid in See also: rosary-like strings
.
They have been found, in Japan, deposited in deep holes in the water, where they See also: form large clumps (70 to 8o eggs) round which the See also: female coils herself
.
The gigantic salamander has also bred in the See also: Amsterdam zoological gardens, the eggs numbering upwards of Soo; the male, it is stated, took See also: charge of the eggs, and for the
ten See also: weeks which elapsed before the See also: release of the last larva, he kept close to them, at times crawling among the coiled mass of See also: egg-strings or lifting them up, evidently for the purpose of aeration
.
The larva on leaving the egg is about an inch long, provided with three branched See also: external gills on each side, and showing See also: mere rudiments of the four limbs
.
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