Gyrinophilus palleucus necturoides

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Big Mouth Cave salamander
Conservation status

Critically Imperiled (TNC)
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Amphibia
Order: Caudata
Family: Plethodontidae
Genus: Gyrinophilus
Species: G. palleucus
Subspecies: G. p. necturoides
Lazell and Brandon, 1962
Binomial name
Gyrinophilus palleucus necturoides

Big Mouth Cave salamander (Gyrinophilus palleucus necturoides), a lungless salamander, is an infraspecies of Tennessee cave salamander which lives exclusively in Big Mouth Cave in the Elk River drainage basin in Grundy County, Tennessee. The salamander was first described by Lazell and Brandon in 1962.

[edit] Conservation status

While the TNC rates the Big Mouth Cave salamander as "critically imperiled", IUCN claims it is only "vulnerable". A study in 2007 by Brian T. Miller and Matthew L. Niemiller investigated the actual population size of the infraspecies. They determined that the species was actually abundant in the Big Mouth Cave, contrary to popular concern.

[edit] References

Distribution and relative abundance of Tennessee cave salamanders (Gyrinophilus palleucus and Gyrinophilus gulolineatus) with an emphasis on Tennessee populations