Caudata
Caudata, also known as Urodela, is an order of amphibians that includes salamanders and newts, distinguished by the presence of a tail throughout their life cycle, from larval to adult stages.[1] These tailed amphibians typically exhibit an elongate, cylindrical body with short limbs projecting at right angles, moist permeable skin for cutaneous respiration, and a lack of scales or claws, adapting them to moist environments.[2] With 828 species distributed across 10 families, Caudata represents about 9% of all amphibian diversity (as of November 2025), predominantly in the northern hemisphere's temperate regions, including North America, Europe, and Asia.[3][4][5] Members of Caudata vary widely in size, from tiny species under 1 inch long to giants like the Japanese giant salamander reaching up to 5.6 feet, and they possess the largest genomes among tetrapods, which may contribute to their morphological diversity.[1][4] Most species are ectothermic carnivores that feed on invertebrates, insects, or small vertebrates, playing key ecological roles in controlling pest populations and serving as indicators of environmental health due to their sensitivity to habitat changes.[4] Habitats range from fully aquatic streams and caves to moist terrestrial forests, with many requiring proximity to water for breeding; notably, the family Plethodontidae, comprising about 63% of species (as of November 2025), includes lungless forms that rely entirely on skin and mouth lining for gas exchange.[1][6][5] Reproduction in Caudata is unique among amphibians, featuring internal fertilization through spermatophores deposited by males and taken up by females, followed by oviposition in water or damp sites.[2] Life cycles often involve aquatic larvae with external gills that metamorphose into terrestrial adults, though some exhibit paedomorphosis—retaining larval traits into maturity, as seen in the axolotl—or even viviparity in a few species.[1][2] Evolutionarily, Caudata traces back to the Triassic-Jurassic periods around 230-170 million years ago, descending from temnospondyl ancestors and retaining primitive traits that make them the most generalized extant amphibians.[5] Today, while diverse, many species face threats from habitat loss, climate change, and emerging fungal diseases such as Batrachochytrium salamandrivorans (Bsal).[4][7]Taxonomy
Classification
Caudata, commonly known as salamanders and newts, constitutes one of the three extant orders within the class Amphibia, alongside Anura (frogs and toads) and Gymnophiona (caecilians).[8] This placement reflects the shared amphibian characteristics such as a life cycle involving aquatic larval stages and terrestrial adults in many species, though Caudata retain a tail throughout life, distinguishing them from the other orders.[9] The order encompasses approximately 828 species as of 2025, distributed across diverse habitats primarily in the Northern Hemisphere.[10] Traditionally, Caudata is divided into three suborders: Cryptobranchoidea, which includes primitive forms like the hellbenders and hynobiid salamanders; Sirenoidea, comprising eel-like sirens with external gills and reduced limbs; and Salamandroidea, encompassing advanced salamanders including newts and lungless forms.[11] These suborders highlight evolutionary divergences in larval development and morphology, with Cryptobranchoidea representing the basal lineage.[12] The order includes 10 extant families, varying in size and distribution, with Plethodontidae being the most speciose. Recent taxonomic revisions, driven by molecular phylogenetic analyses, have refined family boundaries; for instance, genera previously grouped under broader families have been elevated based on genetic evidence, such as the distinct recognition of lungless salamander lineages within Plethodontidae and the separation of families like Rhyacotritonidae and Dicamptodontidae from ancestral stocks.[13] These changes underscore the role of DNA sequence data in resolving cryptic diversity, particularly in the lungless salamanders.[14] The following table summarizes the 10 families, with approximate species counts and notable examples (as of November 2025):[3]| Family | Approximate Species Count | Notable Genera/Examples |
|---|---|---|
| Cryptobranchidae | 6 | Cryptobranchus (hellbender), Andrias (giant salamanders) [2 genera] |
| Hynobiidae | 98 | Hynobius, Onychodactylus (Asian salamanders) [over 10 genera] |
| Sirenidae | 7 | Siren, Pseudobranchus (sirens) [2 genera] |
| Proteidae | 8 | Proteus (olm), Necturus (mudpuppy) [2 genera] |
| Ambystomatidae | 32 | Ambystoma (mole salamanders, axolotl) [1 genus][15] |
| Dicamptodontidae | 4 | Dicamptodon (giant salamanders) [1 genus][16] |
| Salamandridae | 147 | Salamandra (fire salamander), Triturus (newts) [21 genera] |
| Amphiumidae | 3 | Amphiuma (congo eels) [1 genus] |
| Rhyacotritonidae | 4 | Rhyacotriton (slimy salamanders) [1 genus] |
| Plethodontidae | 519 | Bolitoglossa, Desmognathus (lungless salamanders) [29 genera][17] |