Nature Notes From Crater Lake
Volume 18, 1952
The Mazama Newt: A Unique Salamander
of Crater Lake
By James Kezer, Ranger-Naturalist and Donald S. Farner, Assistant
Park Naturalist

Under-surfaces of two closely related newts. A
Mazama newt from Crater Lake at the left and a common Oregon
newt on the right.
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During the past two seasons many of the
visitors to Crater Lake National Park have been able to get some first
hand contact with one of the most distinctive and interesting animals of
the Lake. This is a salamander or water-dog, oftentimes called the
Mazama newt or Crater Lake newt; it is found no place in the world
outside of the waters of Crater Lake. Believing that many of the
visitors to the Park would be interested in this unusual animal, we have
frequently exhibited living specimens during lectures in the lodge and
the community building and the excitement that is invariably caused by
the circulation of the jars of newts has indicated to us that these
salamanders are indeed a real source of interest to our visitors. If one
compares the Mazama newt (Triturus granulosus mazamae) with the
common Oregon newt (Triturus granulosus granulosus) it is clearly
evident that the two are very closely related. Indeed, the difference
between the two is simply a matter of the pigmentation of the lower
surface; the immaculate orange-yellow of the Oregon newt is replaced in
the Mazama newt with varying amounts of dark pigment that appears to
invade the under surface of the animal from the sides. This difference
in pigmentation is illustrated in the photograph in which the under
surfaces of the two kinds of newts are shown. It should be pointed out
that the amount of black pigment on the lower surface of a Mazama newt
is highly variable; some individuals have lots of it and others approach
closely the pigmentation of the common Oregon newt.
Our best interpretation of the Crater
Lake newt population assumes that hundreds of years ago some common
Oregon newts were able to get into the Lake through an unknown route,
probably during a period when the climate was much wetter. The steep,
dry walls of the Lake Rim have apparently served as an isolating
mechanism, allowing the Crater Lake newts to develop a different genetic
composition and resulting in the pigmentation differences that now
separate this group of water-dogs from the common Oregon newt. It is a
very interesting fact that a specimen of the common Oregon newt
collected within the Park boundaries as close as two and one-half miles
from the Lake showed none of the under-surface black of a Mazama newt.
This is surely a tribute to the isolating function of the caldera walls.
Our present knowledge of the life
history of the Mazama newt is fragmentary, despite the fact that during
the past years a good many members of the ranger-naturalist staff have
searched the water and the shoreline of Crater Lake for such
information. The smallest larvae that we have found in the Lake were
collected in a partially cut-off pool behind the Government Boathouse on
Wizard Island during the first week of September, 1951. Ten of these
larvae had an average length of about 3/4 inch which indicated to us
that they had hatched from the egg mass at least three weeks previously.
It seems very probable that the eggs from which these larvae came had
been laid during the summer, perhaps back in the spaces between the
large blocks of lava where they would be found only with great
difficulty.
In the water along the shore and in
pools partially separated from the Lake, large larvae with an average
length of about 3-1/4 inches are commonly found. Our limited data
suggest that the small larvae observed in the pool on Wizard Island
attain this size during their second season of growth, undergoing
metamorphosis at that time. Associated with the large larvae in the
water along the shore and in the partially cut-off pools on Wizard
Island, may be found newly metamorphosed newts and adults of various
sizes, including large, mature individuals averaging about 6-3/4 inches
in total length.
If one lifts up the rocks and driftwood
along the shore of Crater Lake he soon learns that the Mazama newts are
by no means confined to the actual water of the Lake. Oftentimes they
may be collected in large numbers under the debris along the shore,
frequently in association with the long-toed salamander, Ambystoma
macrodactylum. In this non-aquatic environment they appear
desiccated and sluggish with extremely granular skins. We have
considered the possibility that these semi-terrestrial individuals
represent a definite stage in the life history of this newt; however,
since no single age group is involved, it seems more probable that a
transitory semi-terrestrial existence represents an aspect of the
behavior of the Mazama newt at various times during its life.
On several different occasions we have
observed large aggregations of the Mazama newt along the shore of the
Lake. Usually these aggregations consist of semi-terrestrial individuals
in groups of about twelve to fifteen out of the water and under rocks or
pieces of driftwood. A somewhat different kind of aggregation was
observed September 6, 1951, on the east side of Eagle Point where the
shore of the Lake consists of a rocky beach covered with willows. Two
hundred and fifty-nine newts were massed together in an area of water
not more than thirty feet square, the vast majority of these being under
a single flat rock about nine feet square, resting on other rocks in
approximately one foot of water. Making up the aggregation were adults
of varying sizes, large larvae and newly metamorphosed individuals.
On August 7, 1952, an enormous
aggregation of Mazama newts was observed under rocks in the shallow
water of about 15-20 feet of shoreline in Eagle Cove. We estimated that
at least three hundred newts were involved in this aggregation and, as
previously noted, all sizes from large larvae to the largest adults were
present. At this time the significance of these aggregations is not
understood.
From the zoological standpoint, the
newts of Crater Lake are particularly interesting because they provide
material for the determination of the time required for the genetical
change that is necessary for the development of a subspecies. The
collapse of Mt. Mazama has been accurately established by modern
techniques as occurring between six and seven thousand years ago. This
information clearly indicates that newts could not have entered the
water of Crater Lake more than about six thousand years ago; moreover,
considering the subsequent eruptions that brought about the formation of
Wizard Island, it is highly probable that the Lake newt population was
established much more recently. Indeed, the Mazama newts are doubtless
one of the most clearly dated cases of subspeciation available any place
in the world.