SMOOTH
NEWT
Lissotriton vulgaris
Where to find them
The smooth newt is the UK's most widespread newt species, found
throughout Britain and Ireland. Like the common frog, smooth newts may
colonise garden ponds.
Identification
Smooth newts can grow to 10cm and are generally brown in colour. Males develop
a continuous wavy crest along their back in the breeding season. The belly of both sexes is
yellow/orange with small black spots. The spots on the throat provide
a good way of telling this species apart from palmate newts (which lack spots on their throat).
Lifecycle
Adults are often found in ponds during the breeding season and into
summer the months (February – June). Spawn is laid as individual eggs, each of
which is wrapped carefully in a leaf of pond weed, by the female newt. Unlike
tadpoles of frogs and toads, newt larvae develop their
front legs before their back legs. They breathe through external
feathery gills which sprout from behind the head. Juvenile newts leave
the water in later summer after losing their gills. Smooth newts eat
invertebrates either on land or in water. They also prey on frog
tadpoles. Outside of the breeding season, newts come onto land and are often
found in damp places, frequently underneath logs and debris in the
summer months.
Protection
Smooth newts are protected by law in
Great Britain. It is illegal to sell or trade them in any way. In Northern Ireland they are fully
protected against killing, injuring, capturing, disturbance, possession
or trade.