Abstract

The antipredator behaviors of Phaeognathus hubrichti (Red Hills Salamander), a large fossorial plethodontid, and the basal member of the desmognathine salamanders, are unknown. The responses of P. hubrichti to tongue-flicks from hand-held snakes, tapping with a rod and pinching with a forceps were recorded with a videocamera. When contacted by a snake tongue- flick, P. hubrichti exhibited several antipredator behaviors including immobility, gape, walk, run, head flatten, head elevation, flip, bite, and flinch. One other antipredator behavior—writhe—was observed in the field. The antipredator be- haviors of P. hubrichti are more similar to those species in its sister taxon, Desmognathus, than to those of other less closely related fossorial salamanders. Gape, a threat display, is nearly identical to that of Desmognathus quadramaculatus. Gape, bite, and writhe are proposed to be ancestral behaviors in this group.

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