Sirenidae

Sirenidae or sirens is a family of aquatic salamanders. They have very small front legs and do not have back legs.[1] They have gills for breathing. Sirens are found only in the southeastern United States and northern Mexico.

Sirenidae
Siren intermedia
Scientific classification
Kingdom:
Phylum:
Class:
Subclass:
Order:
Suborder:
Sirenoidea
Family:
Sirenidae
Genera

  Habrosaurus
  Pseudobranchus
  Siren

Taxonomy

The siren family (Sirenidae) is subdivided into two genera, with two species each:

Family SIRENIDAE

  • Genus Pseudobranchus (Gray, 1825) Dwarf sirens
    • Pseudobranchus axanthus (Netting & Goin, 1942) Southern Dwarf Siren
    • Pseudobranchus striatus (LeConte, 1824) Northern Dwarf Siren
  • Genus Siren (Österdam, 1766) Sirens
    • Siren intermedia (Barnes, 1826) Lesser Siren
    • Siren lacertina (Linnaeus, 1766) Greater Siren

References

  1. Zweifel, Richard George (1998). Encyclopedia of Reptiles & Amphibians (2nd ed.). San Diego, CA. ISBN 0-12-178560-2. OCLC 39559811.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)

Books

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