In article , Gwenhyffar
Milgi writes
On Tue, 27 Apr 2004 09:22:15 +0100, Kay Easton
wrote:
In article , Gwenhyffar
Milgi writes
ggg we get a few of those here as well. What I mean is a legless
amphibian though. I don't know what they're called!
I'm not aware of any legless amphibians in the UK! We've only got toads,
newts and frogs. I suppose you could call a tadpole a legless amphibian
;-)
Do you mean slowworm, aka legless lizard? It's a reptile, along with
lizards and snakes. Lives on small invertebrates, completely harmless, a
lovely thing to have in the garden.
Well, no. It was about 4 cm's long, glittery grey/silver in colour,
and it was definitely an amphibian. It had no legs.
But we don't have any british legless amphibians!
I've kept snakes, so I am aware of the difference between amphibians
and reptiles. There's a difference in skin appearance between a wet
amphibian and a wet reptile. This looked more like a salamander
without legs than like a small snake.
Well, I can only suggest it had escaped from captivity.
--
Kay Easton
Edward's earthworm page:
http://www.scarboro.demon.co.uk/edward/index.htm