“Smooth newts eat tadpoles, crustaceans and molluscs in ponds, and caterpillars, insects and slugs on land” Smooth newt, Lissotriton vulgaris
The smooth, or common, newt is greyish brown, with a black-spotted yellow-orange belly. In the breeding season, males develop a crest along the length of their body, when they’re sometimes confused with great-crested newts, which are bigger and have darker, wartier skin. They eat frog tadpoles, crustaceans and molluscs in ponds, while on land they devour insects, caterpillars, worms and slugs.
Smooth newts breed from April to June in ponds. The male uses his tail to ‘waft’ pheromones to the female, who then chooses whether or not to pick up a packet of sperm (known as a spermatophore) he has left for her, with which she fertilises her eggs. She…