During mating season, these salamanders will travel upstream where, after the fertilization of the eggs, the male will guard them for at least 6 months. At this point, the offspring will live off their noticeable stored fat until ready to hunt.
The giant salamander has been given a place in mythology. In one particular Asian myth, the salamander, although resembling a typical specimen, it makes its home in fires; the hotter the better. Early travellers to China were shown garments which, or so they were told, had been woven of wool from the salamander: the cloth was completely unharmed by fire. The garments had actually been woven from asbestos.
Genus Andrias (Giant Salamanders)
Chinese Giant Salamander (Andrias davidianus)
Japanese Giant Salamander (Andrias japonicus)
Genus Cryptobranchus (Hellbenders)
Hellbender (Cryptobranchus alleganiensis )
The Swiss physician Johann Jacob Scheuchzer described in 1726 a fossil as Andrias scheuchzeri (Andrias means "image of man"). He assumed that it was a fossil of a human being that survived the Great Flood, and called it homo diluvii testis (Witness of the Great Flood). The Teylers Museum in Haarlem (the Netherlands) bought the fossil in 1802, where it still is being exhibited. In 1812 the fossil was examined by Georges Cuvier who recognized it as being a Giant Salamander. The name of the genus Andrias was used for the Chinese and Japanese Giant Salamander.
The family Cryptobranchidae is comprised of three similar-looking living species, in two genera.
Cryptobranchids are characterized by the absence of lacrimals and septomaxillae, and a curved row of palatal teeth set parallel to the maxillary and premaxillary teeth (Duellmann and Trueb, 1986).
Cryptobranchidae and the Asian family Hynobiidae comprise the suborder Cryptobranchoidea, the ancient or primitive salamanders.