Quick answer
Most caecilians live around Often more than a decade, though predation, disease, habitat quality, and (for pets) veterinary care shift individual outcomes.
Key takeaway
Most caecilians live around Often more than a decade, though predation, disease, habitat quality, and (for pets) veterinary care shift individual outcomes.
Typical lifespan
Caecilians (Gymnophiona) typically live around Often more than a decade. Published averages mix wild and managed populations, so treat any single number as a planning range rather than a guarantee.
What shortens life
In the wild, caecilian mortality is driven by predation, competition, infectious disease, injury, and habitat loss. Food shortages and human conflict also cut average lifespan in many regions.
What supports longer life
Stable habitat, low chronic stress, and adequate nutrition support longevity. Where caecilians live alongside people, responsible management and veterinary care (for domestic or captive animals) matter as much as genetics.
Life stages
Juveniles face higher mortality than healthy adults. Seniors show slower movement, dental wear, and reduced body condition — useful field signs when comparing age classes.
How this compares
Body size and ecology shape longevity: larger mammals often live longer than small ones, but high-risk lifestyles (open hunting, migration) can reverse that pattern. Always compare like-with-like populations.
Behavior and senses
Caecilians are secretive amphibians that spend most of their lives burrowing through moist soil and leaf litter, and a few species are fully aquatic. With no limbs, they move like worms or snakes, pushing through the ground with a strong, muscular body. Their eyes are tiny and often covered by skin or bone, so they navigate using a unique pair of retractable tentacles between the eyes and nostrils that detect chemicals and prey.
Diet and feeding
Caecilians are carnivores that eat earthworms, termites, insect larvae, and other small invertebrates found underground. They seize prey with strong jaws lined with backward-curving teeth and may spin to subdue it. Their underground lifestyle keeps them close to a steady supply of soil-dwelling animals.
Habitat and range
As a group, caecilians live across the wet tropics of Africa, Asia, and Central and South America, with none in most temperate regions. They favor warm, damp environments such as rainforest soil, riverbanks, and leaf litter. Because they live hidden underground or in water, they are rarely seen and remain among the least-known amphibians.
Reproduction and conservation
Caecilians have remarkable reproduction: some lay eggs while others give birth to live young, and in several species the young feed on a special layer of their mother's skin. As a diverse group their conservation status varies by species, with many too poorly known to assess, while some face threats from habitat loss. Their secretive habits mean scientists are still discovering new kinds.
Research notes
Figures for caecilians (Gymnophiona) come from field studies, museum records, and conservation assessments that do not always agree on exact averages. Prefer ranges over single-point claims, and check whether a source describes wild, captive, or mixed populations.
Practical takeaways
If you encounter caecilians in the wild, prioritise distance and local guidance. If you care for related domestic or captive animals, match diet and housing to species needs rather than generic pet advice. Share accurate status information (Least Concern) when discussing conservation.
Sources
FAQs
How Long Do Caecilians Live?
Most caecilians live around Often more than a decade, though predation, disease, habitat quality, and (for pets) veterinary care shift individual outcomes.
What is the scientific name of the caecilian?
Gymnophiona
What do caecilians eat?
Carnivore (worms, insects, small invertebrates)
Where do caecilians live?
Damp soil and leaf litter in the tropics
Are caecilians endangered?
Listed here as Least Concern. Check IUCN and national lists for the latest assessment.