Wild Type
A wild type axolotl is the dark, natural-looking color form of Ambystoma mexicanum, usually showing olive, brown, gray, or near-black pigment with lighter speckling and dark eyes. In captive collections it is a morph label, not proof that the animal came from a wild population. The look echoes the ancestral axolotls of the Xochimilco lake system, with mottled camouflage that can vary from almost charcoal to warm brown depending on age, health, and lighting.
Wild type axolotls appeal to keepers who prefer a less ornamental appearance, but they need the same cool aquatic setup as albino or leucistic animals. Clean water, low temperatures, secure hides, and careful feeding matter more than color. Breeders may use wild type animals to maintain pigment diversity or outcross heavily selected lines, but records should distinguish appearance from confirmed genetics. Conservation discussions should also be precise: captive wild type color does not make an individual suitable for release or equivalent to a managed wild axolotl.
Colors: Albino, Axanthic, Chimera, Copper, Dirty Leucistic, Gfp, Golden Albino, Leucistic, Melanoid, Mosaic, Piebald, Silver Dalmatian, White Albino, Wild Type