
A metamorphed axolotl, picture from Reddit. Axolotls often have pink/albino coloration in captivity, but if this was a brown, wild-type individual, it would probably look much more similar to a tiger salamander.
The reverse can happen as well - sometimes tiger salamanders do not complete metamorphosis and stay neotenic, retaining their gills and aquatic lifestyle, even as adults. Interestingly, these "big babies" may be larger than tiger salamanders which do undergo metamorphosis!
So, you could go to a zoo and see two salamanders in side-by-side tanks, one aquatic with large external gills, the other terrestrial and lacking those gills, and actually not be immediately sure which is the tiger salamander and which is the axolotl (not that I've ever seen such a display. Nor what I recommend it, either - from what I understand, forcing an axolotl to undergo metamorphosis shortens its lifespan considerably, so best to leave things as they are. A good educational exhibit isn't always compatible with optimal animal welfare, so I try to err on the side of the later.

Eastern tiger salamander larvae, from USFWS
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