The colon is notation which indicates to git the string after defines the repository you wish to interact with.
edit: Well spotted
As we can see the remote add is as follows:
git remote add [-t <branch>] [-m <master>] [-f] [--tags|--no-tags] [--mirror] <name> <url>
and your example is:
git remote add repo_name ssh://serveradmin%[email protected]:/home/45678/domains/git.example.com/html/example.git
where 'name' is 'repo_name'
and URL is the big string
ssh://serveradmin%[email protected]:/home/45678/domains/git.example.com/html/example.git
which is even more apparent when we see it has the ssh protocol definition at the beginning.
In a URL you can define the colon without the proceeding port value and the default port for that protocol is generally used as the port number which seems to be what is happening here.
Therefore markup for the question and mark up for harpo's comment
ssh user@host:path
syntax (where path is absolute or relative to your home dir).