К фауне моллюсков семейства Bithyniidae (Gastropoda, Pectinibranchia) Свердловской области : Towards the fauna of molluscs of the family Bithyniidae (Gastropoda, Pectinibranchia) of the Sverdlovsk region

По материалам коллекции Музея Института экологии растений и животных УрО РАН изучен видовой состав гребнежаберных моллюсков сем. Bithyniidae (Gastropoda, Pectinibranchia) из водоемов Свердловской обл. Определено 12 видов, относящихся к 5 родам: Bithynia (4), Boreoelona (1), Digyrcidum (2), Opisthorc...

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Main Authors: Андреева Светлана Иосифовна, Андреев Николай Игоревич, Гребенников Максим Евгеньевич
Format: Report
Language:unknown
Published: Фауна Урала и Сибири 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.24411/2411-0051-2018-10102
https://cyberleninka.ru/article/n/k-faune-mollyuskov-semeystva-bithyniidae-gastropoda-pectinibranchia-sverdlovskoy-oblasti/pdf
id ftdatacite:10.24411/2411-0051-2018-10102
record_format openpolar
spelling ftdatacite:10.24411/2411-0051-2018-10102 2023-05-15T16:41:27+02:00 К фауне моллюсков семейства Bithyniidae (Gastropoda, Pectinibranchia) Свердловской области : Towards the fauna of molluscs of the family Bithyniidae (Gastropoda, Pectinibranchia) of the Sverdlovsk region Андреева Светлана Иосифовна Андреев Николай Игоревич Гребенников Максим Евгеньевич 2018 https://dx.doi.org/10.24411/2411-0051-2018-10102 https://cyberleninka.ru/article/n/k-faune-mollyuskov-semeystva-bithyniidae-gastropoda-pectinibranchia-sverdlovskoy-oblasti/pdf unknown Фауна Урала и Сибири Mollusca Урал малакофауна. Urals malacofauna. Paper Text article-journal ScholarlyArticle 2018 ftdatacite https://doi.org/10.24411/2411-0051-2018-10102 2021-11-05T12:55:41Z По материалам коллекции Музея Института экологии растений и животных УрО РАН изучен видовой состав гребнежаберных моллюсков сем. Bithyniidae (Gastropoda, Pectinibranchia) из водоемов Свердловской обл. Определено 12 видов, относящихся к 5 родам: Bithynia (4), Boreoelona (1), Digyrcidum (2), Opisthorchophorus (3) и Paraelona (2). В зоогеографическом плане это виды преимущественно европейского происхождения. : We studied the mollusc samples collected in the Sverdlovsk region and stored in the malacological collection of the Museum of the Institute of Plant and Animal Ecology (the Ural branch of the Russian Academy of Sciences). Samples from the collection of the Zoological Institute of the Russian Academy of Sciences were also studied. In total, 65 samples containing 287 specimens of Bythiniid snails (dried shells only) were studied. An annotated list of the Bythiniidae of the Sverdlovsk region includes 12 species belonging to 5 genera: Bithynia (4 species), Boreoelona (1 species), Digyrcidum (2 species), Opisthorchophorus (3 species) and Paraelona (2 species). Snails of the genera Bithynia and Digyrcidum were most abundant which may be explained by the fact that most of the studied samples were collected from lotic water habitats that are most suitable for snails of these 2 genera. Three species: Digyrcidum starobogatovi, Bithynia curta and B. decipiens were the most numerous in the studied collection whereas other 3 species (Opisthorchophorus troscheli, Paraelona socialis and P. milachevitchi) were represented by single specimens. From the zoogeographical point of view, 75% of the species inhabiting the Sverdlovsk region are of European origin and the European-Western-Siberian distribution type. Boreoelona sibirica was the only species of presumably Eastern Asian origin and may represent an example of an advance of the East Siberian fauna towards Europe as a consequence of the Pleistocene ice sheet retreat driven by the Holocene warming. Report Ice Sheet DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology)
institution Open Polar
collection DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology)
op_collection_id ftdatacite
language unknown
topic Mollusca
Урал
малакофауна.
Urals
malacofauna.
spellingShingle Mollusca
Урал
малакофауна.
Urals
malacofauna.
Андреева Светлана Иосифовна
Андреев Николай Игоревич
Гребенников Максим Евгеньевич
К фауне моллюсков семейства Bithyniidae (Gastropoda, Pectinibranchia) Свердловской области : Towards the fauna of molluscs of the family Bithyniidae (Gastropoda, Pectinibranchia) of the Sverdlovsk region
topic_facet Mollusca
Урал
малакофауна.
Urals
malacofauna.
description По материалам коллекции Музея Института экологии растений и животных УрО РАН изучен видовой состав гребнежаберных моллюсков сем. Bithyniidae (Gastropoda, Pectinibranchia) из водоемов Свердловской обл. Определено 12 видов, относящихся к 5 родам: Bithynia (4), Boreoelona (1), Digyrcidum (2), Opisthorchophorus (3) и Paraelona (2). В зоогеографическом плане это виды преимущественно европейского происхождения. : We studied the mollusc samples collected in the Sverdlovsk region and stored in the malacological collection of the Museum of the Institute of Plant and Animal Ecology (the Ural branch of the Russian Academy of Sciences). Samples from the collection of the Zoological Institute of the Russian Academy of Sciences were also studied. In total, 65 samples containing 287 specimens of Bythiniid snails (dried shells only) were studied. An annotated list of the Bythiniidae of the Sverdlovsk region includes 12 species belonging to 5 genera: Bithynia (4 species), Boreoelona (1 species), Digyrcidum (2 species), Opisthorchophorus (3 species) and Paraelona (2 species). Snails of the genera Bithynia and Digyrcidum were most abundant which may be explained by the fact that most of the studied samples were collected from lotic water habitats that are most suitable for snails of these 2 genera. Three species: Digyrcidum starobogatovi, Bithynia curta and B. decipiens were the most numerous in the studied collection whereas other 3 species (Opisthorchophorus troscheli, Paraelona socialis and P. milachevitchi) were represented by single specimens. From the zoogeographical point of view, 75% of the species inhabiting the Sverdlovsk region are of European origin and the European-Western-Siberian distribution type. Boreoelona sibirica was the only species of presumably Eastern Asian origin and may represent an example of an advance of the East Siberian fauna towards Europe as a consequence of the Pleistocene ice sheet retreat driven by the Holocene warming.
format Report
author Андреева Светлана Иосифовна
Андреев Николай Игоревич
Гребенников Максим Евгеньевич
author_facet Андреева Светлана Иосифовна
Андреев Николай Игоревич
Гребенников Максим Евгеньевич
author_sort Андреева Светлана Иосифовна
title К фауне моллюсков семейства Bithyniidae (Gastropoda, Pectinibranchia) Свердловской области : Towards the fauna of molluscs of the family Bithyniidae (Gastropoda, Pectinibranchia) of the Sverdlovsk region
title_short К фауне моллюсков семейства Bithyniidae (Gastropoda, Pectinibranchia) Свердловской области : Towards the fauna of molluscs of the family Bithyniidae (Gastropoda, Pectinibranchia) of the Sverdlovsk region
title_full К фауне моллюсков семейства Bithyniidae (Gastropoda, Pectinibranchia) Свердловской области : Towards the fauna of molluscs of the family Bithyniidae (Gastropoda, Pectinibranchia) of the Sverdlovsk region
title_fullStr К фауне моллюсков семейства Bithyniidae (Gastropoda, Pectinibranchia) Свердловской области : Towards the fauna of molluscs of the family Bithyniidae (Gastropoda, Pectinibranchia) of the Sverdlovsk region
title_full_unstemmed К фауне моллюсков семейства Bithyniidae (Gastropoda, Pectinibranchia) Свердловской области : Towards the fauna of molluscs of the family Bithyniidae (Gastropoda, Pectinibranchia) of the Sverdlovsk region
title_sort к фауне моллюсков семейства bithyniidae (gastropoda, pectinibranchia) свердловской области : towards the fauna of molluscs of the family bithyniidae (gastropoda, pectinibranchia) of the sverdlovsk region
publisher Фауна Урала и Сибири
publishDate 2018
url https://dx.doi.org/10.24411/2411-0051-2018-10102
https://cyberleninka.ru/article/n/k-faune-mollyuskov-semeystva-bithyniidae-gastropoda-pectinibranchia-sverdlovskoy-oblasti/pdf
genre Ice Sheet
genre_facet Ice Sheet
op_doi https://doi.org/10.24411/2411-0051-2018-10102
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