Skull features of the common vole (Microtus arvalis sensu lato) from Hungary: craniometrical evidence for its taxonomic detachment

A revision was carried out on 245 adult skull specimens of the common vole (Microtus arvalis sensu lato) kept in the mammal collection of the Hungarian Natural History Museum in Budapest. A highly effective craniometric classification function was used to reveal whether they belonged to the common v...

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Published in:TURKISH JOURNAL OF MEDICAL SCIENCES
Main Authors: MARKOV, Georgi, CSORBA, Gabor, KOCHEVA, Maria, GOSPODINOVA, Milena
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:Turkish
Published: TÜBİTAK 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:https://dergipark.org.tr/tr/pub/tbtkzoology/issue/12615/153100
https://doi.org/10.3906/sag-1204-111
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spelling ftdergipark2ojs:oai:dergipark.org.tr:article/153100 2023-05-15T15:56:27+02:00 Skull features of the common vole (Microtus arvalis sensu lato) from Hungary: craniometrical evidence for its taxonomic detachment MARKOV, Georgi CSORBA, Gabor KOCHEVA, Maria GOSPODINOVA, Milena 2012-03-01T00:00:00Z application/pdf https://dergipark.org.tr/tr/pub/tbtkzoology/issue/12615/153100 https://doi.org/10.3906/sag-1204-111 tr tur TÜBİTAK TUBITAK https://dergipark.org.tr/tr/download/article-file/134508 https://dergipark.org.tr/tr/pub/tbtkzoology/issue/12615/153100 doi:10.3906/sag-1204-111 Volume: 36, Issue: 3 283-290 1300-0179 1303-6114 Turkish Journal of Zoology Key words: Skull features,Microtus arvalis,Microtus levis,taxonomic detachment,distribution,Hungary info:eu-repo/semantics/article 2012 ftdergipark2ojs https://doi.org/10.3906/sag-1204-111 2020-08-27T17:49:51Z A revision was carried out on 245 adult skull specimens of the common vole (Microtus arvalis sensu lato) kept in the mammal collection of the Hungarian Natural History Museum in Budapest. A highly effective craniometric classification function was used to reveal whether they belonged to the common vole (M. arvalis Pallas, 1778 sensu stricto) or to the East European vole (Microtus levis Miller, 1908). It was found that M. levis specimens were present in the Hungarian mammal fauna; the boundaries of that animal's European range were thus expanded in the west. The distribution of the East European vole and the common vole in Hungary showed that both of these vole species occur together in all of the studied regions, with different predominant presence. M. levis occurred in lower numbers than M. arvalis in the western part of the country while the 2 species were relatively equally present in the central part of the country, with an insignificant preponderance of M. arvalis in the northeastern part. Conversely, M. levis had a clearly expressed predominance over M. arvalis in several regions of the northern part of the country. The craniometrical specificity of the 2 vole species in Hungary was characterized on the basis of craniologically determined samples. Craniometrical characteristics of both species showed similar absolute variability of their corresponding parameters with poorly expressed cranial sexual dimorphism. A revision was carried out on 245 adult skull specimens of the common vole (Microtus arvalis sensu lato) kept in the mammal collection of the Hungarian Natural History Museum in Budapest. A highly effective craniometric classification function was used to reveal whether they belonged to the common vole (M. arvalis Pallas, 1778 sensu stricto) or to the East European vole (Microtus levis Miller, 1908). It was found that M. levis specimens were present in the Hungarian mammal fauna; the boundaries of that animal's European range were thus expanded in the west. The distribution of the East European vole and the common vole in Hungary showed that both of these vole species occur together in all of the studied regions, with different predominant presence. M. levis occurred in lower numbers than M. arvalis in the western part of the country while the 2 species were relatively equally present in the central part of the country, with an insignificant preponderance of M. arvalis in the northeastern part. Conversely, M. levis had a clearly expressed predominance over M. arvalis in several regions of the northern part of the country. The craniometrical specificity of the 2 vole species in Hungary was characterized on the basis of craniologically determined samples. Craniometrical characteristics of both species showed similar absolute variability of their corresponding parameters with poorly expressed cranial sexual dimorphism. Article in Journal/Newspaper Common vole Microtus arvalis DergiPark Akademik (E-Journals) TURKISH JOURNAL OF MEDICAL SCIENCES
institution Open Polar
collection DergiPark Akademik (E-Journals)
op_collection_id ftdergipark2ojs
language Turkish
topic Key words: Skull features,Microtus arvalis,Microtus levis,taxonomic detachment,distribution,Hungary
spellingShingle Key words: Skull features,Microtus arvalis,Microtus levis,taxonomic detachment,distribution,Hungary
MARKOV, Georgi
CSORBA, Gabor
KOCHEVA, Maria
GOSPODINOVA, Milena
Skull features of the common vole (Microtus arvalis sensu lato) from Hungary: craniometrical evidence for its taxonomic detachment
topic_facet Key words: Skull features,Microtus arvalis,Microtus levis,taxonomic detachment,distribution,Hungary
description A revision was carried out on 245 adult skull specimens of the common vole (Microtus arvalis sensu lato) kept in the mammal collection of the Hungarian Natural History Museum in Budapest. A highly effective craniometric classification function was used to reveal whether they belonged to the common vole (M. arvalis Pallas, 1778 sensu stricto) or to the East European vole (Microtus levis Miller, 1908). It was found that M. levis specimens were present in the Hungarian mammal fauna; the boundaries of that animal's European range were thus expanded in the west. The distribution of the East European vole and the common vole in Hungary showed that both of these vole species occur together in all of the studied regions, with different predominant presence. M. levis occurred in lower numbers than M. arvalis in the western part of the country while the 2 species were relatively equally present in the central part of the country, with an insignificant preponderance of M. arvalis in the northeastern part. Conversely, M. levis had a clearly expressed predominance over M. arvalis in several regions of the northern part of the country. The craniometrical specificity of the 2 vole species in Hungary was characterized on the basis of craniologically determined samples. Craniometrical characteristics of both species showed similar absolute variability of their corresponding parameters with poorly expressed cranial sexual dimorphism. A revision was carried out on 245 adult skull specimens of the common vole (Microtus arvalis sensu lato) kept in the mammal collection of the Hungarian Natural History Museum in Budapest. A highly effective craniometric classification function was used to reveal whether they belonged to the common vole (M. arvalis Pallas, 1778 sensu stricto) or to the East European vole (Microtus levis Miller, 1908). It was found that M. levis specimens were present in the Hungarian mammal fauna; the boundaries of that animal's European range were thus expanded in the west. The distribution of the East European vole and the common vole in Hungary showed that both of these vole species occur together in all of the studied regions, with different predominant presence. M. levis occurred in lower numbers than M. arvalis in the western part of the country while the 2 species were relatively equally present in the central part of the country, with an insignificant preponderance of M. arvalis in the northeastern part. Conversely, M. levis had a clearly expressed predominance over M. arvalis in several regions of the northern part of the country. The craniometrical specificity of the 2 vole species in Hungary was characterized on the basis of craniologically determined samples. Craniometrical characteristics of both species showed similar absolute variability of their corresponding parameters with poorly expressed cranial sexual dimorphism.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author MARKOV, Georgi
CSORBA, Gabor
KOCHEVA, Maria
GOSPODINOVA, Milena
author_facet MARKOV, Georgi
CSORBA, Gabor
KOCHEVA, Maria
GOSPODINOVA, Milena
author_sort MARKOV, Georgi
title Skull features of the common vole (Microtus arvalis sensu lato) from Hungary: craniometrical evidence for its taxonomic detachment
title_short Skull features of the common vole (Microtus arvalis sensu lato) from Hungary: craniometrical evidence for its taxonomic detachment
title_full Skull features of the common vole (Microtus arvalis sensu lato) from Hungary: craniometrical evidence for its taxonomic detachment
title_fullStr Skull features of the common vole (Microtus arvalis sensu lato) from Hungary: craniometrical evidence for its taxonomic detachment
title_full_unstemmed Skull features of the common vole (Microtus arvalis sensu lato) from Hungary: craniometrical evidence for its taxonomic detachment
title_sort skull features of the common vole (microtus arvalis sensu lato) from hungary: craniometrical evidence for its taxonomic detachment
publisher TÜBİTAK
publishDate 2012
url https://dergipark.org.tr/tr/pub/tbtkzoology/issue/12615/153100
https://doi.org/10.3906/sag-1204-111
genre Common vole
Microtus arvalis
genre_facet Common vole
Microtus arvalis
op_source Volume: 36, Issue: 3 283-290
1300-0179
1303-6114
Turkish Journal of Zoology
op_relation https://dergipark.org.tr/tr/download/article-file/134508
https://dergipark.org.tr/tr/pub/tbtkzoology/issue/12615/153100
doi:10.3906/sag-1204-111
op_doi https://doi.org/10.3906/sag-1204-111
container_title TURKISH JOURNAL OF MEDICAL SCIENCES
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