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The hypothesis, that shrews avoid intra- and interspecific aggression through a reduction of their loco-motor activity, was tested. In 55 neutral arena tests (each of 30-min-duration), 10 subadult individuals of Sorex minutus, 14 of S. araneus, 9 (including 1 adult male) of Neomys anomalus, and 13 of N. fodiens were used. Loco-motor activity and sum of conflicts (attacks, chases, escapes and threats) in 1st-5th minutes of interactions (phase I) and 10th-15th minutes (phase II) were compared. In all the species, both in intra- and interspecific interactions, a reduction of mobility between phases I and II was observed (in 6 out of 16 comparisons the difference was statistically significant, and in the 7th comparison it was fairly significant). The highest reduction of activity was observed in the smallest S. minutus, and the lowest reduction (no difference was significant) in the largest, dominating N. fodiens.
Vaucherilepis trichophorus sp. nov., gen. nov. is described based on specimens of adult tapeworms found in the European water shrew, Neomys fodiens, in Bulgaria and cysticercoids found in crustaceans Gammarus (Rivulogammarus) balcanicus, in Ukraine. The most important differentiating features of the new species are the size (16-18 µm, mean 17 µm), number (29-36) and characteristic shape of the rostellar hooks as well as details of the strobila morphology such as the relatively large cirrussac, cirrus armament, testes arranged in a shallow triangle and a sac-like uterus which, in gravid proglottids, transforms into a single thick-walled capsule enclosing all eggs, facilitating a group infection of intermediate hosts with eggs. The morphological features of the new species, combined with the aquatic life cycle and peculiarities of the cysticercoid organisation, differ significantly from known hymenolepidid genera, therefore a new monotypical genus Vaucherilepis gen. nov. is proposed to accommodate this species. The diagnosis of the new genus is given and some data on the infection rates of intermediate hosts with cysticercoids of Vaucherilepis trichophorus sp. nov., are provided.
The use of trophic and spatial resources in a guild composed of five species of insectivorous mammals (Galemys pyrenaicus, Talpa europaea, Neomys fodiens, Sorex coronatus, and Sorex minutus) was studied. The characteristics of the macrohabitat were studied based on data from trap lines. Those pertaining to the microhabitat were examined through a study of the sites where each animal was caught. The diet was studied by analysis of the digestive tract as well as the availability of resources in various microhabitats. The results show a high level of segregation in the use of trophic resources. The microhabitat used on the ground surface has a low level of segregation among the shrews. A comparison of the diet of each species with the results from the invertebrate sampling carried out in different microhabitats (water, subsoil, humus, ground surface) shows that there is a relation between the food consumed and its availability in the microhabitats utilised by each species. This study suggests that the coexistence among the insectivorous species studied may be ex­plained by the use of the microhabitat and diet segregation. The differences in diet would be a consequence of the use of different microhabitats. Servicio de Conservacion de la Biodiversidad, Gobierno de Navarra, C.I Alhóndiga 1, 31002 Pamplona, Spain (EC); Departament de Biologia Animal, Facultat de Biologia, Universität de Barcelona, Avgda. Diagonal 645, 08028 Barcelona, Spain (JG)
Hypotheses about the dependence of circadian activity from metabolic rate and the segregation of temporal niches among competing species were verified by the study of activity patterns in a shrew community of two semiaquatic species,Neomys anomalus Cabrera, 1907 andN. fodiens (Pennant, 1771), and two terrestrial species,Sorex araneus Linnaeus, 1758 andS. minutus Linnaeus, 1766, co-existing in wet habitats of Białowieża Forest (E Poland). In ten trapping sessions, performed in early summer between 1991 and 2000, traps were open 24 hours continuously and patrolled at 1:00, 5:00, 10:00, 15:00, and 20:00. All the shrew species were most active between 20:00 and 1:00, and least active around mid-day (10:00–15:00). However, activity of the twoSorex species was lower than that of the twoNeomys species in the period 20:00–1:00, but higher in the period 15:00–20:00. BothNeomys species displayed clearly nocturnal, unimodal patterns of activity. In contrast, activity of bothSorex species was relatively evenly distributed over 24 hours and they increased their activity earlier (ie after 15:00) than bothNeomys species (after 20:00). These results confirm the idea that small shrew species with higher metabolic rate have more frequent and more equally distributed activity bouts than large species. Overlap of temporal niches was the highest within genera (99.29% between bothNeomys species and 98.36% between bothSorex species), the lowest betweenN. fodiens andS. araneus (88.26%) andS. minutus (89.34%), and intermediate betweenN. anomalus and bothSorex species (91.78 and 93.34%, respectively). Such high interspecific overlaps in activity suggest a joint-action of other mechanisms that separate ecological niches of these species also in other dimensions (eg food, microhabitat).
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