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The common shrew Sorex araneus Linnaeus, 1758 and pygmy shrew S. minutus Linnaeus, 1766 were live-trapped for 10 months in a spruce plantation. Mean home range sizes were 1058 (SD = 381) m2 for the common shrew and 2146 (SD = 147) m2 for the pgymy shrew. The density estimates of S. araneus varied from 4 ind/ha in winter to 26 ind/ha in summer, and these of S. minutus were 2 ind/ha and 7 ind/ha, respectively. Peak densities for both species occurred during August. It appears that maintaining a viable population of these two shrew species in this spruce plantation requires no special precaution.
In the shrews Sorex araneus Linnaeus, 1758 and S. minutus Linnaeus, 1766 a short period of fast post-natal development in the nest is followed by a longer summer period of developmental stasis and then by autumn regression. The aim of this paper has been to test whether this period of developmental stability also is accompanied by inhibited development of the eye lens - the most continuously growing organ of the mammalian body. If it is not, then can this be used as an age indicator in studies on shrews, and can it serve in distinguishing seasonal cohorts of young born in consecutive summer months? This aspect was examined on material comprising dead shrews collected from live traps and pitfalls set for rodent research in the marshy habitat of a river valley in Białowieża Forest, Poland, in 1997-1999. In fact, the eye lens in shrews was shown to increase in size continuously; therefore it may be used as a reliable age indicator. Body mass of weaned young shrews also continued to increase slowly with age until autumn. On the basis of the distribution of individuals in successive lens-mass classes, three age groups (cohorts) of young could be distinguished each season in the S. araneus popu­lation, and two in S. minutus. In the former species, consistent patterns to the relative abundance of the three seasonal cohorts were observed. The consequences of time of birth on individual fitness in Sorex shrews are discussed.
Difficulties in investigating shrews in the wild in winter, especially in trapping them and keeping them alive during live-trapping studies, have been the main reason for serious deficiencies in our knowledge of their ecology. We developed a live-trapping protocol which allowed us to maximise capture rates and minimise mortality of shrews. We used wooden box traps with a nest-chamber, which we set in plywood ‘chimneys’ with removable roofs. Chimneys facilitated suitable positioning of traps and protected them from being blocked by snow. This resulted in a high trappability (up to 20.2 shrews and 8.2 voles per 1000 trap hours), a large proportion of recaptures (most shrews were recaptured, often repeatedly) and a very low mortality rate (<0.09 shrews and 0 rodents per 1000 trap hours) despite sub-zero temperatures and deep snow cover. This allowed us to pursue an intensive live-trapping study, using the CMR-method, of shrews wintering in the Narewka river valley (north-east Poland). Because of the high trappability and minimal mortality, the presented protocol can be recommended to study winter ecology and conservation biology of such fragile and strictly protected small mammals as shrews.
W pracy przedstawiono aktualne dane dotyczące występowania ryjówkowatych w Tatrach polskich i u ich podnóży. W latach 1993–2012 odnotowano na 124 stanowiskach 301 osobników należących do pięciu gatunków ryjówkowatych: ryjówki aksamitnej Sorex araneus, ryjówki malutkiej S. minutus, ryjówki alpejskiej S. alpinus, rzęsorka rzeczka Neomys fodiens i rzęsorka mniejszego N. anomalus. Najpospolitszym gatunkiem była ryjówka aksamitna, którą wykazano na 64 stanowiskach (208 osobników). Znacznie rzadziej stwierdzana była ryjówka malutka (34 stanowiska i 61 osobników) i ryjówka górska (19 osobników w 16 miejscach). Rzęsorek rzeczek (11 osobników) obserwowany był na ośmiu stanowiskach zlokalizowanych w sąsiedztwie górskich potoków. Tylko dwukrotnie u podnóża Tatr, przy wlocie Doliny Strążyskiej (885 m n.p.m.) i na Polanie Zazadniej (910 m) został stwierdzony rzęsorek mniejszy
During a study conducted in 2002–2008 the following 6 species of shrews were recorded in the Silesian Beskid Mts. (Western Carpathians, S Poland): Sorex araneus, S. minutus, S. alpinus, Neomys fodiens, N. anomalus and Crocidura suaveolens. The most widespread was S. araneus (63.4% of locations), followed by S. alpinus (13.4%), S. minutus (12.2%), N. fodiens (7.3%), N. anomalus (2.4%) and C. suaveolens (1.2%). Among dead shrews (n=47) S. araneus comprised 56.6%, S. minutus 21.7%, S. alpinus 10.9%, C. suaveolens 4.3%, N. anomalus 4.3% and N. fodiens 2.2%. During capture with live traps only S. araneus was recorded, constituting 2.5% of all small mammals captured. It was most frequently caught in deforested areas.
Trichinellosis is one of the most frequent parasitic disease in Poland. Up to now, all animal and human trichinellosis infections in Poland have been considered to be caused by Trichinella spiralis in spite of only few isolates from humans and swine have been identified so far. From November 1994 to February 1995, 112 mammals belonging to 9 species were examined to detect Trichinella infection, and to identify the etiological agent at the species level. Muscle larvae of Trichinella sp. were isolated from 3 (27%) red foxes (Vulpes vulpes), 3 (13%) common shrews (Sorex araneus), and from 2 (20%) pygmy shrews (Sorex minutus). Only larvae from foxes have been identified by random amplified polymorphic DNA analysis as T. spiralis and T. britovi in one and two animals, respectively. As far as we know, this is the first report of T. britovi in Poland.
Stable co-existence of similar species should be facilitated by mechanisms impairing, besides exploitative, interference competition. We investigated avoidance of intra- and interspecific conflicts in a four-species community of shrews [Sorex minutus Linnaeus, 1766,S. araneus Linnaeus, 1758,Neomys anomalus Cabrera, 1907, andN. fodiens (Pennant, 1771)], using the method of dyadic encounters in a neutral arena. We tested whether the use of passive (habituation, reduction of mobility, increase of inter-individual distance, and stillness) and active (‘to-and-fro’ and ‘keeping distance’ behaviours) forms of conflict avoidance depends on species, size or domination rank. The duration of conflicts was positively correlated with mobility and negatively with inter-individual distance, whereas it was unrelated to time of stillness and the active forms. The repertoire of conflict avoidance mechanisms was not species-specific and the display of these mechanisms depended rather on the size and domination rank of animals participating in a given interaction. In contrast to rodents, shrews did not avoid conflicts by the most passive forms: freeze and stillness reactions. All other forms were used with a higher or lower efficiency by all species. However, consistent with our predictions, large shrews (asN. fodiens) used mainly the passive mechanisms of conflicts avoidance (‘wait-and-see’ strategy), whereas small shrews (asS. minutus) invest proportionally more time in active forms (‘escape’ strategy).
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).
6 species of smal mammals have been registered In the pine forests of Bory Tucholskie and Puszcza Biała. The core of the community is formed by C. glareolus, A.sylvaticus, S. araneus and S. pygmaeus. In both forest areas, community abundance is 12 ind./100 trap-days, reaching 15 ind./100 trap-days in young forests. The reproduction of C. glareolus and A. sylvaticus falls in the middle of the reproduction range for European forests. Differences in net reproduction depend on the number of litters of overwintering females arid tire contribution to reproduction of females born during the current season.
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