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We studied the intra- and interspecific size variability of 271 water shrewsNeomys fodiens (Pennant, 1771) andN. anomalus Cabrera, 1907 from seven sample sites along a latitudinal transect from Bosnia and Herzegovina to Poland.Neomys anomalus was the only water shrew in three Dinaride karst fields, while it was sympatric with N.fodiens in remaining sites. The first principal component scores (PC1; 72.2% of variance explained), derived from principal components analysis of 13 cranial, mandibular and dental measurements, were used as the size factor. One-way ANOVA detected significant interpopulation variation in both species; intraspecific variation, however, was much more pronounced inN. anomalus. No latitudinal size pattern was found in N. fodiens (r = −0.42, p = 0.58), while mean PC1 scores correlated significantly and negatively with latitude inN. anomalus (r = −0.92, p = 0.004). Therefore, along a north to south transect,N. anomalus converged in size towards N. fodiens, which suggests that the former species occupies increasingly more aquatic habitats in the same direction. Individuals from allopatric populations ofN. anomalus from Slovenia and Bosnia and Herzegovina were, on average, larger than sympatric conspecific populations from the same latitudinal zone, which is consistent with the hypothesis of character displacement.
Reactions of a Neomys fodiens (Pennant, 1771) parous female [FP] to 4 conspecific and 3 N. anomalus Cabrera, 1907 intruders were studied quantitatively in enclosure (135 x 135 cm) experiments. Total time of observations was 30 hr. FP initiated 5.6 intraspecific conflicts per 1 hr (1.95/hr of these were pouncings and fightings) with adult males, 0.8 conflicts/hr with a juvenile female, and 4.7 conflicts/hr with a N. ano­malus adult male. Reactions of N. fodiens parous female were several times more aggressive than interactions between non-breeding 'residents' and 'immigrants' of both water shrew species tested under the same conditions in earlier studies.
Behavioral mechanisms which control resident-immigrant relations in wild popula­tions of Neomys fodiens (Pennant, 1771) and N. anomalus Cabrera, 1907 were studied by quantitative analysis of agonistic interactions between animals inhabiting the enclosure for at least 1 week ('residents') and animals newly introduced ('immigrants'). Tested animals (46 N. fodiens and 24 N. anomalus) were observed in one- and two-species groups or pairs in enclosures of 275 x 135 or 135 x 135 cm built in a laboratory room. During 214 hours of direct observation, social behaviour and patterns of hiding place usage were registered. Individual occupation of the neat boxes, a great number of conflicts among/bdiens-'residents', and a targe number of conflicts between /bdiens-'immigrants' and -'residents' suggest that strong territorial competition in breeding females and strong competition for females in adult males occur between residents and immigrants of the wild N. /odtercs-populations. Group occupation of the nest boxes, a very low degree of aggressiveness among anoma/iis-'residents' and the tolerant interactions between anom.a/«s-'immigrants' and -'residents' suggest that, in wild populations, N. anomalus are gregarious and inhabit given areas in groups. The low number of interspecific conflicts between 'residents' suggests that in the two-spe­cies stabilized groups, behavioral mechanisms exist, which allow N. anomalus to avoid conflicts with the more aggressive N. fodiens. Since the number of conflicts between /bdiercs-'residents' and arioma/us-'immigrants' is much greater than between 'residents' of the two species, it seems that these mechanisms are active learning rather than simple habituation. The decrease in the number of interspecific conflicts within 1-3 days suggests high efficiency of these mechanisms.
Two new hymenolepidid species, Coronacanthus magnihamatus sp. nov. and Triodontolepis boyanensis sp. nov. are described from the European water shrew, Neomys fodiens, in Bulgaria. The most important differentiating features of C. magnihamatus are the length of the rostellar hooks (26-28 um, mean 27 µm) and the thick-walled uterus, which does not form capsules in gravid proglottids. T. boyanensis is distinguished from other members in the genus by the number (16) and size (47-48 µm, mean 48 µm) of the rostellar hooks, the non-capsulate gravid uterus, containing relatively large number of eggs (35-70, mean 49) and the embryophore, possessing polar filaments. The types of uterine development in hymenolepidids of Neomys spp. are discussed.
The modes and efficiency of foraging in the terrestrial and aquatic habitats in water shrews Neomys anomalus Cabrera, 1907 and N. fodiens (Pennant, 1771) were compared in order to investigate if these species can avoid competition for food when they occur syntopically. Seven individuals of N. anomalus and five of N. fodiens, caught in the Białowieża Primeval Forest, were tested individually in the terrarium of size 3 x 0.5 m, containing a 0.25-m-wide 'stream' with flowing water of an average depth 25 cm. Six experimental variants, simulating different habitat conditions, were established. Each animal was tested in a given variant during 3 succeeding days for 6 h a day. In total, 738 h of shrews' behaviour were recorded in darkness using 2 infra-red sensitive video-cameras. Results obtained on four N. fodiens tested with similar methods (648 h; Ruthardt 1990) were included for comparison. N. anomalus swam and dived significantly shorter than N. fodiens, and they did not take food under water, even when there was no food on land. N. fodiens found and took food placed under water and foraged quite efficiently here. They found on average 17.7% of food portions placed under water in the most similar to natural conditions and 19.4% when there was no food on land. In both species foraging time on land was much longer than in water. The presence of natural structures increased duration and efficiency of foraging, but this influence was stronger in N. anomalus than in N. fodiens. These results and literature data suggest that in the wild: (1) both species forage in shallow water and in muddy grounds of wet habitats (wading foraging mode), and also in drier terrestrial habitats (epigeal and hypogeal foraging); (2) only N. fodiens forage in deep water (aquatic foraging); (3) the competition for food between N. anomalus and N. fodiens may be very weak, when potential aquatic prey are available.
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.
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