A Review Of Species Diversity, Distribution And Ecology Of Freshwater Gastropod Molluscs Inhabiting The Ukrainian Transcarpathian
Author
Anistratenko, V. V.
Schmalhausen Institute of Zoology, of NAS of Ukraine, vul. B. Khmelnitskogo, 15, Kyiv, 01030 Ukraine
Author
Furyk, Yu. I.
Uzhgorod National University, Narodna Square, 3, Uzhgorod, 88000 Ukraine
Author
Anistratenko, O. Yu.
Schmalhausen Institute of Zoology, of NAS of Ukraine, vul. B. Khmelnitskogo, 15, Kyiv, 01030 Ukraine & Institute of Geological Sciences of NAS of Ukraine, O. Gontchar st., 55 - b, Kyiv, 01054 Ukraine
Author
Degtyarenko, E. V.
Schmalhausen Institute of Zoology, of NAS of Ukraine, vul. B. Khmelnitskogo, 15, Kyiv, 01030 Ukraine & National University of Life and Environmental Sciences of Ukraine, General Rodimtsev st., 19, Kyiv, 03041 Ukraine
text
Vestnik Zoologii
2019
2019-10-01
53
5
349
374
http://dx.doi.org/10.2478/vzoo-2019-0033
journal article
10.2478/vzoo-2019-0033
4a118496-6a5f-4607-b880-fe24d1fe9ae8
2073-2333
6949164
Terrestribythinella baidashnikovi
Sitnikova, Starobogatov & V. Anistratenko, 1992
D i s t r i b u t i o n. This regionally endemic species for a long time was known from a few localities in the
Transcarpathian Region
(
Sitnikova et al., 1992
). The only one population recently found extra — in the adjacent
Ivano-Frankivsk Region
(
Anistratenko et al., 2017
: shell image is given in
fig. 3
, I–K). By now
T. baidashnikovi
is recorded in 17 localities of
Transcarpathia
: 4, 5, 19, 28, 31, 35–37, 41, 47, 49, 52, 54, 57–59 and 61 (
fig. 1
,
table 1
).
Remarks. Judging by the number of records the species is one of the most widespread snails in the region occuring in the altitude range between 300 and
1100 m
a. s. l. (table 2), although they produce the populations of a very low density. Our observations confirm these small gastropods inhabit here in quite particular biotopes: they live rather under and among the litter leaves on banks of water flows than in the water. Riverine biotopes are not characteristic for the species. Few findings in the rivers were made at the mouths of streams, and these molluscs were not observed upstream and downstream of the rivers.
Terrestribythinella
hold an intermediate position between terrestrial and freshwater environments and apparently do not require significant amounts of liquid water for their existence. It seems they are neither strictly terrestrial, nor strictly water molluscs. This hidden under the leaves biotope is actually amphibiotic and therefore is usually poorly explored by malacologists who collect either freshwater molluscs or land snails. Occurring of
Terrestribythinella
snails sympatric with terrestrial gastropods on the wet litter leaves or stones reflect their putative amphibiotic ecological preferences (
Sitnikova et al., 1992
;
Anistratenko, 1995
;
Anistratenko et al., 2017
). Interestingly,
Terrestribythinella
, inhabiting mostly springs and streams, sometimes forms a monospecific mollusc community. This can be proved by finding the caddisfly
Crunoeсia irrorata
(Curtis, 1834) larva with a case built entirely of beech leaves and 22 living snails of
Terrestribythinella
(
Martynov et al., 2018
)
.