Forest snail faunas from Transylvania (Romania) and their relationship to the faunas of Central and Northern Europe |
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Authors: | ROBERT A. D. CAMERON BEATA M. POKRYSZKO MICHAL HORSÁK IOAN SIRBU VOICHIŢA GHEOCA |
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Affiliation: | 1. Department of Animal and Plant Sciences, University of Sheffield, Sheffield S10?4TN, UK;2. Department of Zoology, the Natural History Museum, London SW7?5BD, UK;3. Museum of Natural History, Wroc?aw University, Sienkiewicza 21, 50‐335, Wroc?aw, Poland;4. Department of Botany and Zoology, Masaryk University, Kotlá?ská 2, CZ‐611 37 Brno, Czech Republic;5. Department of Ecology and Environmental Protection, Lucian Blaga University of Sibiu, 31 Oituz Street, Sibiu, RO – 550337, Romania |
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Abstract: | Forty‐three forest sites in seven sampling areas in mountainous parts of Transylvania were sampled to obtain inventories of their snail faunas, and to make comparisons between these and the faunas of similar sites further north along the Carpathian chain. Sampling areas ran from close to the Ukrainian border in the north to Retezat in the south‐west. Altogether, 83 species were found, as well as between 19 and 40 species at individual sites. Sites within the same sampling area had more species in common than in among‐area comparisons, although differences between areas did not relate to the distance between them. Such differences appear to be related more to ecological factors than to geography. Faunas of all areas were very similar to those recorded from the Polish and Ukrainian Carpathians; distance from these northern faunas had little effect on similarity. More broadly, the fauna of these forests shows a much greater affinity to those of countries to the north than to those of countries to the south. Despite the survival of forests through the last glacial period of the Pleistocene, and the greater proximity to potential Mediterranean refugia, these faunas appear to be mainly a subset of those found further north. They represent a rather small proportion of the known Romanian fauna, in which there are many endemics restricted to other habitats. © 2011 The Linnean Society of London, Biological Journal of the Linnean Society, 2011, 104 , 471–479. |
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Keywords: | distance decay land molluscs Pleistocene refugia |
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