4.1 Article

The first records of Niphargus hrabei and N. potamophilus in Ukraine and Bulgaria significantly enlarge the ranges of these species

Journal

EUROPEAN ZOOLOGICAL JOURNAL
Volume 89, Issue 1, Pages 1191-1200

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/24750263.2022.2126534

Keywords

Amphipoda; epigean; Black Sea; biogeography

Categories

Funding

  1. University of Lodz
  2. IDUB scholarship of the University of Lodz
  3. Research Council of Lithuania [09.3.3-LMT-K-712-19-0149]

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This study provides important new records for two species based on morphological and molecular analyses. The results reveal that both species have good dispersal ability and prefer stagnant or low running water environments. This research further elucidates the biogeography and ecology of Niphargus.
Niphargus comprises hundreds of narrowly-endemic West Palaearctic subterranean taxa. However, a few exceptional species inhabit surface waters and have remarkably large ranges. Herein, based on morphological and molecular analyses, we provide important new records for two of these species. N. potamophilus, previously known from the eastern Azov Sea lowlands, is reported for the first time from Ukraine and Bulgaria from localities adjacent to the Black Sea. These findings expand its range westward by more than 1000 km along the coastline. From Bulgaria, we also report for the first time N. hrabei, a species previously known to occur along the middle and lower Danube lowlands and in isolated populations at the foothills of the Northern Caucasus. Our new record thus extends its range southwards by more than 150 km. Both species contained unique haplotypes at all of the sampled localities. These were, nevertheless, not very divergent from more distant populations, emphasizing their good dispersal ability. Ecologically, the sampling localities were generally characterized by stagnant to low running water, dense vegetation, and muddy substrate. Overall, our results bring important insights, shedding more light on the biogeography and ecology of Niphargus.

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