Aulodrilus limnobius Bretscher, 1899
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.199216 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5624754 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03B3879C-FFB4-1678-FF64-799CFD99F8A6 |
treatment provided by |
Plazi |
scientific name |
Aulodrilus limnobius Bretscher, 1899 |
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Aulodrilus limnobius Bretscher, 1899
Records. Gránický Brook, Znojmo, 48°51'60"N / 16°01'33"E, lgt. PP, det. PP. (2005); Drietomice River, Starý Hrozenkov, 48°57'13"N / 17°52'29"E, lgt. PP, det. PP (2005); Trusovický Brook, Jívová, 49°42'27"N / 17°21'40"E, lgt. KB, det. PP; Olešná River, Zvole, 49°29'26"N / 16°09'44"E, lgt. KB, det. PP (2002); Nectava River, Březinky, 49°39'24"N / 16°46'52"E, lgt. KB, det. PP (2002); Okluky River, Uherský Ostroh, 48°59'38"N / 17°24'07"E, lgt. H, det. PP (2002); Farský Brook, Trhové Sviny, 48°50'24"N / 14°37'55"E, lgt. JZ, det. PP (2002); all specimens were immature.
Characteristics of sites. All records were from small and middle-sized brooks (3rd and 4th Strahler order, river width up to 5 m) with a bottom substrate dominated by sand, gravel, and stones. Most of these highland stretches had a natural morphology (with buffer strips) and extensively used (cropland, grassland), partially forested catchments. The brooks have good water quality (from oligo- to beta-mesosaprobity), with one exception of lowland stream (Okluky River, alpha-mesosaprobity).
Ecology. Being a detritophagous species, A. limnobius occurs from hyporhithral to potamal, and also has been collected from standing water areas including deeper, profundal habitats ( Hörner et al. 2002; Šporka 2003; Alves et al. 2008). It can tolerate intermediate eutrophication ( Verdonschot 2006) and organic pollution from oligo- to alpha-mesosaprobity ( Hörner et al. 2002). Microhabitat preferences of fine substrates rich in organic material (pelal, psamal and argylal) have been reported ( Šporka 2003; Alves et al. 2008). Among oligochaetes, A. limnobius belongs to K-strategists ( Šporka 2003) with one reproductive cycle per year, mostly realised by asexual reproduction (architomy); mature specimens are rare (Timm & Veldhijzen van Zanten 2002). Worms burrow in sediment, where they build reinforced tubes of silt (Timm & Veldhijzen van Zanten 2002).
Morphology. Aulodrilus limnobius has characteristic bifid crotchets, with up to 10 chaetae per bundle (all with shorter upper teeth, and occasionally with wing-like dilations of the distal ends of the chaetae in posterior segments), and an unsegmented tail, serving as a respiratory organ—typical for this genus. It can be distinguished from its congeners known to occur in the Czech Republic— A. pigueti , A japonicus , and A. pluriseta —by a lack of hair chaetae (Timm & Veldhijzen van Zanten 2002; van den Hoek & Verdonschot 2005).
Distribution. This cosmopolitan species has been recorded in most of European countries, absent only in Austria, the UK, Croatia, Denmark, Greece, Slovenia, and Portugal ( Timm & Giani 2004). According to Fauna Europaea ( Timm & Giani 2004), the species was found also in the Czech Republic, but unfortunately, the source of this data is not available.
No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.
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