New Faunistic Records of Spiders (Arachnida: Araneae) From Dobruja (Romania and Bulgaria)

Author(s):  
Liviu Aurel Moscaliuc

Abstract A number of spider species were collected in 2011 and 2012 in various microhabitats in and around the village Letea (the Danube Delta, Romania) and on the Bulgarian Dobruja Black Sea coast. The results are the start of a proposed longer survey of the spider fauna in the area. The genus Spermophora Hentz, 1841 (with the species senoculata), Xysticus laetus Thorell, 1875 and Trochosahispanica Simon, 1870 are mentioned in the Romanian fauna for the first time. Floronia bucculenta (Clerck, 1757) is at the first record for the Bulgarian fauna. Diagnostic drawings and photographs are presented.

2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Iulian Pojar ◽  
Adrian Stănică ◽  
Friederike Stock ◽  
Christian Kochleus ◽  
Michael Schultz ◽  
...  

AbstractA multitude of recent studies have detailed microplastic concentrations in aquatic and terrestrial environments, although questions remain over their ultimate fate. At present, few studies have detailed microplastic characteristics and abundance along a freshwater–marine interface, and considerable uncertainties remain over the modelled contribution of terrestrial and riverine microplastic to the world’s oceans. In this article, for the first time, we detail sedimentary microplastic concentrations along a River–Sea transect from the lower reaches of a major continental river, the River Danube, through the Danube Delta, the Black Sea coast to the Romanian and Bulgarian inner shelf of the Black Sea. Our results indicate that isolated areas of the Danube Delta are still relatively pristine, with few microplastic particles in some of the sediments sampled.


Phytotaxa ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 365 (2) ◽  
pp. 130
Author(s):  
STOYAN STOYANOV

Bupleurum pauciradiatum is recorded for the first time in the Balkans. It was discovered in the Kaliakra Reserve, the Bulgarian North Black Sea coast. A revised species description and comparison with its morphologically closest taxa—B. asperuloides and B. wolffianum—are given. The name B. pauciradiatum was misused in the countries of Transcaucasia for B. wolffianum. Bupleurum wolffianum is found conspecific with B. leptocladum, and the latter is reduced into synonymy. The records of B. pauciradiatum in the Crimea belong to B. asperuloides.


Author(s):  
Daniyar Memedemin ◽  
Marian Tudor ◽  
Dan Cogălniceanu ◽  
Marius Skolka ◽  
Gabriel Bănică ◽  
...  

Abstract We report the occurrence of the European otter (Lutra lutra Linnaeus, 1758) along the entire Romanian Black Sea coast, for the first time. Several sightings were within the harbor and the city of Constanţa, indicating that the otter can accommodate to and tolerate high human impact. The report is based on observations made between 2012 and 2015. The species has been previously reported from all Romanian regions but not from the Black Sea coast. The occurrences reported within this article confirm an extension of the range of this Near Threatened species on the Romanian Black Sea coast, most probably due to the increasing of population size from other sources such as the Danube floodplain.


Author(s):  
Н.Ф. Федосеев ◽  
Л.Ю. Пономарев

Necropolis Kyz-Aul is located on the Black Sea coast, 1 km to the south-east of the village. Yakovenkovo. In 1930, 1979–1983, 1985, 1995, 1997, 2000, 2005–2006, 2015–2017, he was investigated by Yu. Martti, O. Chevelev, N. Sudarev and N. Fedoseev. Separate burials date back to the II–I BC, the burial of the I–III AD the most recent burials, apparently, were committed in the IV–V AD. In the VI – third quarter of the VII century AD on the territory of the already abandoned necropolis, a small settlement was located. Its cultural stratum is traced on all sites that have been followed in the last decade. As living quarters, the looted crypts of the 1st–3rd centuries AD were adapted, consisting of one or two funerary cells and built of massive blocks of limestone (№ 6, 7, 9, 10). With exception of the crypts of the poorly preserved pit of the semidugout (?) other residential and household buildings on the necropolis could not be fixed. One child burial also belongs to the same period. The most well-preserved living room in the crypt number 6. In one of its funerary cells housed five household pits and heating devices, including a fireplace, reminiscent of the design of the fireplace. In the other crypts, the interior details of the “underground” dwellings have not been preserved. In the “Khazar” time burial chamber crypts were adapted for the maintenance of small cattle. The time of the early Byzantine settlement on the necropolis dates numerous finds of amphorae. The upper date was determined thanks to the coin of 674 Constantine IV Pogonat. In addition, a ring with the image of an archangel was found, an analogy of which is known in the burial complexes of the 7th century. Unfortunately, the area and location of the necropolis of this settlement is not yet established. Cannot be reconstructed and its layout. It is difficult to reconstruct the interior of the “underground” dwellings themselves, since the crypts were reused in the “Khazar” period. In addition, no other settlements of this time were found on the ancient necropolises of the Kerch Peninsula


2005 ◽  
Vol 15 (1) ◽  
pp. 63-71 ◽  
Author(s):  
I. SCHOGOLEV ◽  
A. RUDENKO ◽  
A.J. CRIVELLI

The status of breeding pelicans and cormorants is assessed in the area from the Danube delta (Romania) to the northern part of the Crimean peninsula. Four breeding species occur in inland and coastal wetlands: Dalmatian Pelican Pelecanus crispus, Great White Pelican Pelecanus onocrotalus, Great Cormorant Phalacrocorax carbo and Pygmy Cormorant Phalacrocorax pygmeus. Data on clutch size and breeding success are given. Historically, all four species were restricted to the Danube delta. Currently, with the exception of Dalmatian Pelican, they all breed successfully on the eastern Black Sea coast in the Ukraine. There are many conservation problems that will jeopardize the breeding of these species in the future if nothing is done.


Author(s):  
DENIS COPILAȘ-CIOCIANU ◽  
GAVRIL MARIUS BERCHI ◽  
LEVAN MUMLADZE

We present findings from the first survey of shallow-water amphipods conducted along the Black Sea coast in Georgia. Eight species from five families have been identified, all but one being new for the Georgian fauna. Although most are usual inhabitants of the Black and Mediterranean seas, we report the first record of the invader Melita nitida in this region. This North American species was previously known in Europe only from the Atlantic and Baltic coasts. Its finding in the Black Sea implies either jump dispersal, or a more widespread, but cryptic distribution. Given that the total number of species reported in Georgia is lower than in the other countries neighbouring the Black Sea, we anticipate the discovery of new taxa in future surveys. Our study highlights the importance of faunistic exploration in previously overlooked regions for detecting potentially cryptic invasions and corroborating biogeographical patterns.


2018 ◽  
Vol 3 (4) ◽  
pp. 36-42
Author(s):  
A. V. Katokhin ◽  
Yu. M. Kornyychuk

Data of genetic analysis of the Black Sea trematodes of Cainocreadium genus and Helicometra fasciata were obtained for the first time. The nucleotide sequences of ITS1 rRNA gene cluster of Cainocreadium flesi from Platichthys flesus (GenBank entries MG980645, MG980646) and Cainocreadium sp. from Gaidropsarus mediterraneus (MG980643, MG980644, MK248037, MK248038) off Crimean Black Sea coast were found to be identical. Nevertheless, they have not been synonymized because of morphological differences known between these hostal morphs. Sequences of Cainocreadium from the Black Sea fish turned out to differ, by 4 positions, from similar sequences of a closely related Mediterranean congener, C. labracis (cercaria). Five insertions-deletions and 38 nucleotide sequences distinguish the ITS1 sequences of the Black Sea trematodes, C. flesi and Cainocreadium sp., from ITS1 sequences of another Mediterranean congener, C. dentecis. The ITS1 sequences of the Black Sea and Mediterranean Helicometra fasciata samples also differ: 5 nucleotide changes and 11 insertions-deletions were identified. Supplementary data associated with this article can be found in online version at https://doi.org/10.21072/mbj.2018.03.4.04.


2020 ◽  
Vol 66 (1) ◽  
pp. 91-93
Author(s):  
Ömral Ü. Özkoç ◽  
Deniz Oğuz ◽  
Can Nacar ◽  
Kiraz Erciyas-Yavuz ◽  
Y. Sancar Barış

2013 ◽  
Vol 294 ◽  
pp. 294-302 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ahmet Evren Erginal ◽  
Yunus Levent Ekinci ◽  
Alper Demirci ◽  
Mustafa Bozcu ◽  
Muhammed Zeynel Ozturk ◽  
...  

Geosciences ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 10 (12) ◽  
pp. 489
Author(s):  
Galina Trebeleva ◽  
Andrey Kizilov ◽  
Konstantin Glazov ◽  
Vladlen Yurkov ◽  
Gleb Yurkov

The Markul settlement is an architectural site of the local population of northwestern Colchis. It is located in the village of Markula, Ochamchira region, Republic of Abkhazia. Traditional and modern digital methods are combined here to study the settlement. Panorama images acquired by a drone are used to outline a final orthometric model of the landscape of the entire settlement. An ancient road was discovered after detailed analysis of the finished model. Field studies have confirmed the existence of the road. Photogrammetry is similarly used here to study the architectural remains of the Alakhash-abaa tower and the results suggest that it was erected in the Roman period. The excavation results also support this conclusion.


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