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Danube crested newt

The Danube crested newt or Danube newt (Triturus dobrogicus) is a species of newt found in central and eastern Europe, along the basin of the Danube river and some of its tributaries and in the Dnieper delta. It has a smaller and more slender body than the other crested newts in genus Triturus but like these, males develop a conspicuous jagged seam on back and tail during breeding season.

Danube crested newt
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Amphibia
Order: Urodela
Family: Salamandridae
Genus: Triturus
Species:
T. dobrogicus
Binomial name
Triturus dobrogicus
(Kiritzescu, 1903)
Synonyms[2]
  • Triton cristatus var. dobrogicus Kiritzescu, 1903
  • Molge macrosoma Boulenger, 1908
  • Triton cristatus danubialis Wolterstorff, 1923
  • Triton cristatus cristatus forma dobrogica Wolterstorff, 1923
  • Triton cristatus danubialis forma werneri Wolterstorff, 1923
  • Triturus cristatus danubialis Mertens, 1923
  • Triton (Neotriton) cristatus danubialis Bolkay, 1928
  • Triturus cristatus dobrogicus Mertens & Müller, 1928
  • Molge cristata danubialis forma smederevana Karaman, 1948
  • Triturus cristatus danubialis var. intermedia Fuhn, 1953
  • Triturus cristatus dobrogicus Mertens & Wermuth, 1960
  • Triturus dobrogicus Bucci-Innocenti, Ragghianti & Mancino, 1983
  • Triturus (Triturus) dobrogicus MacGregor, Sessions & Arntzen, 1990
  • Triturus dobrogicus dobrogicus Litvinchuk and Borkin, 2000
  • Triturus dobrogicus macrosomus Litvinchuk and Borkin, 2000
  • Triturus (Triturus) dobrogicus dobrogicus Dubois & Raffaëlli, 2009
  • Triturus (Triturus) dobrogicus macrosoma Dubois & Raffaëlli, 2009

For half of the year or longer, adults live in slow-flowing river margins, lakes, or ponds, where reproduction takes place. Males perform a courtship display, and females lay around 200 eggs individually onto leaves of aquatic plants. Larvae develop two to four months in the water before reaching metamorphosis. For the remainder of the year, the newts live in shady land habitats, usually forests. Although not yet considered threatened, Danube crested newt populations have declined significantly, the reason being mainly habitat loss. The species is protected by law in the European Union.

Taxonomy edit

The Danube crested newt was described as a variety of the northern crested newt (Triturus cristatus) by C. Kiritzescu in 1903.[3] Later, it was considered a subspecies until genetic analysis supported its recognition as a separate species in the crested newt species complex.[2] The northern crested newt is its sister species, according to phylogenomic studies.[4][5]

Separated populations from the Danube Delta and the Pannonian Basin (see section Distribution and habitats) were described as two subspecies, T. dobrogicus dobrogicus and T. dobrogicus macrosoma, in 2000.[6] Later genetic study, however, did not support the distinction of these two forms.[7][8]

Position of the Danube crested newt (T. dobrogicus) in the phylogenetic tree of the genus Triturus[5]

Description edit

Measuring 13 to 15 centimetres (5.1 to 5.9 in) long in total, sometimes up to 18 centimetres (7.1 in) in females,[9]: 345  the Danube crested newt is the smallest crested newt species. It has a more slender, elongate body than the other species, well adapted to swimming, with a narrow head and relatively short limbs. This body shape has evolved through an increase in the number of rib-bearing vertebrae: there are 16–17 of them in T. dobrogicus, the highest number among the crested newts.[10]: 10–14 

The Danube crested newt's back and sides are dark brown with black spots and white stippling. The belly is orange to red (in other crested newts, it is usually yellow or orange–yellow), with small or medium-sized black blotches that have sharp edges. Like all crested newts, T. dobrogicus males develop a crest on their back and tail during breeding phase, which can be quite high and jagged, usually starts between the eyes and nostrils, and is interrupted at the tail base. Another feature of males at breeding season is a bluish-white stripe along the tail.[10]: 10–14 [9]: 345  Females can sometimes have a yellow stripe along the back, similar to the Italian crested newt (T. carnifex).[9]: 345 

Distribution and habitats edit

The Danube crested newt is found in three allopatric areas of distribution from central to eastern Europe:

 
The riparian forests of Danube-Auen National Park in Austria harbour important populations, breeding in a variety of temporarily flooded water bodies.[12]

In addition to the northern crested newt to the north, the Danube crested newt's range borders that of the Italian crested newt (T. carnifex) in the west, and that of the Macedonian (T. macedonicus) and Balkan (T. ivanbureschi) crested newts in the south.[10]: 16–17 

Compared to the other crested newt species, the Danube crested newt is more adapted to life along a river system and frequently occurs in flowing water and together with fish. Typical breeding sites are slow-flowing river margins, oxbow lakes, flooded marshland, larger ponds, or ditches, provided abundant underwater vegetation is available.[10]: 44–48 [13]: 144–145  During land phase, the newts live in deciduous forests or groves, bushlands, or meadows.[1]

Lifecycle and behaviour edit

Danube crested newts have the longest aquatic phase in the genus Triturus. Adults move to their breeding sites in February or March and usually stay there for six months; occasionally, they may even stay longer or return to the water in autumn.[10]: 44 [13]: 144–145  Males court females with a display of ritualised body movements. When they have gained the female's interest, they guide it over a spermatophore they deposit on the ground, which the female then takes up with her cloaca.[10]: 80–89  The eggs are fertilised internally. As in other crested newts, a female lays around 200 eggs per season, which are folded individually into leaves of aquatic plants. Eggs and larvae are smaller than in the other crested newt species, and they take longer (two to four months) until they reach metamorphosis and leave the water.[10]: 61–65 [9]: 345 

Both in water and on land, the newts are largely nocturnal. In their aquatic habitats, they hide under vegetation, and on land, they use structures such as logs, rocks, or small animal burrows for cover.[10]: 47–48, 58  They feed mainly on different invertebrates, but in the water may also prey on tadpoles and smaller newts.[10]: 58–59  Predators include herons and other birds, snakes such as the grass snake, and various carnivorous mammals.[10]: 78 

Threats and conservation edit

The population of the Danube crested newt has declined significantly, and the International Union for Conservation of Nature has assessed its conservation status as "least concern". The main threat is habitat destruction by humans, especially through drainage, damming, or pollution. Hybridisation with other crested newt species and a loss of breeding ponds because of decreasing spring rain in the southern range (possibly due to global warming) are also seen as threats.[1] Like the other crested newts, T. dobrogicus is listed in the Berne Convention (appendix II) and the EU Habitats Directive (annexes II and IV), and capture, disturbance, killing, trade, and destruction of habitats are prohibited.[14][15]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c Amphibian Specialist Group (2022). "Triturus dobrogicus". IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. 2022: e.T22216A89709283. doi:10.2305/IUCN.UK.2022.RLTS.T22216A89709283.en. Retrieved 27 July 2022.
  2. ^ a b Frost, D.R. (2015). "Triturus dobrogicus (Kiritzescu, 1903). Amphibian Species of the World: an Online Reference. Version 6.0". New York, USA: American Museum of Natural History. Retrieved 2015-07-11.
  3. ^ Kiritzescu, C. (1903). "Contributions à la faune des batraciens de Roumanie". Buletinul Societatii de Sciinte Din Bucuresci, România (in French). 12: 243–265.
  4. ^ Wielstra, B.; Arntzen, J.W. (2011). "Unraveling the rapid radiation of crested newts (Triturus cristatus superspecies) using complete mitogenomic sequences". BMC Evolutionary Biology. 11 (1): 162. doi:10.1186/1471-2148-11-162. ISSN 1471-2148. PMC 3224112. PMID 21672214.
  5. ^ a b Wielstra, B.; McCartney-Melstad, E.; Arntzen, J.W.; Butlin, R.K.; Shaffer, H.B. (2019). "Phylogenomics of the adaptive radiation of Triturus newts supports gradual ecological niche expansion towards an incrementally aquatic lifestyle". Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution. 133: 120–127. doi:10.1016/j.ympev.2018.12.032. ISSN 1055-7903. PMID 30630099.
  6. ^ Litvinchuk, S.N.; Borkin, L.N. (2000). "Intraspecific taxonomy and nomenclature of the Danube crested newt, Triturus dobrogicus" (PDF). Amphibia-Reptilia. 21 (4): 419–430. doi:10.1163/156853800300059313.
  7. ^ a b c Vörös, J.; Arnzten, J.W. (2000). "Weak population structuring in the Danube crested newt, Triturus dobrogicus, inferred from allozymes" (PDF). Amphibia-Reptilia. 31 (3): 339–346. doi:10.1163/156853810791769518.
  8. ^ Wielstra, B.; Arntzen, J.W.; Vörös, J. (2016). "Is the Danube crested newt Triturus dobrogicus polytypic? A review and new nuclear DNA data" (PDF). Amphibia-Reptilia. 37 (2): 167–177. doi:10.1163/15685381-00003041. ISSN 0173-5373. S2CID 88449169.
  9. ^ a b c d Sparreboom, M. (2014). Salamanders of the Old World: The Salamanders of Europe, Asia and Northern Africa. Zeist, The Netherlands: KNNV Publishing. doi:10.1163/9789004285620. ISBN 9789004285620.
  10. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Jehle, R.; Thiesmeier, B.; Foster, J. (2011). The crested newt. A dwindling pond dweller. Bielefeld, Germany: Laurenti Verlag. ISBN 978-3-933066-44-2.
  11. ^ Litvinchuk, S.N. (2005). "A Record of the Danube Newt, Triturus dobrogicus, from the Dnepr River Delta (Ukraine)". Russian Journal of Herpetology. 12 (1): 69–72.
  12. ^ Gollmann, G.; Pintar, M. (2009). Erhebung des Donaukammmolches (Triturus dobrogicus) in der Lobau [Assessment of the Danube crested newt (Triturus dobrogicus) in the Lobau floodplain] (PDF) (Report) (in German). University of Natural Resources and Applied Life Sciences, Vienna.
  13. ^ a b Griffiths, R.A. (1996). Newts and salamanders of Europe. London, UK: Poyser. ISBN 0-85661-100-X.
  14. ^ "Convention on the Conservation of European Wildlife and Natural Habitats". Bern: Council of Europe. 1979. Retrieved 2015-05-24.
  15. ^ "Council directive 92/43/EEC on the conservation of natural habitats and of wild fauna and flora". Act No. 1992L0043 of 1 January 2007. Retrieved 2015-05-31.

External links edit

  • AmphibiaWeb - Triturus dobrogicus
  • media from ARKive  

danube, crested, newt, danube, newt, triturus, dobrogicus, species, newt, found, central, eastern, europe, along, basin, danube, river, some, tributaries, dnieper, delta, smaller, more, slender, body, than, other, crested, newts, genus, triturus, like, these, . The Danube crested newt or Danube newt Triturus dobrogicus is a species of newt found in central and eastern Europe along the basin of the Danube river and some of its tributaries and in the Dnieper delta It has a smaller and more slender body than the other crested newts in genus Triturus but like these males develop a conspicuous jagged seam on back and tail during breeding season Danube crested newtConservation statusLeast Concern IUCN 3 1 1 Scientific classificationDomain EukaryotaKingdom AnimaliaPhylum ChordataClass AmphibiaOrder UrodelaFamily SalamandridaeGenus TriturusSpecies T dobrogicusBinomial nameTriturus dobrogicus Kiritzescu 1903 Synonyms 2 Triton cristatus var dobrogicus Kiritzescu 1903 Molge macrosoma Boulenger 1908 Triton cristatus danubialis Wolterstorff 1923 Triton cristatus cristatus forma dobrogica Wolterstorff 1923 Triton cristatus danubialis forma werneri Wolterstorff 1923 Triturus cristatus danubialis Mertens 1923 Triton Neotriton cristatus danubialis Bolkay 1928 Triturus cristatus dobrogicus Mertens amp Muller 1928 Molge cristata danubialis forma smederevana Karaman 1948 Triturus cristatus danubialis var intermedia Fuhn 1953 Triturus cristatus dobrogicus Mertens amp Wermuth 1960 Triturus dobrogicus Bucci Innocenti Ragghianti amp Mancino 1983 Triturus Triturus dobrogicus MacGregor Sessions amp Arntzen 1990 Triturus dobrogicus dobrogicus Litvinchuk and Borkin 2000 Triturus dobrogicus macrosomus Litvinchuk and Borkin 2000 Triturus Triturus dobrogicus dobrogicus Dubois amp Raffaelli 2009 Triturus Triturus dobrogicus macrosoma Dubois amp Raffaelli 2009For half of the year or longer adults live in slow flowing river margins lakes or ponds where reproduction takes place Males perform a courtship display and females lay around 200 eggs individually onto leaves of aquatic plants Larvae develop two to four months in the water before reaching metamorphosis For the remainder of the year the newts live in shady land habitats usually forests Although not yet considered threatened Danube crested newt populations have declined significantly the reason being mainly habitat loss The species is protected by law in the European Union Contents 1 Taxonomy 2 Description 3 Distribution and habitats 4 Lifecycle and behaviour 5 Threats and conservation 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksTaxonomy editThe Danube crested newt was described as a variety of the northern crested newt Triturus cristatus by C Kiritzescu in 1903 3 Later it was considered a subspecies until genetic analysis supported its recognition as a separate species in the crested newt species complex 2 The northern crested newt is its sister species according to phylogenomic studies 4 5 Separated populations from the Danube Delta and the Pannonian Basin see section Distribution and habitats were described as two subspecies T dobrogicus dobrogicus and T dobrogicus macrosoma in 2000 6 Later genetic study however did not support the distinction of these two forms 7 8 nbsp marblednewts crestednewts T marmoratus andT pygmaeus T karelinii T anatolicusand T ivanbureschi T carnifex andT macedonicus T cristatus T dobrogicus nbsp Position of the Danube crested newt T dobrogicus in the phylogenetic tree of the genus Triturus 5 Description editMeasuring 13 to 15 centimetres 5 1 to 5 9 in long in total sometimes up to 18 centimetres 7 1 in in females 9 345 the Danube crested newt is the smallest crested newt species It has a more slender elongate body than the other species well adapted to swimming with a narrow head and relatively short limbs This body shape has evolved through an increase in the number of rib bearing vertebrae there are 16 17 of them in T dobrogicus the highest number among the crested newts 10 10 14 The Danube crested newt s back and sides are dark brown with black spots and white stippling The belly is orange to red in other crested newts it is usually yellow or orange yellow with small or medium sized black blotches that have sharp edges Like all crested newts T dobrogicus males develop a crest on their back and tail during breeding phase which can be quite high and jagged usually starts between the eyes and nostrils and is interrupted at the tail base Another feature of males at breeding season is a bluish white stripe along the tail 10 10 14 9 345 Females can sometimes have a yellow stripe along the back similar to the Italian crested newt T carnifex 9 345 Distribution and habitats editThe Danube crested newt is found in three allopatric areas of distribution from central to eastern Europe Pannonian basin From easternmost Austria through Czech Republic small part in the southeast Slovakia Hungary northern Croatia Bosnia Hercegovina marginally northern Serbia to the east of Romania and southeast of Ukraine Transcarpathian region This includes the middle floodplains of the Danube river and some of its tributaries including the Drava Sava and Tisza 7 Lower Danube and Danube delta Separated from the Pannonian basin by an area where the northern crested newt occurs this central part ranges from southern Romania northern Bulgaria and small parts of southern Moldova to the Odesa region of southern Ukraine 7 Dnieper delta This small area of distribution in southern Ukraine was reported in 2005 It is now isolated by steppe from the Danube basin but it has been suggested that these areas were connected through marshlands during the last glacial maximum when the level of the Black Sea was around 100 metres lower than today This range may also extend to the lower basins of the Dniester and Bug rivers 11 nbsp The riparian forests of Danube Auen National Park in Austria harbour important populations breeding in a variety of temporarily flooded water bodies 12 In addition to the northern crested newt to the north the Danube crested newt s range borders that of the Italian crested newt T carnifex in the west and that of the Macedonian T macedonicus and Balkan T ivanbureschi crested newts in the south 10 16 17 Compared to the other crested newt species the Danube crested newt is more adapted to life along a river system and frequently occurs in flowing water and together with fish Typical breeding sites are slow flowing river margins oxbow lakes flooded marshland larger ponds or ditches provided abundant underwater vegetation is available 10 44 48 13 144 145 During land phase the newts live in deciduous forests or groves bushlands or meadows 1 Lifecycle and behaviour editSee also Triturus Lifecycle and behaviour Danube crested newts have the longest aquatic phase in the genus Triturus Adults move to their breeding sites in February or March and usually stay there for six months occasionally they may even stay longer or return to the water in autumn 10 44 13 144 145 Males court females with a display of ritualised body movements When they have gained the female s interest they guide it over a spermatophore they deposit on the ground which the female then takes up with her cloaca 10 80 89 The eggs are fertilised internally As in other crested newts a female lays around 200 eggs per season which are folded individually into leaves of aquatic plants Eggs and larvae are smaller than in the other crested newt species and they take longer two to four months until they reach metamorphosis and leave the water 10 61 65 9 345 Both in water and on land the newts are largely nocturnal In their aquatic habitats they hide under vegetation and on land they use structures such as logs rocks or small animal burrows for cover 10 47 48 58 They feed mainly on different invertebrates but in the water may also prey on tadpoles and smaller newts 10 58 59 Predators include herons and other birds snakes such as the grass snake and various carnivorous mammals 10 78 Threats and conservation editSee also Triturus Threats and conservation The population of the Danube crested newt has declined significantly and the International Union for Conservation of Nature has assessed its conservation status as least concern The main threat is habitat destruction by humans especially through drainage damming or pollution Hybridisation with other crested newt species and a loss of breeding ponds because of decreasing spring rain in the southern range possibly due to global warming are also seen as threats 1 Like the other crested newts T dobrogicus is listed in the Berne Convention appendix II and the EU Habitats Directive annexes II and IV and capture disturbance killing trade and destruction of habitats are prohibited 14 15 See also edit nbsp Amphibians and Reptiles portalList of amphibians of EuropeReferences edit a b c Amphibian Specialist Group 2022 Triturus dobrogicus IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2022 e T22216A89709283 doi 10 2305 IUCN UK 2022 RLTS T22216A89709283 en Retrieved 27 July 2022 a b Frost D R 2015 Triturus dobrogicus Kiritzescu 1903 Amphibian Species of the World an Online Reference Version 6 0 New York USA American Museum of Natural History Retrieved 2015 07 11 Kiritzescu C 1903 Contributions a la faune des batraciens de Roumanie Buletinul Societatii de Sciinte Din Bucuresci Romania in French 12 243 265 Wielstra B Arntzen J W 2011 Unraveling the rapid radiation of crested newts Triturus cristatus superspecies using complete mitogenomic sequences BMC Evolutionary Biology 11 1 162 doi 10 1186 1471 2148 11 162 ISSN 1471 2148 PMC 3224112 PMID 21672214 a b Wielstra B McCartney Melstad E Arntzen J W Butlin R K Shaffer H B 2019 Phylogenomics of the adaptive radiation of Triturus newts supports gradual ecological niche expansion towards an incrementally aquatic lifestyle Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution 133 120 127 doi 10 1016 j ympev 2018 12 032 ISSN 1055 7903 PMID 30630099 Litvinchuk S N Borkin L N 2000 Intraspecific taxonomy and nomenclature of the Danube crested newt Triturus dobrogicus PDF Amphibia Reptilia 21 4 419 430 doi 10 1163 156853800300059313 a b c Voros J Arnzten J W 2000 Weak population structuring in the Danube crested newt Triturus dobrogicus inferred from allozymes PDF Amphibia Reptilia 31 3 339 346 doi 10 1163 156853810791769518 Wielstra B Arntzen J W Voros J 2016 Is the Danube crested newt Triturus dobrogicus polytypic A review and new nuclear DNA data PDF Amphibia Reptilia 37 2 167 177 doi 10 1163 15685381 00003041 ISSN 0173 5373 S2CID 88449169 a b c d Sparreboom M 2014 Salamanders of the Old World The Salamanders of Europe Asia and Northern Africa Zeist The Netherlands KNNV Publishing doi 10 1163 9789004285620 ISBN 9789004285620 a b c d e f g h i j Jehle R Thiesmeier B Foster J 2011 The crested newt A dwindling pond dweller Bielefeld Germany Laurenti Verlag ISBN 978 3 933066 44 2 Litvinchuk S N 2005 A Record of the Danube Newt Triturus dobrogicus from the Dnepr River Delta Ukraine Russian Journal of Herpetology 12 1 69 72 Gollmann G Pintar M 2009 Erhebung des Donaukammmolches Triturus dobrogicus in der Lobau Assessment of the Danube crested newt Triturus dobrogicus in the Lobau floodplain PDF Report in German University of Natural Resources and Applied Life Sciences Vienna a b Griffiths R A 1996 Newts and salamanders of Europe London UK Poyser ISBN 0 85661 100 X Convention on the Conservation of European Wildlife and Natural Habitats Bern Council of Europe 1979 Retrieved 2015 05 24 Council directive 92 43 EEC on the conservation of natural habitats and of wild fauna and flora Act No 1992L0043 of 1 January 2007 Retrieved 2015 05 31 External links edit nbsp Wikispecies has information related to Danube crested newt AmphibiaWeb Triturus dobrogicus Danube crested newt media from ARKive nbsp Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Danube crested newt amp oldid 1175501315, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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