J 2024

Měkkýši jihovýchodních údolí Prahy

ŘÍHOVÁ, Dagmar; Štěpánka PODROUŽKOVÁ; Alena KOCURKOVÁ; Magda DRVOTOVÁ; Jana ŠKODOVÁ et al.

Basic information

Original name

Měkkýši jihovýchodních údolí Prahy

Name in Czech

Měkkýši jihovýchodních údolí Prahy

Name (in English)

Molluscs of the southeastern valleys of Prague

Authors

ŘÍHOVÁ, Dagmar; Štěpánka PODROUŽKOVÁ; Alena KOCURKOVÁ; Magda DRVOTOVÁ; Jana ŠKODOVÁ; Jan ORAVEC and Lucie JUŘIČKOVÁ

Edition

Malacologica Bohemoslovaca, 2024

Other information

Language

Czech

Type of outcome

Article in a journal

Country of publisher

Czech Republic

Confidentiality degree

is not subject to a state or trade secret

References:

URL, URL

Marked to be transferred to RIV

No

Organization

Malacologica Bohemoslovaca - Ústav botaniky a zoologie – Přírodovědecká fakulta – Repository – Repository

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5817/MaB2024-23-42

Keywords in English

faunistics; Prague molluscs; Daudebardia brevipes; Lucilla scintilla; Deroceras invadens

Tags

Reviewed
Changed: 9/7/2024 19:25, Mgr. Michal Maňas

Abstract

In English

By the standards of Prague, its south-eastern part represents a less diversified part of the city in terms of relief and geological composition. The present article describes the development of terrestrial mollusc fauna since the beginning of explorations of this area in the 1940s and a comparison with the current in-depth exploration. Currently, 82 species have been recorded here (6 bivalves, 12 aquatic snails, 64 land gastropods). Most of the mollusc fauna occur in the linear vegetation along the waterways, suitable for the ecological group of less demanding forest snails dominating the entire Prague area. Specific to this part of the city are several more sensitive forest snails, which are the relicts of certainly much more widespread forest communities in the past. The first findings of Daudebardia brevipes and the non-native species Deroceras invadens and Lucilla scintilla in the wild nature of Prague are significant.
Displayed: 4/5/2026 14:04