22 results on '"mesovoid shallow substratum"'
Search Results
2. Photoreceptor genes in a trechine beetle, Trechiama kuznetsovi, living in the upper hypogean zone
- Author
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Takuma Niida, Yuto Terashima, Hitoshi Aonuma, and Shigeyuki Koshikawa
- Subjects
Blind ground beetle ,Adaptation ,Evolution ,Carabidae ,Mesovoid shallow substratum ,Zoology ,QL1-991 - Abstract
Abstract To address how organisms adapt to a new environment, subterranean organisms whose ancestors colonized subterranean habitats from surface habitats have been studied. Photoreception abilities have been shown to have degenerated in organisms living in caves and calcrete aquifers. Meanwhile, the organisms living in a shallow subterranean environment, which are inferred to reflect an intermediate stage in an evolutionary pathway to colonization of a deeper subterranean environment, have not been studied well. In the present study, we examined the photoreception ability in a trechine beetle, Trechiama kuznetsovi, which inhabits the upper hypogean zone and has a vestigial compound eye. By de novo assembly of genome and transcript sequences, we were able to identify photoreceptor genes and phototransduction genes. Specifically, we focused on opsin genes, where one long wavelength opsin gene and one ultraviolet opsin gene were identified. The encoded amino acid sequences had neither a premature stop codon nor a frameshift mutation, and appeared to be subject to purifying selection. Subsequently, we examined the internal structure of the compound eye and nerve tissue in the adult head, and found potential photoreceptor cells in the compound eye and nerve bundle connected to the brain. The present findings suggest that T. kuznetsovi has retained the ability of photoreception. This species represents a transitional stage of vision, in which the compound eye regresses, but it may retain the ability of photoreception using the vestigial eye.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Photoreceptor genes in a trechine beetle, Trechiama kuznetsovi, living in the upper hypogean zone.
- Author
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Niida, Takuma, Terashima, Yuto, Aonuma, Hitoshi, and Koshikawa, Shigeyuki
- Subjects
PHOTORECEPTORS ,AMINO acid sequence ,NERVE tissue ,BEETLES ,FRAMESHIFT mutation ,GENES - Abstract
To address how organisms adapt to a new environment, subterranean organisms whose ancestors colonized subterranean habitats from surface habitats have been studied. Photoreception abilities have been shown to have degenerated in organisms living in caves and calcrete aquifers. Meanwhile, the organisms living in a shallow subterranean environment, which are inferred to reflect an intermediate stage in an evolutionary pathway to colonization of a deeper subterranean environment, have not been studied well. In the present study, we examined the photoreception ability in a trechine beetle, Trechiama kuznetsovi, which inhabits the upper hypogean zone and has a vestigial compound eye. By de novo assembly of genome and transcript sequences, we were able to identify photoreceptor genes and phototransduction genes. Specifically, we focused on opsin genes, where one long wavelength opsin gene and one ultraviolet opsin gene were identified. The encoded amino acid sequences had neither a premature stop codon nor a frameshift mutation, and appeared to be subject to purifying selection. Subsequently, we examined the internal structure of the compound eye and nerve tissue in the adult head, and found potential photoreceptor cells in the compound eye and nerve bundle connected to the brain. The present findings suggest that T. kuznetsovi has retained the ability of photoreception. This species represents a transitional stage of vision, in which the compound eye regresses, but it may retain the ability of photoreception using the vestigial eye. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Studies of the mesovoid shallow substratum can change the accepted autecology of species: the case of ground beetles (Coleoptera, Carabidae) in the Sierra de Guadarrama National Park (Spain)
- Author
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Ortuño, V. M., Ledesma, E., Jiménez–Valverde, A., and Pérez–Suárez, G.
- Subjects
mesovoid shallow substratum ,hypogean ,orobiome ,autoecology ,carabidae ,sierra de guadarrama national park ,iberian peninsula ,Zoology ,QL1-991 - Abstract
The family Carabidae is of particular interest not only due to its great specific diversity but also due to the geophilic nature of many of its members, which makes them good bioindicators of soil characteristics. The diversity of the epigean Carabidae is relatively well studied. However, there are no robust data on the presence of these beetles in hypogean habitats of non–karstic substrate and, therefore, without the development of caves. In the present study, we sampled the mesovoid shallow substratum (MSS) at various sites in the Sierra de Guadarrama National Park, with the aim of characterising the Carabidae hypogean fauna. Among many other organisms, we collected 12 species of Carabidae. Of these, despite being known from epigean/edaphic habitats, Leistus (Leistus) constrictus Schaufuss, 1862, Nebria (Nebria) vuillefroyi Chaudoir, 1866, Trechus (Trechus) schaufussi pandellei Putzeys, 1870, and Laemostenus (Eucryptotrichus) pinicola (Graells, 1851) are consistently reported from MSS habitats, albeit with certain differences as regards their occupation of subterranean spaces. The species from forest–dwelling (thermophilous) lineages, T. (T.) schaufussi pandellei and L. (E.) pinicola, presented a higher prevalence in subsoil cavities at lower altitudes, whereas those from orobiont (psychrophilic) lineages, L. (L.) constrictus and N. (N.) vuillefroyi, predominated in subsoils at higher altitudes. As regards the presence of these four species during their different life cycle stages, we found that N. (N.) vuillefroyi was present and abundant as both larval (in the three preimaginal stages) and imago stages, showing the most evident trend towards an hypogean lifestyle. In contrast, for the other three species, only one of the two stages showed a high presence on hypogean habitats. The facultative hypogean capabilities of N. (N.) vuillefroyi and L. (L.) constrictus calls into question the protected status conferred on both species when it was thought that they were exclusively epigean.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Three new subterranean species of Baezia (Curculionidae, Molytinae) for the Canary Islands.
- Author
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García, Rafael, Andújar, Carmelo, Oromí, Pedro, Emerson, Brent, and López, Heriberto
- Subjects
- *
CURCULIONIDAE , *SPECIES , *ISLANDS , *CAVES , *SOILS - Abstract
The genus Baezia Alonso-Zarazaga & García, 1999 is endemic to the Canary Islands, where four species were known to date. Based on morphological evidence, three new species of Baezia are described in this study: Baezia aranfaybo García & López, sp. nov. from El Hierro island, and Baezia madai García & Oromí sp. nov. and Baezia tizziri García & Andújar, sp. nov. from La Palma island. Notes on their biology, habitat, and distribution are presented. The number of taxa in this endemic Canarian genus increases to seven eyeless species. One species has been reported from the soil (endogean environment), with the other six associated with caves and the mesovoid shallow substratum (hypogean or subterranean environment). Frequent association with the presence of roots suggests that species of Baezia may inhabit the continuum represented by the endogean and hypogean environments. Identification key to the seven species are provided. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Two new dipluran species unearthed from subterranean habitats of the Canary Islands (Arthropoda, Hexapoda, Entognatha).
- Author
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Sendra, Alberto, López, Heriberto, Selfa, Jesús, and Oromí, Pedro
- Subjects
- *
INSECTS , *CANARIES , *ISLANDS , *SPECIES , *HABITATS , *RHIPICEPHALUS - Abstract
Two new dipluran species of the family Campodeidae have been unearthed in the Canary Islands. Remycampa herbanica sp. nov. was found in a highly threatened lava tube on Fuerteventura island. It is related to the soil-dwelling northwest African Remycampa launeyi that also inhabits four of the Canary Islands. The two known Remycampa species are characterized by a torsion of the labial palps. They differ chiefly in the distribution of macrosetae and in the features of cave adaptation of R. herbanica, i.e. elongation of body and appendages, and a higher number of olfactory chemoreceptors with a coniform shape unique within campodeids. Spaniocampa relicta sp. nov. was collected in the mesovoid shallow substratum (MSS) and has been assigned to a formerly monotypic genus that includes the soil-dwelling Spaniocampa prima from the Republic of Guinea. The two species differ in the number of abdominal macrosetae. Females of S. relicta sp. nov. have small setae arranged in groups along the posterior border of the first urosternite. These structures of unknown function have never been described in other campodeid species. Sequencing the COI barcode region of R. herbanica has been produced but it proved insufficient to identify closest relatives. The two new hexapods from subterranean habitats raise the Canarian campodeid fauna to six species. Five of them are living in soil and/or MSS, whereas the cave-adapted R. herbanica is known only from a single, particularly endangered lava tube distant from other caves. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Distribution of Oribatida (Acari) along a depth gradient in forested scree slopes.
- Author
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Jakšová, Patrícia, Ľuptáčik, Peter, and Miklisová, Dana
- Subjects
- *
ACARIFORMES , *CARBON in soils , *MITES , *SODIC soils , *DEPTH profiling - Abstract
Mesovoid shallow substratum (MSS) of scree slopes constitutes a transition habitat between the soil and the network of voids in the vadose zone of a bedrock massif. In the present study, the vertical distribution of oribatid communities along a depth of 95 cm was studied at five forested MSS sites in the Western Carpathians, Slovakia. The sites differed in type of bedrock, topography and gradient of the microclimate and nutrients content. In all, 909 specimens were captured in subterranean traps exposed for one year. Most Oribatida represented edaphic forms, and their presence in the depth profile of the screes was accidental. Pantelozetes cavatica (Kunst, 1962) was the only species closely linked to deep subterranean environments found in the deeper part of the single limestone site studied. Species richness and the activity of oribatids along the scree profile at the sites clearly reflected the content of organic carbon in the soil substratum. The communities had very low numbers of individuals and low species richness at three sites with soil pH < 7 and organic carbon content in the upper soil layer = 10%. However, they differed markedly in internal temperature dynamics. The other two sites, with a slightly alkaline soil pH and a higher carbon content, showed distinctly higher activity and a relatively uniform pattern of oribatid distribution across the depth profile. The soil pH and organic carbon content in the topsoil layer were substantial factors that determined the Oribatida diversity and vertical distribution in the forested screes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. THE VARIATION OF SOME MAIN ECOLOGICAL FACTORS (TEMPERATURE AND RELATIVE HUMIDITY) ON LIMESTONE SCREE SURFACES, GHIMBAV MOUNTAIN, SOUTHERN CARPATHIANS (ROMANIA).
- Author
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Dorobăţ, Magdalin Leonard and Dobrescu, Codruţa Mihaela
- Subjects
- *
ECOLOGY , *HUMIDITY - Published
- 2019
9. NEW SPIDERS (ARANEAE) FROM THE MESOVOID SHALLOW SUBSTRATUM (MSS) FAUNA, LEAOTA MOUNTAINS (ROMANIA).
- Author
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Dorobăţ, Magdalin Leonard, Nae, Augustin, Nae, Ioana, and Dobrescu, Codruţa Mihaela
- Subjects
- *
SPIDER ecology , *SPECIES distribution - Abstract
This paper presents the faunistic results regarding the spider fauna (Araneae Ord.) encountered in the superficial underground environment of the Leaota Mountains. The gathering of spiders was carried out during 2014-2015 in surveys located in limestone and schists colluvial scree. We captured faunistic elements at depths of 1m, 0.75m and 0.5m in limestone MSS; in shale MSS we collected fauna only from the depth of 0.5m and 1m. As a result of our research, we identified 12 spiders species, of which 11 are new for Leaota. The Nesticus balacescui species was first reported in shale MSS. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
10. An ecological survey of the invertebrate community at the epigean/hypogean interface.
- Author
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Mammola, Stefano, Piano, Elena, Giachino, Pier Mauro, and Isaia, Marco
- Subjects
- *
INVERTEBRATE communities , *ARTHROPODA , *SOUTERRAINS , *SPECIES diversity , *ECOLOGICAL surveys - Abstract
We studied the ecological continuum between caves and the associated network of fissures - Milieu Souterrain Superficiel (MSS) - in an hypogean site in the Graian Alps, Italy. Over one year, we surveyed the faunal assemblages by means of pitfall traps placed in the caves and specific subterranean sampling devices (SSD) buried in the MSS. We used generalized linear mixed models (GLMMs) and generalized additive mixed models (GAMMs) to compare the spatial and temporal dynamics of the subterranean invertebrates inhabiting the two environments. As expected, arthropod communities occurring near the surface were characterized by minor level of subterranean adaptations, and conversely, subterranean species were more abundant and diversified at higher depths, both in the caves and in the MSS. Diversity and abundance of external elements in the superficial layers were found to be highly seasonal dependent, with minor values in winter compared to the other seasons. We provided information about the faunal assemblages dwelling in the two hypogean compartments, and we characterized the microclimatic conditions therein. We discussed the existence of an ecological gradient of specialization extending from the surface to the deep hypogean layers, which can be interpreted in light of the microclimatic changes occurring at increasing depths and the parallel decrease in available organic matter. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Can montane and cave centipedes inhabit soil?
- Author
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TUF, Ivan Hadrián, KOPECKÝ, Oldřich, and MIKULA, Jan
- Subjects
- *
CENTIPEDES , *SOIL ecology , *LITHOBIUS , *MOUNTAIN animals , *MYRIAPODA - Abstract
Communities of centipedes (Chilopoda) were studied at three localities in eastern Bohemia (Czech Republic) near the town of Skuteč using modified subterranean traps. Centipedes were trapped separately from depths of 5, 15, 25, 35, 45, 55, 65, 75, 85, and 95 cm to allow evaluation of the vertical distribution in the soil. Presence of centipedes in deeper soil profiles is related to their ability to colonize the subterranean environment. Lithobius tenebrosus fennoscandius, L. lucifugus, L. macilentus, Cryptops parisi, Strigamia acuminata, and S. transsilvanica inhabited deeper soil layers preferentially. This study shows that soil can be inhabited by cave centipedes or centipedes with montane distribution. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Rediscovery of the "extinct" blind ground beetle (Coleoptera: Carabidae: Trechinae).
- Author
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Kazuki SUGAYA, Ryo OGAWA, and Yusuke HARA
- Subjects
- *
EXTINCT insects , *GROUND beetles , *HABITATS , *ZOOLOGICAL specimens , *INSECT conservation - Abstract
The blind ground beetle Ishikawatrechus intermedius (Coleoptera: Carabidae: Trechinae), called Kadotamekurachibigomimushi in Japanese, was first found in 1952 in the cave Ôchi-dô, Kôchi Prefecture, Japan. However, this cave and a large part of the surrounding hill were destroyed by limestone mining in the 1970s. Because most species of blind ground beetles are restricted to specific caves or cave systems, I. intermedius has been considered endemic to very narrow areas of the cave Ôchi-dô and the upper hypogean zone around the cave. Therefore, I. intermedius was considered to have become extinct. In this study, during 2011-2015, we collected ten individuals of a blind ground beetle, which appeared to be I. intermedius, from the upper hypogean zone, approximately 0.3-1.0 mbelow ground, in the southern part of the type locality. A comparison with type specimens indicated that the individuals were indeed I. intermedius. Therefore, we conclude that I. intermedius survives in the upper hypogean zone near the type locality. The results of this study will be useful for quickly establishing conservation measures for threatened or vulnerable species of Trechinae beetles. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
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13. First records and rare species of Collembola in the Roumanian Fauna – The Piatra Craiului Massif (The Carpathians)
- Author
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IONUŢ POPA
- Subjects
mesovoid shallow substratum ,collembola ,piatra craiului massif ,romania ,first records ,Biology (General) ,QH301-705.5 - Abstract
The author presents new data about the collembolan species collected from the Piatra Craiului Massif. Sixty-five species were identified from the material sampled from soil and mesovoid shallow substratum (M.S.S.) Three species (Arrhopalites ornatus Stach, 1945, Microgastrura duodecimoculata Stach, 1922 and Xenylla mucronata Axelson, 1903) are for the first time recorded in the Romanian fauna
- Published
- 2010
14. Ecology and sampling techniques of an understudied subterranean habitat: the Milieu Souterrain Superficiel (MSS).
- Author
-
Mammola, Stefano, Giachino, Pier, Piano, Elena, Jones, Alexandra, Barberis, Marcel, Badino, Giovanni, and Isaia, Marco
- Abstract
The term Milieu Souterrain Superficiel (MSS) has been used since the early 1980s in subterranean biology to categorize an array of different hypogean habitats. In general terms, a MSS habitat represents the underground network of empty air-filled voids and cracks developing within multiple layers of rock fragments. Its origins can be diverse and is generally covered by topsoil. The MSS habitat is often connected both with the deep hypogean domain-caves and deep rock cracks-and the superficial soil horizon. A MSS is usually characterized by peculiar microclimatic conditions, and it can harbor specialized hypogean, endogean, and surface-dwelling species. In light of the many interpretations given by different authors, we reviewed 235 papers regarding the MSS in order to provide a state-of-the-art description of these habitats and facilitate their study. We have briefly described the different types of MSS mentioned in the scientific literature (alluvial, bedrock, colluvial, volcanic, and other types) and synthesized the advances in the study of the physical and ecological factors affecting this habitat-i.e., microclimate, energy flows, animal communities, and trophic interactions. We finally described and reviewed the available sampling methods used to investigate MSS fauna. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. A new species of Illacme Cook & Loomis, 1928 from Sequoia National Park, California, with a world catalog of the Siphonorhinidae (Diplopoda, Siphonophorida).
- Author
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Marek, Paul E., Krejca, Jean K., and Shear, William A.
- Subjects
- *
MILLIPEDES , *GENETIC speciation , *BIOLOGICAL classification , *CLADISTIC analysis , *ECOLOGICAL regions - Abstract
Members of the family Siphonorhinidae Cook, 1895 are thread-like eyeless millipedes that possess an astounding number of legs, including one individual with 750. Due to their cryptic lifestyle, rarity in natural history collections, and sporadic study over the last century, the family has an unclear phylogenetic placement, and intrafamilial relationships remain unknown. Here we report the discovery of a second species of Illacme, a millipede genus notable for possessing the greatest number of legs of any known animal on the planet. Illacme tobini sp. n. is described from a single male collected in a cave in Sequoia National Park, California, USA. After 90 years since the description of Illacme, the species represents a second of the genus in California. Siphonorhinidae now includes Illacme Cook & Loomis, 1928 (two species, USA), Kleruchus Attems, 1938 (one species, Vietnam), Nematozonium Verhoeff, 1939 (one species, South Africa) and Siphonorhinus Pocock, 1894 (eight species, India, Indonesia, Madagascar, Vietnam). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. ECOLOGICAL FACTORS IN THE COLLUVIAL MESOVOID SHALLOW SUBSTRATUM, LIMESTONE SCREE, CĂPĂŢÂNA MOUNTAIN (LEAOTA MASSIF), WINTER 2014-2015.
- Author
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Dorobăţ, Magdalin Leonard, Nae, Augustin, Popa, Ionuţ, and Dobrescu, Codruţa Mihaela
- Subjects
- *
ENVIRONMENTAL monitoring , *HUMIDITY , *ECOLOGICAL impact - Abstract
This paper present and discussed the results of the monitoring of two ecological factors, the temperature and the relative humidity monitorised during winter 2014-2015, in an ecological station in the in the north-western area of Leaota Mountains. In this station, three polls were located in areas with limestone forming mesovoid shallow substratum (MSS), also called shallow subterranean habitats(SSHs). The first survey has 1m deepth, the second has 0.75m depth and the third was drilled up to 0.5m depth. In each survey was placed a datalogger above a Barber trap, wich recorded continuously for the winter 2014-2015 relative humidity and temperature. The values of this abiotic parameters were collected on every twelve hours. The continuous data collection on ecological parameters mentioned before is a first for Romania. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
17. Exceptional invertebrate diversity in a scree slope in Eastern Spain.
- Author
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Jiménez-Valverde, Alberto, Gilgado, José, Sendra, Alberto, Pérez-Suárez, Gonzalo, Herrero-Borgoñón, Juan, and Ortuño, Vicente
- Subjects
INVERTEBRATE diversity ,BIODIVERSITY ,NUMBERS of species ,ENVIRONMENTAL education ,ECOLOGICAL heterogeneity - Abstract
In this study, the invertebrate fauna of a colluvial Mesovoid Shallow Substratum (MSS) is Eastern Spain was characterized, and the importance of the MSS as refuge for endemic and rare species was assessed. Ten pitfall traps were buried up to 1 m deep inside multiperforated PVC tubes across a stone debris. Several environmental variables were measured in each sampling point. The completeness of the inventory was assessed, and different diversity patterns-variation in abundance, species richness and species composition-were analyzed. 4150 individuals and 164 species were captured, most of them arthropods. The number of individuals and species varied considerably among traps. Half of the species were represented by one or two individuals, and neither the species accumulation curves nor the curves for the non-parametric estimators showed any sign of stabilizing. Individuals of abundant species aggregated in one or a few traps. No consistent diversity patterns were found, except that distance among traps partially explained the similarity in species composition when considering only the most abundant species. This is a very rich but uneven assemblage that shows a high degree of species turnover between traps. One-sixth of the species can be classified as either troglobionts or troglophiles, but there is a significant presence of edaphic species. Obtaining complete fauna inventories in the MSS has proven to be a challenging task. The study of the MSS reveals important faunistic information, providing new taxa to science as well as interesting records of poorly known species. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Vertical distribution of spiders in soil.
- Author
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Laška, Vratislav, Kopecký, Oldřich, Růžička, Vlastimil, Mikula, Jan, Véle, Adam, Šarapatka, Bořivoj, and Tuf, Ivan H.
- Subjects
- *
SPIDERS , *SPECIES distribution , *HABITATS , *UNDERGROUND areas , *ARTHROPODA , *SOIL profiles , *SHIELDS (Geology) - Abstract
Research studies of the shallow subterranean habitats as environments for arthropods have been sparse up to this point. Using subterranean traps, we studied the distribution of spiders in soil profile over a depth span of 5-95 cm at six sites. Although almost 40% of individual specimens (1088 in total) were obtained from the epigeon (5 cm depth), spiders colonized all parts of the soil profiles examined. Beside ground-dwelling species with significant preferences for the upper layers, some species (Porrhomma microphthalmum (O. Pickard-Cambridge 1871), Centromerus cavernarum (L. Koch 1872), Cicurina cicur (Fabricius 1793), Dysdera lantosquemis Simon 1882, and Nesticus cellulunus (Clerck 1757)) commonly inhabited the whole range of the profiles studied, without any depth preference. In contrast, depigmented and microphthalmous Porrhomma microps (Roewer 1931) and Maro sp. exclusively inhabited deep soil layers adjoining void systems in bedrock. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
19. An ecological survey of the invertebrate community at the epigean/hypogean interface
- Author
-
Pier Mauro Giachino, Stefano Mammola, Elena Piano, and Marco Isaia
- Subjects
0106 biological sciences ,Mesovoid Shallow Substratum, Cave fauna, Superficial Subterranean Habitats, Subterranean biology, Subterranean Sampling Devices, Ecological gradient, Troglobionts ,Subterranean Sampling Device ,Interface (Java) ,Ecology ,Subterranean biology ,Subterranean Sampling Devices ,010607 zoology ,Soil Science ,Cave fauna ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,Ecological gradient ,Geography ,Mesovoid Shallow Substratum ,lcsh:Biology (General) ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Troglobionts ,Epigeal ,lcsh:QH301-705.5 ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Superficial Subterranean Habitats ,Nature and Landscape Conservation ,Invertebrate - Abstract
We studied the ecological continuum between caves and the associated network of fissures – Milieu Souterrain Superficiel (MSS) – in an hypogean site in the Graian Alps, Italy. Over one year, we surveyed the faunal assemblages by means of pitfall traps placed in the caves and specific subterranean sampling devices (SSD) buried in the MSS. We used generalized linear mixed models (GLMMs) and generalized additive mixed models (GAMMs) to compare the spatial and temporal dynamics of the subterranean invertebrates inhabiting the two environments. As expected, arthropod communities occurring near the surface were characterized by minor level of subterranean adaptations, and conversely, subterranean species were more abundant and diversified at higher depths, both in the caves and in the MSS. Diversity and abundance of external elements in the superficial layers were found to be highly seasonal dependent, with minor values in winter compared to the other seasons. We provided information about the faunal assemblages dwelling in the two hypogean compartments, and we characterized the microclimatic conditions therein. We discussed the existence of an ecological gradient of specialization extending from the surface to the deep hypogean layers, which can be interpreted in light of the microclimatic changes occurring at increasing depths and the parallel decrease in available organic matter.
- Published
- 2017
20. Temporal and spatial dynamics of arthropod groups in terrestrial subsurface habitats in central Portugal.
- Author
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Eusébio, R.P., Enghoff, H., Solodovnikov, A., Michelsen, A., Barranco, P., Salgado, J.M., Sendra, A., and Reboleira, A.S.P.S.
- Subjects
- *
BEETLES , *INVERTEBRATE diversity , *SOCIAL groups , *INVERTEBRATE communities , *SEASONS , *MILLIPEDES , *CORRIDORS (Ecology) , *HABITATS - Abstract
• Scree slopes of Portugal are inhabited by diverse and abundant arthropod fauna. • Different arthropod groups have different temporal and spatial dynamics in the MSS. • Winter had the highest arthropod abundance in the MSS habitat. • At higher elevation arthropod abundance is correlated to low temperature in the MSS. • MSS acts as a climatic refuge for arthropods during summer and winter. The mesovoid shallow substratum (MSS) can act as a climatic refuge for invertebrates, as a biogeographic corridor to deeper substrates or as a permanent habitat for some species. This study characterizes the seasonal invertebrate diversity and abundance of MSS ecosystems in central Portugal focusing on Diplopoda, Diplura, Orthoptera and Coleoptera during one year. Sampling was performed with standard MSS pitfalls in scree slopes (colluvial MSS) of karst areas and environmental parameters (temperature, pH, conductivity, water content, organic carbon, nitrate, phosphate and ammonium) were quantified. Our results show that winter was the season with the highest arthropod abundance and that the MSS acts as a permanent habitat for chordeumatidan millipedes and as a climatic refuge for orthopterans and most beetles. All Diplura collected belong to a single species known previously from surface habitats in the Iberian Peninsula, which does not seem to use the Portuguese MSS as a refuge. MSS habitats in central Portugal, classified as western Mediterranean and thermophile deposits protected by the Natura 2000 network based on plant communities and geology, revealed an abundant and diverse invertebrate community that urges characterization and protection. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. STUDY ON THE DEW POINT TEMPERATURE IN AREAS COVERED BY COLLUVIAL MESOVOID SHALLOW SUBSTRATUM (CRYSTALLINE SCHISTS SCREE) IN THE LEAOTA MOUNTAINS, 2014
- Author
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Magdalin Leonard Dorobăţ and Codruţa Mihaela Dobrescu
- Subjects
MSS ,shallow subterranean habitat ,mesovoid shallow substratum ,scree ,dew point ,Leaota ,lcsh:Science (General) ,lcsh:Q1-390 - Abstract
This paper present and discussed the results of the monitoring of the dew point values, recorded in October and November 2014, in an ecological station in the Leaota Mountains. In this station, two polls were located in areas covered by colluvial mesovoid shallow substratum (MSS) formed by epi- and mesometamorphic crystalline schists. In the ecological stations we located in the Leaota Mountains, almost always we found condensation on the walls of the polls tubes placed at different depths. Most often in spring or autumn or in other cold days, the dew point is more revealing regarding the recording actual amount of moisture in the air, than the relative humidity indicator. This work is part of a larger project that seeks correlations between ecological factors (humidity, temperature and dew point) registered in various types of screes (limestone and crystalline schists) and some zoocenotic components (invertebrates). This research aim to know the importance of mesovoid shallow substratum for invertebrates or small vertebrates fauna and represents a premiere for Leaota Mountains, not only regarding the continuous monitoring of some ecologic factors of these types of ecosystems (MSS), rarely researched even at global level, and also regarding the inventory of the invertebrate fauna in scree for these mountains.
- Published
- 2015
22. Spatial and temporal dynamics of invertebrates dwelling karstic mesovoid shallow substratum of Sivec National Nature Reserve (Slovakia), with emphasis on Coleoptera
- Author
-
Rendoš, Michal, Mock, Andrej, and Jászay, Tomáš
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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