Reprint

Cave Communities: From the Surface Border to the Deep Darkness

Edited by
December 2023
224 pages
  • ISBN978-3-0365-9752-2 (Hardback)
  • ISBN978-3-0365-9753-9 (PDF)

This book is a reprint of the Special Issue Cave Communities: From the Surface Border to the Deep Darkness that was published in

Biology & Life Sciences
Environmental & Earth Sciences
Summary

From a biological perspective, the subterranean realm is one of the less studied, but at the same time, one of the most promising, theatres for new findings and research. Compared to those on the surface, the ecological conditions occurring in subterranean habitats are relatively simple, and this may be an optimal scenario for understanding the mechanisms allowing the colonization, adaptation, and evolution of species, as well as their interactions within local communities. Diversity in subterranean habitats is often overlooked, and few studies embrace whole communities or try to assess functional relationships between species.

This Special Issue reprint comprises papers covering a wide range of aspects related to the distribution, composition, and roles of subterranean communities occurring in different typologies of subterranean habitats.

Format
  • Hardback
License
© 2022 by the authors; CC BY-NC-ND license
Keywords
cave biology; subterranean habitats; vertebrates; invertebrates; community dynamics; biospeleology; hypogean; conservation; biodiversity; troglobite; troglophile; trogloxene; extreme environment; niche; epikarst; classification trees; Copepoda; random forests; Diptera; Limonia; Limonia nubeculosa; Neolimonia; Trichoceridea; cave community; biospeleology; cave biology; prey; food resources; occupancy; abundance; Astyanax; Spelaeomysis; Troglomexicanus; Speocirolana; Toro cave; Sierra de El Abra; troglomorphy; troglobite; stygobite; fieldwork; wild fish; comparative biology; behavior; troglomorphism; olfactory test; infrared movies; amino acids; chondroitin; plasticity; cybernetics; ecology; cave biology; biospeleology; cavefish; dissolved oxygen; cave evolution; Astyanax mexicanus; Sierra de El Abra; Ostracoda; Yucatán Peninsula; cenotes; mitochondrial marker; geometric morphometrics; population ecology; growth; movements; São Domingos karst area; conservation; epikarst; subterranean fishes; evolution; origin of troglobites; Brazil; subterranean biology; environmental science; biogeography; distribution records; groundwater; cave biology; underwater caves; cenote; mysid; stygobiont; bioindicator; accidental cave visitors; Arachnida; Araneae; arid; hypogean; levant; Mediterranean; species diversity; troglobite; troglophile