Shelter-seeking is a vital behavior for stress reduction and survival in a range of animals. It comes at the cost of reduced foraging, mate finding, dispersal and territoriality, and is expected to reflect the trade-off between fitness costs and benefits. One way to test this hypothesis is to compare shelter-seeking behavior in surface habitats and in caves where external threat factors are largely reduced.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe family Moitessieriidae includes minute dioecious gastropods exclusively inhabiting subterranean waters, including thermal ones. Only empty shells were collected in most species, the vast majority of them are described from their gross shell morphology alone. Several visits to a site are usually required to obtain at least some living individuals.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe freshwater isopod crustacean Asellus aquaticus has recently been developed as an emerging invertebrate cave model for studying evolutionary and developmental biology. Mostly morphological and genetic differences between cave and surface A. aquaticus populations have been described up to now, while scarce data are available on other aspects, including physiology.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTurcolana Argano & Pesce, 1980 is the isopod genus occurring in freshwater and brackish groundwater environments around the eastern Mediterranean. In this study, a revised diagnosis of the genus, an updated map of species distribution and a key to species are presented. The first cave dwelling species is described from the Melissotrypa Cave in central Greece, a highly troglomorphic Turcolana lepturoides sp.
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