Category Ranking

98%

Total Visits

921

Avg Visit Duration

2 minutes

Citations

20

Article Abstract

Dark marine habitats are often characterized by a food-limited condition. Peculiar dark habitats include marine caves, characterized by the absence of light and limited water flow, which lead to reduced fluxes of organic matter for cave-dwelling organisms. We investigated whether the most abundant and common cave-dwelling fish Apogon imberbis has the potential to play the role of trophic vector in Mediterranean marine caves. We first analysed stomach contents to check whether repletion changes according to a nycthemeral cycle. We then identified the prey items, to see whether they belong to species associated with cave habitats or not. Finally, we assessed whether A. imberbis moves outside marine caves at night to feed, by collecting visual census data on A. imberbis density both inside and outside caves, by day and by night. The stomach repletion of individuals sampled early in the morning was significantly higher than later in the day. Most prey were typical of habitats other than caves. A. imberbis was on average more abundant within caves during the day and outside during the night. Our study supports the hypothesis regarding the crucial trophic role of A. imberbis in connecting Mediterranean marine caves with external habitats.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6003952PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41598-018-27491-1DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

marine caves
16
mediterranean marine
8
caves day
8
day night
8
caves
7
marine
6
habitats
5
imberbis
5
fish mitigate
4
mitigate trophic
4

Similar Publications

Genomes provide tools for reconstructing organismal evolution and larger Earth system processes. Although genome sequences have been jointly analyzed with geological data to understand links between biological evolution and geological phenomena such as erosion and uplift, genomic and natural history observations have seldom been leveraged to reconstruct the timescale of landscape change in cases where traditional methods from the Earth sciences cannot. Here, we reconstruct the genomic evolution of cave-adapted amblyopsid fishes.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The Xiong'an Area in the Bohai Bay Basin is a typical superimposed basin rich in geothermal resources within deeply buried marine carbonate rocks. The Wumishan Formation in the Xiong'an Area, Bohai Bay Basin, hosts high-quality dolomite reservoirs vital for geothermal resource development within deeply buried marine carbonates. Granular, algal, and micritic dolomites dominate the formation with reservoir spaces comprising primary pores, karst pores, and fractures.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

A 75,000-y-old Scandinavian Arctic cave deposit reveals past faunal diversity and paleoenvironment.

Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A

August 2025

Centre for Ecological and Evolutionary Synthesis, Department of Biosciences, University of Oslo, Oslo N-0371, Norway.

During the last glacial period (~118 to 11.7 ka), the Arctic has been characterized by a major redistribution of flora and fauna as a consequence of extreme climatic fluctuations, with associated glacial advances and retreats, sea-level changes, and shifting sea ice extent. In the high-latitude regions of Northern Europe that are currently subject to rapid climate warming, we lack a comprehensive understanding of faunal biodiversity in the last glacial period due to the extreme rarity of preserved organic remains.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Visual ecology, the study of how animals acquire and respond to visual information in nature, has grown rapidly over the past few decades. Research in this field has transformed our understanding of fundamental processes, such as the neurobiological basis of behavior and the diversification of species through sensory drive. The recent growth in the field has been accompanied by leaps in our understanding of the diversity of visual systems and in the development of novel technologies and techniques (for example, those allowing us to measure scenes and signals).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Extreme environments serve as natural laboratories for studying evolutionary processes, with caves offering replicated instances of independent colonizations. The timing, mode and genetic underpinnings underlying cave-obligate organismal evolution remain enigmatic. We integrate phylogenomics, fossils, palaeoclimatic modelling and newly sequenced genomes to elucidate the evolutionary history and adaptive processes of cave colonization in the study group, the North American Amblyopsidae fishes.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF