Dragonfly Cave Mold Beetle ecosystem and habitat types Sample Clauses

Dragonfly Cave Mold Beetle ecosystem and habitat types. The hydrogeological evolution of the Xxxxxxx Aquifer occurred contemporaneously with the biological evolution of a diverse community of troglobitic species within caves in the aquifer outcrop (USFWS 2011). Humid cave environments with stable temperatures were exploited by populations of surface invertebrates that did not require sunlight to complete their lifecycles. Isolation of these populations, commonly due to climate change at the surface, lead to endemic species with troglomorphic characteristics including elongated appendages, loss or reduction of eyes, and metabolic adaptations to life with a lean diet. As obligate cave-dwellers they cannot leave the cave environmental and depend on the introduction of nutrients from the surface. Nutrients can enter the deep cave environment in the form of plant roots, leaf litter and other organic debris washed into the cave, or actively in the form of trogloxeneic organisms that forage or shelter in caves such as small mammals, cave crickets, and bats. Cave habitat depends on continued infiltration of undegraded surface water into the cave. As extensions of surface ecology cave ecosystems also rely on the health of the surface plant and animal communities. The Tooth Cave Spider presumably preys on microarthopods. The Dragonfly Cave mold beetle presumably scavenges on decaying organic matter.
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