Abstract
Cave-obligate (troglobiotic) land snails are among the most understudied taxa inhabiting cave systems because of their small size and cryptic nature. Other than locality records and general descriptions of species' morphology, information regarding most cave snail taxa is minimal. Given the importance of land snails as indicator species and as important drivers of ecosystem processes, this lack of knowledge on cave-obligate taxa impedes conservation management of subterranean snails and subterranean ecosystems in general. As a first step, we compiled and georeferenced all available distributional records for troglobiotic snail species within two major karst regions in the United States: The Interior Low Plateau (ILP) and Appalachians. We identified 16 new localities among these species from caves in Alabama, Tennessee, and Georgia from 2012 to 2016, yielding 8 new occurrences of two species in the ILP and 8 new occurrences of three species in the Appalachians. In total, we report 143 occurrences for five species in 124 caves, representing the most comprehensive dataset on the distribution of caveobligate snails in the eastern United States to date. We also provide the first IUCN Red List conservation assessments for all five troglobiotic taxa and reexamine NatureServe conservation ranks. Our assessments indicate that three of the five species are considered at an elevated risk of extinction. Given these ranks and the threats identified to each species, we offer recommendations concerning the conservation and management of these cave snails and outline future areas of research for these taxa.
Original language | English |
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Pages (from-to) | 62-78 |
Number of pages | 17 |
Journal | American Malacological Bulletin |
Volume | 36 |
Issue number | 1 |
DOIs | |
State | Published - May 2018 |
Externally published | Yes |
Funding
We particularly thank Jon W. Armbruster, Kristen Bobo, Brian Buchanan, Pamela Hart Burress, Jance Carter, Emily Davis, Barbara Dinkins, Collin Dunn, Annette S. Engel, Scott Engel, Dante Fenolio, Allison Harris, Lindsey Hayter, Cory Holliday, Sarah Keenan, K. Denise Kendall Niemiller, Nathaniel Mann, A. McAnally, J.P. McClendon, Gerald Moni, Audrey Paterson, David Pelren, Bill Reeves, Daphne Soares, Charles D.R. Stephen, Chuck Sutherland, Dave Werneke, and Kirk S. Zigler for assistance in the field or for providing specimens. We also thank The Nature Conservancy and numerous private landowners that permitted access to caves. We thank the Tennessee Cave Survey, Alabama Cave Survey, Georgia Speleological Survey, and Kentucky Speleological Survey with assistance georeferencing cave locations. Fieldwork in Tennessee was authorized by the Tennessee Wildlife Resources Agency (scientific collection permit no. 1605) and supported by funding from the Tennessee Wildlife Resources Agency (MLN) and the Cave Conservancy Foundation (MLN).
Funders | Funder number |
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Cave Conservancy Foundation | |
MLN | |
Tennessee Wildlife Resources Agency | 1605 |
Keywords
- Carychium
- Glyphyalinia
- Helicodiscus