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Title:Are caves enough to represent karst groundwater biodiversity? Insights from geospatial analyses applied to European obligate groundwater-dwelling copepods
Authors:ID Galmarini, Emma (Author)
ID Di Cicco, Mattia (Author)
ID Fiasca, Barbara (Author)
ID Mori, Nataša (Author)
ID Iannella, Mattia (Author)
ID Di Lorenzo, Tiziana (Author)
ID Cerasoli, Francesco (Author)
ID Galassi, Diana Maria Paola (Author)
Files:URL URL - Source URL, visit https://dx.doi.org/10.7717/peerj.20285
 
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Language:English
Typology:1.01 - Original Scientific Article
Organization:Logo NIB - National Institute of Biology
Abstract:Caves are recognized as biodiversity hotspots for groundwater fauna, including obligate groundwater-dwelling copepods (Crustacea: Copepoda), exhibiting high species richness, endemism, and phylogenetic rarity. However, the extent to which caves alone provide a representative estimate of copepod species richness in karst areas remains uncertain. Taking advantage of the recently published EGCop dataset, the first expert-validated, Europe-wide occurrence dataset for obligate groundwater-dwelling copepods (hereinafter, GW copepods), this study investigates the distribution of GW copepods into karst areas, comparing species richness in caves versus other karst groundwater habitats (e.g., springs, karst streams, artificial wells), within and among the European karst units. The main aims are: (i) identifying karst areas which represent hotpots of GW copepod species richness; (ii) assessing to which extent caves, as open windows to the subterranean environments, contribute to define hotspots of GW copepods’ species richness into karst areas across Europe. EGCop comprises 6,986 records from 588 copepod species/subspecies distributed among four orders: Cyclopoida (3,664 records, 184 species), Harpacticoida (3,288 records, 395 species), Calanoida (32 records, seven species), and Gelyelloida (two records, two species). To perform geospatial analyses, we filtered the dataset by: (i) selecting only the records with spatial uncertainty in the associated coordinates lower than 10 km; (ii) searching for those records falling within, or very close to, the polygons representing European karst areas. Species richness hotspots were then estimated through geospatial analyses in geographic information system (GIS) environment. Within the selected records, those specifically referring to karst habitats (2,526 records, 369 species) are primarily represented by Harpacticoida (1,199 records, 228 species) and Cyclopoida (1,293 records, 132 species). Among species collected from karst habitats, records from caves (1,867, 73.9%) belong to 318 species (Harpacticoida = 189, Cyclopoida = 122, Calanoida = 7), representing 86.1% of the total species richness of karst habitats. Geospatial analyses reveal that the European hotspots of GW copepods’ species richness recorded exclusively in caves reflect the spatial arrangement of postglacial refugia in southern karst regions, though representing a subset of the broader diversity found across all karst groundwater habitats. Our findings highlight that the contribution of cave systems in groundwater biodiversity assessments and related conservation planning may vary depending on the evolution and morphologies of the target karst regions—often pointing to a high representativeness of caves for subterranean biodiversity, sometimes revealing their lower explanatory power within the broader karst systems.
Keywords:copepoda, groundwater, biodiversity, datasets, caves, karst, Europe
Publication status:Published
Publication version:Version of Record
Publication date:06.11.2025
Year of publishing:2025
Number of pages:str. [1]-32
Numbering:Vol. 13, [art. no.] ǂe20285
PID:20.500.12556/DiRROS-24805 New window
UDC:574
ISSN on article:2167-8359
DOI:10.7717/peerj.20285 New window
COBISS.SI-ID:259544067 New window
Note:Nasl. z nasl. zaslona; Opis vira z dne 2. 12. 2025; Soavtorji: Mattia Di Cicco​, Barbara Fiasca, Nataša Mori, Mattia Iannella, Tiziana Di Lorenzo, Francesco Cerasoli, Diana Maria Paola Galassi;
Publication date in DiRROS:19.12.2025
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Downloads:7
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Record is a part of a journal

Title:PeerJ
Shortened title:PeerJ
Publisher:PeerJ Inc.
ISSN:2167-8359
COBISS.SI-ID:31891929 New window

Document is financed by a project

Funder:EC - European Commission
Project number:101052342
Name:The European Biodiversity Partnership
Acronym:Biodiversa-plus

Funder:SNSF - Swiss National Science Foundation
Project number:209583
Name:The vertical dimension of conservation: A cost-effective plan to incorporate subterranean ecosystems in post-2020 biodiversity and climate change agendas

Licences

License:CC BY 4.0, Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International
Link:http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
Description:This is the standard Creative Commons license that gives others maximum freedom to do what they want with the work as long as they credit the author.

Secondary language

Language:Slovenian
Keywords:ceponožci, podzemne vode, biološka raznovrstnost, podatkovne zbirke, jame, kras, Evropa


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