Ecology and sampling techniques of an understudied subterranean habitat: the Milieu Souterrain Superficiel (MSS)
Stefano Mammola,Pier Mauro Giachino,Elena Piano,Alexandra Jones,Marcel Barberis,Giovanni Badino,Marco Isaia +6 more
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TL;DR: The advances in the study of the physical and ecological factors affecting this habitat—i.e., microclimate, energy flows, animal communities, and trophic interactions are synthesized and described and reviewed the available sampling methods used to investigate MSS fauna.
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Abstract: The term Milieu Souterrain Superficiel (MSS) has been used since the early 1980s in subterranean biology to categorize an array of different hypogean habitats. In general terms, a MSS habitat represents the underground network of empty air-filled voids and cracks developing within multiple layers of rock fragments. Its origins can be diverse and is generally covered by topsoil. The MSS habitat is often connected both with the deep hypogean domain-caves and deep rock cracks-and the superficial soil horizon. A MSS is usually characterized by peculiar microclimatic conditions, and it can harbor specialized hypogean, endogean, and surface-dwelling species. In light of the many interpretations given by different authors, we reviewed 235 papers regarding the MSS in order to provide a state-of-the-art description of these habitats and facilitate their study. We have briefly described the different types of MSS mentioned in the scientific literature (alluvial, bedrock, colluvial, volcanic, and other types) and synthesized the advances in the study of the physical and ecological factors affecting this habitat-i.e., microclimate, energy flows, animal communities, and trophic interactions. We finally described and reviewed the available sampling methods used to investigate MSS fauna.
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CLIMATE, ABIOTIC FACTORS, AND THE EVOLUTION OF SUBTERRANEAN LIFE KLIMA, ABIOTSKI DEJAVNIKI IN EVOLUCIJA PODZEMELJSKEGA žIVLJENJA
David C. Culver,Tanja Pipan +1 more
- 01 Jan 2010
TL;DR: Overall, the role of these shallow subterranean habitats in the evolution and biogeography of subterranean species may be crucial and environmental differences, such as differences in chemistry of epikarst water, may be important in allowing large numbers of species to coexist.
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Organic carbon content and temperature as substantial factors affecting diversity and vertical distribution of Collembola on forested scree slopes
TL;DR: In this article, the vertical distribution of collembolan communities along a depth gradient and the impact of temperature and chemical parameters (pH, organic carbon content) on the structure of communities were studied on three forested scree slopes differing in type of bedrock and topography in the Western Carpathians, Slovakia (Central Europe).
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