Gladstone Nicholas S, Niemiller Matthew L, Hutchins Benjamin, Schwartz Benjamin, Czaja Alexander, Slay Michael E, Whelan Nathan V
School of Fisheries, Aquaculture, and Aquatic Sciences, Auburn University, Auburn, Alabama, USA.
Department of Biological Sciences, The University of Alabama in Huntsville, Huntsville, Alabama, USA.
Conserv Biol. 2022 Feb;36(1):e13722. doi: 10.1111/cobi.13722. Epub 2021 May 31.
Many taxonomic groups successfully exploit groundwater environments and have adapted to a subterranean (stygobiotic) existence. Among these groups are freshwater gastropods (stygosnails), which represent a widespread and taxonomically diverse component of groundwater ecosystems in North America. However, owing to sampling difficulty and lack of targeted study, stygosnails remain among the most understudied of all subterranean groups. We conducted a literature review to assess the biodiversity and geographic associations of stygosnails, along with the threats, management activities, and policy considerations related to the groundwater systems they inhabit. We identified 39 stygosnail species known to occur in a range of groundwater habitats from karst regions in the United States and Mexico. Most stygosnails exhibit extreme narrow-range endemism, resulting in a high risk of extinction from a single catastrophic event. We found that anthropogenically driven changes to surface environments have led to changes in local hydrology and degradation of groundwater systems inhabited by stygosnails such as increased sedimentation, introduction of invasive species, groundwater extraction, or physical collapse of water-bearing passages. Consequently, 32 of the 39 described stygosnail species in the United States and Mexico have been assessed as imperiled under NatureServe criteria, and 10 species have been assessed as threatened under International Union for Conservation of Nature criteria. Compared with surface species of freshwater snails, stygosnail conservation is uniquely hindered by difficulties associated with accessing subterranean habitats for monitoring and management. Furthermore, only three species were found to have federal protection in either the United States or Mexico, and current laws regulating wildlife and water pollution at the state and federal level may be inadequate for protecting stygosnail habitats. As groundwater systems continue to be manipulated and relied on by humans, groundwater-restricted fauna such as stygosnails should be studied so unique biodiversity can be protected.
许多生物分类群成功地利用了地下水环境,并适应了地下(洞穴生物)的生存方式。这些生物分类群中包括淡水腹足纲动物(洞穴蜗牛),它们是北美地下水生态系统中分布广泛且分类多样的组成部分。然而,由于采样困难以及缺乏针对性研究,洞穴蜗牛仍然是所有地下生物分类群中研究最少的之一。我们进行了一项文献综述,以评估洞穴蜗牛的生物多样性和地理关联,以及与其栖息的地下水系统相关的威胁、管理活动和政策考量。我们识别出已知分布于美国和墨西哥岩溶地区一系列地下水栖息地的39种洞穴蜗牛物种。大多数洞穴蜗牛表现出极端的狭域特有性,这导致它们因单次灾难性事件而灭绝的风险很高。我们发现,人为驱动的地表环境变化导致了局部水文变化以及洞穴蜗牛所栖息的地下水系统退化,如沉积物增加、入侵物种引入、地下水抽取或含水层通道的物理坍塌。因此,根据自然服务组织的标准,美国和墨西哥已描述的39种洞穴蜗牛物种中有32种被评估为濒危物种,根据国际自然保护联盟的标准,有10种被评估为受威胁物种。与淡水蜗牛的地表物种相比,洞穴蜗牛的保护因难以进入地下栖息地进行监测和管理而受到独特阻碍。此外,仅发现三种物种在美国或墨西哥受到联邦保护,而目前州和联邦层面监管野生动物和水污染的法律可能不足以保护洞穴蜗牛的栖息地。随着地下水系统继续被人类操纵和依赖,像洞穴蜗牛这样依赖地下水的动物群应得到研究,以便独特的生物多样性能够得到保护。