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You are here: Home / Research / Funded Projects / Classification and Mapping of Cave and Karst Resources / Review of Subterranean Faunal Studies of the Appalachians and Models of Subterranean Species Richness PDF

Review of Subterranean Faunal Studies of the Appalachians and Models of Subterranean Species Richness PDF

Review of Subterranean Faunal Studies of the Appalachians and Models of Subterranean Species Richness PDF
Historically, the cave fauna, and any biota for that matter, were largely studied from a taxonomic perspective. Papers focused on a lineage or a set of closely related lineages because of the strictures of taxonomic expertise, the difficulty in collating and summarizing information for a variety of taxonomic groups, and because, until relatively recently, there was no research agenda that emphasized patterns of species richness. With the advent of interest in species diversity per se in the late 1960’s and especially with the interest in biodiversity and biodiversity hotspots in the late 1980’s, the focus changed. Studies of cave fauna reflected the changing research agendas. In this bibliographic review, we examine five areas of interest:

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