
Caecidotea burkensis, new species, a unique subterranean isopod from Burke’s Garden, with a synthesis of the biogeography and evolution of southwestern Virginia asellids
Author(s) -
S. Lewis,
Jerry Lewis,
William Orndorff
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
journal of caves and karst studies/journal of cave and karst studies
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.262
H-Index - 40
eISSN - 2331-3714
pISSN - 1090-6924
DOI - 10.4311/2020lsc0126
Subject(s) - cave , type locality , species richness , cove , ecology , biogeography , archaeology , geography , biology , taxonomy (biology)
Caecidotea burkensis, a new species of subterranean asellid isopod, is described and illustrated from material collected from Lawson Cave, in Burke’s Garden, Tazewell County, Virginia. The type-locality in Burke’s Garden is located within the highest mountain basin in the southern Appalachians. Burke’s Garden is a unique, geologically isolated area encompassing one of the headwater streams of the New River basin. Phylogenetically, the isopod is a member of the forbesi Group, a clade comprised primarily of epigean species. The complex mountain valleys and coves of southwestern Virginia are an area of intense speciation among asellids that have produced a bizarre array of cavernicolous species belonging to groups of otherwise epigean isopods. In addition to a few subterranean species of the Caecidotea cannula and stygia Groups, the Lirceus hargeri Group possesses over a dozen species endemic to caves and springs in the region, mostly only now in the process of being discovered and described. With so much species richness, syntopy of two, or even three, asellid species is commonplace in caves and springs in southwestern Virginia.