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#biospeleology — Public Fediverse posts

Live and recent posts from across the Fediverse tagged #biospeleology, aggregated by home.social.

  1. And the award for "best arachnology paper title of the year (so far)" goes to...

    Bellvert, A., Nicolosi, G., Pavlek, M., Cresi, L., & Mammola, S. (2026). "Where We’re Going, We Won’t Need Eyes to See: Distributional Range Size Drivers of European Subterranean Spiders." Journal of Biogeography, 53(5). doi.org/10.1111/jbi.70237 :OpenAccess:

    (Part of their aim is to "assess the impact of cave-related phenotypic traits (eye reduction, leg elongation, and pigmentation loss) on species distributional range".)

    #arachnews #arachnology #biospeleology #biogeography #spiders #caves

  2. And the award for "best arachnology paper title of the year (so far)" goes to...

    Bellvert, A., Nicolosi, G., Pavlek, M., Cresi, L., & Mammola, S. (2026). "Where We’re Going, We Won’t Need Eyes to See: Distributional Range Size Drivers of European Subterranean Spiders." Journal of Biogeography, 53(5). doi.org/10.1111/jbi.70237 :OpenAccess:

    (Part of their aim is to "assess the impact of cave-related phenotypic traits (eye reduction, leg elongation, and pigmentation loss) on species distributional range".)

    #arachnews #arachnology #biospeleology #biogeography #spiders #caves

  3. And the award for "best arachnology paper title of the year (so far)" goes to...

    Bellvert, A., Nicolosi, G., Pavlek, M., Cresi, L., & Mammola, S. (2026). "Where We’re Going, We Won’t Need Eyes to See: Distributional Range Size Drivers of European Subterranean Spiders." Journal of Biogeography, 53(5). doi.org/10.1111/jbi.70237 :OpenAccess:

    (Part of their aim is to "assess the impact of cave-related phenotypic traits (eye reduction, leg elongation, and pigmentation loss) on species distributional range".)

    #arachnews #arachnology #biospeleology #biogeography #spiders #caves

  4. And the award for "best arachnology paper title of the year (so far)" goes to...

    Bellvert, A., Nicolosi, G., Pavlek, M., Cresi, L., & Mammola, S. (2026). "Where We’re Going, We Won’t Need Eyes to See: Distributional Range Size Drivers of European Subterranean Spiders." Journal of Biogeography, 53(5). doi.org/10.1111/jbi.70237 :OpenAccess:

    (Part of their aim is to "assess the impact of cave-related phenotypic traits (eye reduction, leg elongation, and pigmentation loss) on species distributional range".)

    #arachnews #arachnology #biospeleology #biogeography #spiders #caves