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The study of hidden habitats sheds light on poorly known taxa: spiders of the Mesovoid Shallow Substratum / Enrique Ledesma, Alberto Jiménez-Valverde, Alberto de Castro, Pablo Aguado-Aranda, Vicente M. Ortuño.

Contributor(s): Ledesma, Enrique [autor] | Jiménez-Valverde, Alberto [autor] | Castro Gil, Alberto, 1972- [autor] | Aguado-Aranda, Pablo [autor] | Ortuño, Viecente M [autor] | Aranzadi Zientzia Elkartea.
Material type: materialTypeLabelComputer fileCitation: Ledesma, E., Jiménez-Valverde, A., Castro, A. de, Aguado-Aranda, P., Ortuño, V.M., 2019. he study of hidden habitats sheds light on poorly known taxa: spiders of the Mesovoid Shallow Substratum. ZooKeys 841, 39-59. Publisher: Sofía, Bulgaria: Zookeys, 2019Content type: texto (visual) Media type: electrónico Subject(s): Araneae | inventory completeness | species distributions | stone debris | Iberian PeninsulaGenre/Form: Artículo científicoSummary: The scarce and biased knowledge about the diversity and distribution of Araneae species in the Iberian Peninsula is accentuated in poorly known habitats such as the Mesovoid Shallow Substratum (MSS). The aim of this study was to characterize the spiders inventory of the colluvial MSS of the Sierra de Guadarrama National Park, and to assess the importance of this habitat for the conservation of the taxon. Thirty-three localities were selected across the high peaks of the Guadarrama mountain range and they were sampled for a year using subterranean traps specially designed to capture arthropods in the MSS. Species accumulation curves were built both for the observed species richness and for the non-parametric richness estimators. The literature was reviewed in order to update the distributional maps of the rarest species. Forty-two species were collected, of which four were species new to science. More than half were represented by one or two individuals which caused the accumulation curves to rise slowly and to end without reaching an asymptote. Almost half of the species showed significant increases in their Iberian distribution ranges. Two species were recorded for the first time in the Iberian Peninsula and 32 species were new additions to the spider checklist of the Sierra de Guadarrama National Park.
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The scarce and biased knowledge about the diversity and distribution of Araneae species in the Iberian Peninsula is accentuated in poorly known habitats such as the Mesovoid Shallow Substratum (MSS). The aim of this study was to characterize the spiders inventory of the colluvial MSS of the Sierra de Guadarrama National Park, and to assess the importance of this habitat for the conservation of the taxon. Thirty-three localities were selected across the high peaks of the Guadarrama mountain range and they were sampled for a year using subterranean traps specially designed to capture arthropods in the MSS. Species accumulation curves were built both for the observed species richness and for the non-parametric richness estimators. The literature was reviewed in order to update the distributional maps of the rarest species. Forty-two species were collected, of which four were species new to science. More than half were represented by one or two individuals which caused the accumulation curves to rise slowly and to end without reaching an asymptote. Almost half of the species showed significant increases in their Iberian distribution ranges. Two species were recorded for the first time in the Iberian Peninsula and 32 species were new additions to the spider checklist of the Sierra de Guadarrama National Park.

Ledesma, E., Jiménez-Valverde, A., Castro, A. de, Aguado-Aranda, P., Ortuño, V.M., 2019. he study of hidden habitats sheds light on poorly known taxa: spiders of the Mesovoid Shallow Substratum. ZooKeys 841, 39-59.

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