Caecidotea nickajackensis | |
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Conservation status | |
Scientific classification | |
Kingdom: | Animalia |
Phylum: | Arthropoda |
Subphylum: | Crustacea |
Class: | Malacostraca |
Order: | Isopoda |
Family: | Asellidae |
Genus: | Caecidotea |
Species: | C. nickajackensis |
Binomial name | |
Caecidotea nickajackensis Packard, 1881 |
Caecidotea nickajackensis is a species of isopod crustacean in the family Asellidae. It was endemic to a single cave in Tennessee, and is thought to have been exterminated when that cave was flooded in 1967 by the building of the Nickajack Dam.
Contents |
Caecidotea nickajackensis is only known to have occurred in Nickajack Cave, Tennessee, before the building of the Nickajack Dam by the Tennessee Valley Authority in 1967.[2] Two other obligate stygobionts were exterminated in the same action – the pseudoscorpion Microcreagris nickajackensis and the ground beetle Pseudanophthalmus nickajackensis.[2]
C. nickajackensis is listed as a vulnerable species on the IUCN Red List,[1] and as a "species of concern" under the Endangered Species Act.[3] It was extirpated from Nickajack Cave in 1967, and is now thought to be extinct.[2]
Caecidotea nickajackensis was first described by Alpheus Spring Packard, in an 1881 publication by Edward Drinker Cope and himself, titled The Fauna of Nickajack Cave.[2][4] A second species, C. richardsonae, was described from the same cave by William Perry Hay in 1901, and was thought to be a junior synonym of C. nickajackensis for a long time.[2] It is now recognised as a separate species distributed from Alabama to Virginia.[2]
External identifiers for Caecidotea nickajackensis | |
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EOL | 324812 |
ITIS | 92751 |
WoRMS | 259568 |