| Featured Creature |
Dugong The dugong is also called the sea cow since it spends much of the time grazing on sea grass. It is believed that mermaid legends may have originated from dugong sightings by sailors who mistook them for half-human half-fish creatures.
Learn more about the Dugong.
|
|
|
Join the Featured Creature Mailing List
Would you like to receive a notice and link when the new Creature Feature is posted? Enter your e-mail address
below:
Privacy Policy
|
Need more Coffin Cave Mold Beetle facts?
|
Scientific Name:
Batrisodes texanus
Group: Insects
Status/Date Listed as Endangered:EN-US FWS: September 16, 1988
Area(s) Where Listed As Endangered:
Texas
The Coffin Cave mold beetle is a cave insect only found in two caves in Williamson County, Texas. It is a small beetle, only measuring 0.10 to 0.11 inches. It has long legs and short wings, and since it is a cave dweller and lives in total darkness, it has no eyes.
This beetle is a “troglobite,” meaning it is capable of living its entire life in a cave or underground environment. Its habitat requirements include limestone caves, sinkholes, and subterranean voids where the temperature and humidity is always constant, and it can not survive without the moisture and nutrients that come through the openings on the surface. The temperature and humidity of these caves must always be constant. The diet and reproductive habits of this creature is unknown.
The main threat to the Coffin Cave mold beetle is habitat loss due to urban development and pollution. Many caves have been paved over or filled in, and other caves have been altered, resulting in unstable temperatures and humidity levels that threaten the survival of the species. This species was listed as endangered in 1988, and a recovery plan was developed in 1994.
Coffin Cave Mold Beetle Facts Last Updated: March 28, 2007
To Cite This Page:
Glenn, C. R. 2006. "Earth's Endangered Creatures - Coffin Cave Mold Beetle Facts" (Online).
Accessed 11/20/2009 at http://earthsendangered.com/profile.asp?sp=543&ID=9.
Coffin Cave Mold Beetle Conservation