Updated
Updated · BBC Discover Wildlife · May 29
Researchers Identify 68th Dolichopoda Species in 25-Meter Greek Island Tunnel
Updated
Updated · BBC Discover Wildlife · May 29

Researchers Identify 68th Dolichopoda Species in 25-Meter Greek Island Tunnel

3 articles · Updated · BBC Discover Wildlife · May 29
  • A 25-meter-deep artificial tunnel on Greece’s Kastellorizo island yielded a new cave cricket species, Dolichopoda balrogi, confirmed through morphological analysis and DNA testing.
  • The species was found after researchers surveyed the island’s only land cave to better document its fauna and discovered tunnel walls covered with crickets adapted to dark, humid habitats.
  • D. balrogi has a brown body and long arching legs for gripping walls and overhangs, and its discovery raises the known Dolichopoda total to 68 species, 51 of them in Greece.
  • The study warns such cave-adapted organisms can be restricted to a single underground system, leaving them vulnerable to disturbance and prompting calls for wider cave surveys and conservation planning on the island.
Is a man-made cave a true sanctuary for a new species, or a fragile, human-built trap?
Could our world's forgotten man-made tunnels be the next frontier for discovering new life?