L. hochenwartii is a true troglobite, adapted to the subterranean life and unable to survive in the outside environment. As a result, it possesses typical troglobiotic features, such as elongated legs and antennae, the absence of wings, the absence of pigment in the integument, as well as the anophthalmia. However, the most striking features are the slender thorax, hence the specific name, and the domed elytrae which cover the abdomen completely and give the animal its peculiar round appearance. This adaptation allows the animal to store wet air under elytrae and use it for breathing in drier areas. Another typical feature is a specific receptor on antennae which helps the animal to perceive air humidity level. It lives predominantly in large and cold caves where the temperature does not exceed. Its ecology is largely unknown, but the specimens were seen feeding on organic material, both animal and vegetable origin, which come from outside environment via percolating water or bats’ and birds’ guano, and carcasses of different cave animals. Even less is known about its life history. The only study done on L. hochenwartii so far showed that, as is the case in most specialised cave Leptodirini, females lay a small number of relatively large eggs which take a long time to develop. The number of larval instars is reduced to only one, and the larvae do not feed before moulting. The maximum period of activity of adults is still unknown. As usual in troglobites, environmental stability and the absence of sunlight have brought about the loss of circadian rhythm, whereas seasonal rhythm is affected by rainfall patterns.
Research history
The animal was first found in 1831 by Luka Čeč, an assistant to the lamplighter in the Postojna Cave system in southwestern Slovenia, when exploring new inner cave portions discovered some year before. He gave the specimen to count Earl Franz von Hohenwart who was unable to determine the species, and gave it in turn to Ferdinand Josef Schmidt, a naturalist and entomologist from Ljubljana. Schmidt recognized the beetle as a new species and described it in the article under the name "Beitrag zu Krain's Fauna" which appeared in the Carniolan paper Illyrisches Blatt in 1832. He named it Leptodirushochenwartii after the donor, and also gave it the common Slovene name drobnovratnik and GermanEnghalskäfer, both related to its typical slender thorax. The article represents the first formal description of a cave animal, since the olm, described in 1768 by Josephus Nicolaus Laurenti, was not recognized as a cave animal at the time. In 1856 the Russian entomologist Viktor Motchoulski described a new Leptodirus species, named L. schmidti, currently recognized as a subspecies of L. hochenwartii. Subsequent research by Schmidt and other naturalists revealed further previously unknown cave inhabitants, which aroused considerable interest among cave researchers. For this reason, the discovery of L. hochenwartii is considered the starting point of biospeleology as a scientific discipline.
L. hochenwartii is the only species in the genus Leptodirus. It is endemic to western Dinaric Alps, from Inner Carniola north to Velebit south. Six subspecies are currently recognized in this range:
L. hochenwartii hochenwartiiSchmidt, 1832
L. hochenwartii schmidti
L. hochenwartii reticulatusJ. Müller, 1906
L. hochenwartii pretneriMüller, 1926
L. hochenwartii croaticusPretner, 1955
L. hochenwartii velebiticusPretner, 1970
Of those, two subspecies are only found in Slovenia, and three are only found in Croatia. The subspecies L. h. reticulatus are found in Slovenia, Croatia and in the Trieste Karst, where was originally found in Grotta Noè.
Conservation
Although IUCN has not evaluated its conservation status, due to its limited range and slow reproduction, L. hochenwartii is considered rare and vulnerable, despite the fact that individual density in some caves can be high. The main threats are illegal and massive collecting and pollution of the caves. As a consequence, the species is included in the Slovenian Red list ofthreatened species. Additionally, it is included in the Annex II of the EU Habitats Directive. On this basis, 15 areas of conservation are established in Slovenia which include the majority of known localities.