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Motobdella montezuma

Motobdella montezuma
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Annelida
Class: Clitellata
Subclass: Hirudinea
Family: Erpobdellidae
Genus: Motobdella
Species: M. montezuma
Binomial name
Motobdella montezuma
(Davies, Singhal & Blinn, 1985) 
Synonyms 

Erpobdella montezuma Davies, Singhal & Blinn, 1985


Erpobdella montezuma Davies, Singhal & Blinn, 1985

Motobdella montezuma is a species of leech which is only found in Montezuma Well, central Arizona, United States. It is a nocturnal pelagic predator that feeds almost exclusively on the endemic amphipod Hyalella montezuma, which it detects using passive sonar and swallows whole.

Adults of M. montezuma may reach a length of 71 mm (2.8 in) including the suckers at the front and rear.

M. montezuma is closely related to the genus Erpobdella, which includes species that are widespread across North America from Alaska to Mexico. However, M. montezuma is only known to occur in a single pool, Montezuma Well, in the Montezuma Castle National Monument in Yavapai County, Arizona.

Montezuma Well due to a high carbon dioxide level in the water is unable to support a population of fish, leaving an ecological niche of open-water predator free. Although there are a number of species of invertebrates living in the well, the diet of M. montezuma consists almost entirely of the endemic amphipod Hyalella montezuma.

M. montezuma is nocturnal, resting at the bottom of the well during the day, when predatory waterfowl are present. As night falls, the leeches swim towards the surface and hunt amphipods near the surface; this is the only instance of a leech hunting in open water. Prey are detected by passive sonar, and swallowed whole. This pattern of diel vertical migration by a leech is only known to occur in Montezuma Well.


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