There are 81 known species of
subterranean fishes in the world. Some
travel back and forth between the darkness underground and the light above, but
many spend their entire lives in the pitch-blackness of subterranean rivers, streams,
lakes, and springs. These are the troglomorphic species, and they have adapted to this harsh
environment by the loss of their eyes and the development of numerous large
sensory papillae on various parts of their bodies. These sensory papillae are sensitive to vibrations
and touch and compensate for their lack of sight, permitting them to carry on
life functions, such as finding food and avoiding predators, in total
darkness. They also lack pigment in the
skin and look pinkish because of blood vessels showing through their translucent
skin.
There are two groups of troglomorphic
fishes in the United States,
the cavefishes of the family Amblyopsidae
and the blindcats of the family Ictaluridae. The cavefishes are
less than five inches in length and are found in the eastern United
States.
They have a large branchial cavity, which
allows them to carry and incubate their eggs in the gill chamber. Because the cave systems they live in are
energy poor, cavefishes eat infrequently and conserve
energy by having slow metabolisms and remaining motionless most of the
time. They are slow-growing and
long-lived. Cavefishes
feed on copepods, isopods, amphipods, crayfish, small salamanders, and even
their own young.
The Alabama Cavefish is found only in Key
Cave in Lauderdale
County, Alabama. Its total known population is numbered at
less than 100, making it one of the most endangered fishes in
the world. In contrast, the Southern
Cavefish is uncommonly found in caves over a fairly large area involving seven
states. The two remaining troglomorphic species in this family are the Ozark Cavefish
of the Springfield Plateau and the Northern Cavefish of south-central Indiana
and central Kentucky. Both are considered rare, with the Ozark
Cavefish being classified as a threatened species.
The blindcats
consist of four species, of which two occur in the United
States.
These are known from five artesian wells penetrating the San Antonio
Pool of the Edward’s Aquifer in and near San Antonio,
Texas.
They have been found to occur together in three of these wells. Both species are abundant in their habitat
and occur in these subterranean waters at depths of 900–2,000
feet. The Toothless Blindcat,
at four inches, feeds on fungal growths and detritus, while the Widemouth Blindcat, at five
inches, is an opportunistic predator, feeding on shrimp, amphipods, and
isopods.
Just as these subterranean fishes have lost
their eyesight from living in total darkness, so the Christian is in danger of
losing his spiritual eyesight by living in the darkness of sin. “In following the path of Satan’s choosing,
we are encompassed by the shadows of evil, and every step leads into deeper
darkness and increases the blindness of the heart. The same law obtains in the spiritual as in
the natural world. He who abides in
darkness will at last lose the power of vision.
He is shut in by a deeper than midnight
blackness; and to him the brightest noontide can bring no light. He ‘walketh in
darkness, and knoweth not whither he goeth, because that darkness hath blinded his eyes.’ 1 John 2:11.
“Through persistently cherishing evil,
willfully disregarding the pleadings of divine love, the sinner loses the love
for good, the desire for God, the very capacity to receive the light of
heaven. The invitation of mercy is still
full of love, the light is shining as brightly as when it first dawned upon his
soul; but the voice falls on deaf ears, the light on blinded eyes.” Thoughts From the
Mount of Blessing, 92.
David Arbour writes from his
home in DeQueen, Arkansas. He may be contacted by e-mail at
incadove@ipa.net.