Blink and you’ll miss it: how species are being lost before they’re even found

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Some fish are confined to a particular cave system, making that one species very vulnerable.

Regional Director at Fauna & Flora International (FFI), Dr Tony Whitten, shares his grave concern for the wondrous and diverse lifeforms that lurk in the darkness of Asia's karst landscapes.
FFI is not yet permitted to discuss openly the significant findings, successes or lessons.

Asia’s karst landscapes are yielding new biological discoveries at an astonishing rate, yet the majority of species found here remain unknown (and unloved) by the wider world. With limestone quarrying threatening these fragile ecosystems, is there anything we can do to stem the tide of unnoticed extinctions?  

At the end of last year a new fish Draconectes narinosus, whose name derives from the Greek words for dragon and swimmer, was revealed to the world. It is known only from a specific lake in one small cave on a diminutive and contorted limestone island in North Vietnam’s World Heritage Site of Ha Long Bay.

Evolving in isolation and the dark, it has no eyes, markings, or scales.  It is so different from anything seen before that it has been recognised not just as a new species, but as a new genus. 

Although exciting, in the world of limestone biodiversity this is not exceptional.  For those who care to look, the limestone hills and caves that characterise Asia’s karst landscapes reveal astonishing levels of biodiversity.  A large proportion of animals collected during surveys are new to science. 

This is partly because caves are visited infrequently, but also as a result of the highly alkaline nature of limestone hills, dry soils and the presence of caves. This combination creates conditions which require animals (and indeed plants) to adapt and evolve. As with the cave fish, some of these species are confined to single hills or a particular cave systems because they are no longer able to cross the non-limestone habitats that lie between.

Alien world of caves

In the darkness, eyes are useless, colour and markings pointless, and flight downright dangerous. Thus many cave species (such as fish, shrimps, woodlice, millipedes and beetles) have lost these features and abilities, and instead have developed long antennae and legs which allow them to “feel” their way around.

With no light for photosynthesis there are no plants, so the energy to sustain the ecosystem has to come from elsewhere – either from the faeces (guano) produced by echo-locating birds and bats, or from nutrients carried in by cave rivers and by water dripping down from the world above. 

FFI is not yet permitted to discuss openly the significant findings, successes or lessons.

The cave environment is generally quite stable and many species will perish quickly if the high humidity and darkness change – such as when blasting in a quarry occurs.  More mobile cave residents such as bats can fly away, but the end is heralded for most cave species when blasting breaks through. And because so many species are endemic to a single cave or hill, quarrying – even in a small area – can easily result in the extinction of one or many species.

Limestone quarrying

With such extinctions taking place, there might be an expectation that more attention would be focused on limestone quarrying for the cement industry, an activity which causes most damage to karst ecosystems; unfortunately, that is not the case. 

It’s difficult to find good examples of cement quarry environmental impact assessments that take into account the full spectrum of karst biodiversity. This suggests that no company has yet done such work with an awareness of the extremely high levels of endemism in the ecosystems it is destroying.  Although one global cement company has done some retrospective work with Fauna & Flora International, FFI is not yet permitted to discuss openly the significant findings, successes or lessons.

Uncharismatic fauna

It’s problematic that many of the limestone species in greatest need of conservation are relatively small and little-known invertebrates - insects, crabs, shrimps, spiders, woodlice, millipedes, snails, etc.  Very few have been properly assessed for the authoritative IUCN Red List of Threatened Species, and even fewer have been given any form of local or national protection.

Unfortunately, this means that a prudent cement company may complete the normal precautionary checklists, but its planned quarry could still be responsible for global extinctions.

Cement industry

The cement industry desperately needs to develop more relevant, bespoke guidance on managing biodiversity at its sites – or to avoid significant locations at the outset.

The World Bank has suggested that sites chosen for cement quarries should be in areas that are already disturbed or degraded. Sites to be avoided include caves, underground streams and small voids, as well as isolated hills (where a high level of endemism is to be expected).  It’s preferable to focus on large limestone blocks, where species are likely to be more widely distributed.  Explicit corporate adoption of such criteria would be a major advance. 

Some leading cement companies have developed partnerships with the larger conservation groups but these have tended to focus on rehabilitation and (questionably termed) ‘restoration’, rather than on the highly range-restricted fauna and flora that probably lived at the sites originally.  

Whilst it’s positive that old quarries are turned into biologically interesting recreational sites, that’s poor compensation for the uninformed, unthinking and possibly avoidable loss of entire species and their associated ecosystems. 

To read more by Tony Whitten, visit: www.fauna-flora.org/author/tony-whitten

Image of underwater cave courtesy of www.shutterstock.com

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