SAVING THE COMAL SPRINGS RIFFLE BEETLE
The aquatic Comal Springs riffle beetle sports a mass of tiny, unwettable hairs on its underside, which it uses to maintain a thin bubble of air that allows it to breathe while it swims. But this remarkable respiration method doesn’t work well when normally clean, flowing water dries up and stagnates, reducing levels of dissolved oxygen. If groundwater pumping and pollution continue to affect the Texas springs this riffle beetle calls home, it won’t have much choice but to suffocate as a species.
The Comal Springs riffle beetle — along with its neighbors the Comal Springs dryopid beetle and Peck’s cave amphipod — was officially declared endangered in 1997, but all three species were denied critical habitat. To protect the invertebrates’ home, the Center sued the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service in 2003, and finally, four years later, critical habitat was designated for all three Comal Springs species. But this designation covered a ridiculously small area — not nearly enough to ensure the invertebrates’ recovery. In August of 2007 we filed a notice of intent to sue the Department of the Interior and the Fish and Wildlife Service over this unlawful designation, as well as illegally failing to implement protections for 54 other imperiled species. Litigation specifically advocating for the three invertebrates is planned.
All three Comal Springs species once survived a drought that stopped the flow of the springs from June 13 through November 3, 1956. The fact that these invertebrates weren’t extirpated at that time says a lot for their tenacity, but all three species were left devastated and still have very small populations. Today, groundwater pumping at Edwards Aquifer is greatly reducing the water flow of the springs in which these species are found, and that could result in years — not months — of significant drying.
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