Blind cave eel
Kingdom
Phylum
Family
Genus
SPECIES
Ophisternon candidum
Length
34-40
13.4-15.7
cminch
cm inch 

The blind cave eel (Ophisternon candidum) is a species of cavefish in the family Synbranchidae. It is the longest cavefish in Australia (up to 40 cm (16 in)) and one of the only three vertebrates in Australia that is restricted to underground waters, the other being the blind gudgeon (Milyeringa veritas) and the Barrow cave gudgeon (Milyeringa justitia). It is blind, its body is eel-like and elongated, and it has a non-pigmented skin with colours ranging from white to pink.

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The blind cave eel is endemic to northwestern Australia, specifically in the Cape Range region, the Pilbara Region, and the Barrow Island region. It is rarely spotted due to its habitat and has only been spotted 36 times from 1959 to 2017. Notably, there is an evolving independent parentage in the Pilbara region showing a significant genetic difference from other blind cave eels.

The blind cave eel lives in a total darkness environment in underground waters disconnecting from the surface seawater. They typically live in caves and burrow into sediments. Their feeding include crustaceans, cave substrate organisms, and sometimes terrestrials washed into the cave system. Little is known about their behaviour except a finding revealing the male blind cave eel takes the responsibility of constructing and guarding their habitation.

The blind cave eel is an aquarium and research fish with no threat to humans. It is listed as vulnerable according to the Environment Protection and Biodiversity Conservation Act 1999 and listed as endangered according to the IUCN Red List. On 26 March 2008, the Australian Minister signed a piece of conservation advice acknowledging threats from human activities and the volatile environment. It then suggested priority actions for researchers, regional and local communities to assist in recovery. An obstacle to the conservation progress is identified as the inaccessibility of the blind cave eel, the situation is abate by the introduction of environmental DNA species-specific PCR assays in 2020 allows for a better sampling method.

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Appearance

The blind cave eel is Australia’s longest cavefish and may grow up to 400 mm (16 in). However, common total lengths for mature adults have an average of 340 mm (13 in) and range between 60 and 385 mm (2.4 and 15.2 in). Its head length accounts for 5.6–6.3%, pre-anus length accounts for 35.8–41.8%, snout length accounts for 0.82–1.11% and gape length accounts for 1.59–2.01% of its total length.

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Its body is round, elongated and eel-like. Its head is very short comparatively without visible external eyes. There are multiple indistinct pairs of slimy pores on its head. It has a large mouth and thick interior lips. It has several rows of strong teeth and a well-evolved tongue. There are two pairs of nostrils, the smaller pair being on top of the upper lip at the snout and the larger pair between the snout and its forehead. Several longitudinal cutaneous folds can be found around its throat. The blind cave eel has four pairs of evolved gills with a crescent in shape. The openings of its gills are extensive and horizontal. No scales or fins can be found except for the presence of a slim rayless membrane around the tail. There is an apparent lateral-line system from its head to close to the tip of its tail. Its anus is located in the front half of the body. Moreover, the blind cave eel has a total vertebrae ranging from 151 to 169 where 51–54 of them are pre-anal vertebrae and 97–117 of them are post-anal vertebrae.

The blind cave eel colours vary between unpigmented to white or pink.

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Distribution

Geography

Continents
Countries
Biogeographical realms

The preferred habitat consists of underground waters and caves, in which the waters have a very high salinity level and are stratified markedly from the surface freshwater. The underground waters have a pH value of 7–8, salinity level of 1–8%, hardness (CaCO3) of 220–1500 mg and conductivity of 115–1250 mS. Although it is altered by marine tides, there is a deficiency of surface connection with the surface freshwater. The blind cave eel is restricted to underground waters, in which only two vertebrate animals in Australia share such habitat, the other being the Blind gudgeon (Milyeringa veritas). The underground waters where the blind cave eel lives are a lightless subterranean system, indicating the adaptiveness of a total darkness environment.

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The blind cave eel likes to live in pastoral wells, dark caverns, fissures, under coastal limestone or burrow into sediments with a soft bottom. Due to the blind cave eel’s habit, it is very difficult for people to access underground waters and its sites are usually too small. Therefore, most of the recorded sightings are by observation rather than voucher specimens because it is unlikely to trap or net the blind cave eel. Moreover, the recorded sightings lack the lower part of the anchialine system and there are no more than three blind cave eels spotted on a single occasion.

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Diet and Nutrition

The blind cave eel feeds primarily based on crustaceans in subterranean and other cave substrate organisms, but have also been documented to feed on terrestrials washed into the cave system. In the gut contents examined by the Western Australia Museum, Halosbaena tulki, Stygiocaris, Philosciidae, and larvae are found. Despite being restricted to subterranean waters adapting a characteristic of faecal ooze, it is sometimes observed in shallow water lying on rock surfaces on its own or in pairs.

Mating Habits

Little is known about the blind cave eel's life cycle due to the inaccessibility of voucher specimens. For mating behaviour, the male blind cave eel tends to take the responsibility of building a nest or burrow and guarding over it.

Population

Population number

The Environment Protection and Biodiversity Conservation Act 1999 assessed the blind cave eel as vulnerable, and the Endangered Species Protection Act 1992 also assessed it as vulnerable. In the Wildlife Conservation Act 1950 in Western Australia and Wildlife Conservation Notice 2006(2) specially for protected fauna, the blind cave eel is accessed as rare. The International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) Red List of Threatened Species accessed the blind cave eel as endangered.

Relationship with Humans

The blind cave eel has no threat to humans. It is not consumable, and fisheries have no interest in it. The blind cave eel is mainly for research uses and scarcely in an aquarium. There is only one occasion where two voucher specimens WAM P.34487-001 (1) and (2) were collected from Anode Well L15 in the Barrow Island Region in 2015. The two blind cave eels stayed alive in the aquarium and were kept in source water for several days.

References

1. Blind cave eel Wikipedia article - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blind_cave_eel
2. Blind cave eel on The IUCN Red List site - https://www.iucnredlist.org/species/15386/123378485

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