The Texas blind salamander is classified as Vulnerable (VU), considered to be facing a high risk of extinction in the wild.
The Texas Blind Salamander, Eurycea rathbuni, is a rare cave-dwelling troglobite amphibian native to San Marcos, Hays County, Texas, specifically the San Marcos Pool of the Edwards Aquifer. The salamander has blood-red external gills for absorbing oxygen from the water. More
The Texas blind salamander is a sightless, cave-dwelling salamander that reaches a mature length of about 13 centimeters (5 inches). It is a slender, frail-legged amphibian, white or pinkish in color with a fringe of blood-red, external gills. More
Because the Texas blind salamander is adapted for living in water underground, it has no eyes, only two small black dots under the skin. More
* Does the Texas blind salamander have eyes? * Are Blind Texas Salamanders Troglobite? * What is the relationship with Texas blind salamander? » More ADVERTISEMENT Answer these * Why is the Texas Blind Salamander More
Because the Texas Blind Salamander is adapted for living in water underground, it has no eyes, only two small black dots under the skin. It has little skin pigment, is white in color, and has red external gills used to get oxygen from the water. More
Texas blind salamander was endangered most from the prospect of overpumping the Edwards Aquifer and therefore drawing the water levels down, possibly dewatering some habitat. More
Texas wild rice, Texas blind salamanders, fountain darters, Comal Springs riffle beetles, San Marcos salamanders and the Devils River minnow. The Texas Blind Salamander is an endangered species found only in the Edwards Aquifer underneath and near the City of San Marcos, Texas. More
The highly endangered Texas blind salamander spends its life in complete darkness underground in the water-filled limestone caves of the Edwards Aquifer near San Marcos - unless it gets too close to a natural spring. More
The Texas Blind Salamander is an endangered species that lives in the water-filled caves of the Edwards Aquifer near San Marcos, Texas. The wild population is being affected by reduced spring flow rates and ongoing droughts. More
A Texas Blind Salamander, Eurycea rathbuni, perched on a rock waiting for food. Photo courtesy Joe N. Fries, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. More
The Texas Blind Salamander can be found in the San Marcos Pool of the Edwards Aquifer in Hays County, Texas. This salamander favors good water quality and water temperature under 70 More
Eurycea rathbuni, the Texas blind salamander, is restricted in its distribution to the Balcones Escarpment of Hays County, Texas. It is a subterranean cave-dwelling salamander, coming to the surface only when water flow displaces it. The diet of E. More
The Texas blind salamander lives in a dark cave in San Marcos and doesn't see very well, hence the blues-guitarist moniker. It's also an endangered species. More
The Texas blind salamander lives in water-filled caves of the Edwards Aquifer near San Marcos, Texas. More
As you must well know, the Texas Blind Salamander is only found in Hays County, Texas in the San Marcos Pool of the Edwards Aquifer. More
Texas Blind Salamander is needed. Because of its strictly restricted inhabitation location, the remaining Texas Blind Salamanders cannot survive elsewhere. More
Description: The Texas blind salamander is smooth and unpigmented, appearing white. Their skin is translucent and the larger organs are visible through the sides and belly. More
Texas Blind Salamander adult swimming high resolution capture taken at Austin, Texas, USA. More
Description:The Texas Blind Salamander, Typhlomolge rathbuni is the top carnivore in the Hays County area of the San Antonio segment of the Balcones Fault Zone Edwards Aquifer. Listed by both the State of Texas and the Federal government as endangered. More