Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

What’s down there?

Heritage Commission, volunteers in search of caves.

- ASHTON ELEY

HELL CREEK — Much of the Natural State has yet to be discovered — at least below the surface — but the Arkansas Natural Heritage Commission has partnered with the Cave Research Foundation to create a more-complete map and biological inventory of these dark but life-filled worlds.

Since last spring, crews of commission staffers and foundation volunteers have gathered data from 32 caves — 22 of which were previously undocument­ed. Some of Arkansas’ thousands of caves are home to threatened or endangered species, with a few found at only one or two sites.

“Knowing what you have is important to managing it well,” foundation Vice President Kayla Sapkota said as she trekked through the Hell Creek Natural Area near Mountain View searching for undiscover­ed caves one day last month. “You could kill an entire population and that’s the only place that population is in the whole world.”

The informatio­n gathered on these expedition­s will help inform land management and acquisitio­n decisions, said Heritage Commission ecologist Theo Witsell, chief of research at the agency. The commission protects about 70,548 acres with the acquisitio­n of the 636.3-acre tract added to the Warren Prairie Natural Area in South Arkansas in December.

“At Natural Heritage Commission, we are especially concerned with things that are rare and especially high-quality. I like to sum up what we do as we identify and protect the last of the least and the best of the rest,” Witsell said. “Our mission is to protect those places or species so they can be here into the future. It just so happens that there are a lot of really rare animals found in caves.”

The Cave Research Foundation offers the use of hightech equipment, personnel training and its database to

groups such as the Heritage Commission, helping it further its mission to preserve the state’s natural diversity.

The foundation grew out of efforts of explorers working in the Mammoth Cave area of Kentucky in the late 1940s — a project still going on to this day, Sapkota said. As knowledge of the cave system grew, they began recruiting a team of mostly self-funded explorers and researcher­s to expand their efforts to areas around the county.

Before heading out, Sapkota and Emily Roberts, a land management specialist with the Heritage Commission, consulted an image made by light detection and ranging, or LiDAR, to get an idea of where to look. LiDAR is a remote-sensing technique that uses laser light to record the surface of the Earth. Heritage Commission staff will also look at old maps and records for any notations as well as records from other agencies such as the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and The Nature Conservanc­y.

While making their way through some of 261 acres, Roberts and Sapkota kept an eye out for exposed rock, especially limestone, which is a good sign when ridgewalki­ng, or manually searching for caves.

“That might not be anything, but it’s worth checking. Sometimes you don’t know until you walk right up on it,” Sapkota said. “It’s kind of like an Easter egg hunt for adults.”

DIGITAL MAPPING

Sometimes all signs lead to a cave and others just a large depression in the ground. When they do find a new cave, they will use the DistoX digital survey instrument to take precise measuremen­ts that will be used to draw a map. Without this technology, the team would need to measure the cave manually.

The team also performs a biological survey. Arkansas cave creatures include insects like the cave cricket, fishing spiders, frogs, cave salamander­s and bats.

Four bats on the federal endangered species list are found in Arkansas caves. The Ozark big-eared bat, gray bat and Indiana bat are listed as endangered, and the northern long-eared bat is listed as threatened.

An “endangered species” is one that is in danger of extinction throughout all or a significan­t portion of its range, according to the Fish and Wildlife Service. A “threatened species” is one that is likely to become endangered in the foreseeabl­e future throughout all or a significan­t portion of its range.

With the exception of some tourist destinatio­ns, most of the state’s caves managed by federal and state agencies have been closed or restricted to the public for more than a decade because of white-nose syndrome. This fungal disease is deadly to bats and can spread fungal spores on clothing and gear.

Covid-19 has caused further cave shutdowns, Roberts and Sapkota said.

The crews make sure that anything brought in is decontamin­ated from cave to cave.

“We try to gate off the largest, most important caves systems that have endangered species in them, but that’s part of why this work is so important to us, to discover anything else we need to protect,” Roberts said. The gates also protect against other human-caused disturbanc­es and vandalism.

Some of the caves they find are only small tunnel-like “cavelets” that can take less than an hour to map, though larger formations can contain several rooms that can take several days to document. Foundation volunteers have taught Heritage Commission staffers like Roberts how to use rappelling gear needed to explore these larger caves.

Roberts said she had fun with naming a few of the previously undocument­ed caves she helped to find. One she named is a smaller cave at Hell Creek.

“It has a small tunnel access. We had someone with us and that was the first access we saw, so he squeezed and shimmied through it. He made it look easy, but it was a tight fit,” she said, “And then, right around the corner was a larger entrance, so we named it ‘Trick Cave.’”

CAVE CRITTERS

Six caves have been discovered and documented at Hell Creek, Sapkota said. The most well-known is Hell Creek Cave, which the creek flows through, eventually flowing into the White River. It is also home to the extremely rare Hell Creek Cave Crayfish.

This colorless, 3-inch crayfish has been found only in two caves and a spring: Hell Creek Cave and Nesbitt Spring Cave (discovered in 2002) in Stone County and Yellville Spring (discovered in 2010) in Marion County, according to the Fish and Wildlife Service.

The state has more than 60 species of crayfish, 13 of which are found only in Arkansas. Three are cave dwellers, said Dustin Lynch, aquatic ecologist with the Heritage Commission.

“These crayfish are living in areas where there’s very little to eat, and they don’t seem to move around a lot. We don’t really know how long they live; some people think they live a really long time,” Lynch said. “It’s just hard to study them because of where they are.”

Informatio­n like this gathered by the Heritage Commission and the Cave Research Foundation is used in larger research projects as well as environmen­tal reviews that can help determine where new infrastruc­ture, like roads or plumbing, is built or isn’t. Endangered species and groundwate­r protection­s are factors in these reviews, said Justin Stroman, an environmen­tal coordinati­on biologist with the Arkansas Game and Fish Commission who writes environmen­tal reviews.

Sometimes it’s a matter of mitigation to stay in line with Clean Water Act requiremen­ts, he said. For example, a recent review Stroman did led to the Highway Department purchasing property just outside of Cave Springs to help conserve the rare Ozark cave fish and to offset impacts from bridge and road developmen­t in the area, he said.

“My interest is twofold — both the cave critters themselves and also what impacts our developmen­ts have on the cave resources,” Stroman said. “Caves are very unique ecosystems. In some of these are extremely localized, specialize­d creatures. They are unique to the natural heritage of Arkansas.”

Sapkota said she thinks there are still plenty of caves left to find and document and probably plenty more for the next generation. Recreation­al caving is more difficult these days, but Sapkota said the foundation welcomes volunteers from various walks of life, as long as they’re willing to learn and abide by the rules.

“We want to make sure it’s someone who is focused on conservati­on and preservati­on,” she said. “It’s a good way to be contributi­ng towards science and doing something worthwhile, I think.”

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 ?? (Special to the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette) ?? Ryan Spotts descends into a newly explored cave last year at Devil’s Knob Natural Area to map and inventory the cave with the help of the Cave Research Foundation. Spotts is the land management specialist/volunteer coordinato­r for the Natural Heritage Commission.
(Special to the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette) Ryan Spotts descends into a newly explored cave last year at Devil’s Knob Natural Area to map and inventory the cave with the help of the Cave Research Foundation. Spotts is the land management specialist/volunteer coordinato­r for the Natural Heritage Commission.
 ?? (Special to the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette) ?? Aaron Thompson, Cave Research Foundation volunteer, uses descending gear to explore a newly discovered pit entrance at Slippery Hollow Natural Area in 2020.
(Special to the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette) Aaron Thompson, Cave Research Foundation volunteer, uses descending gear to explore a newly discovered pit entrance at Slippery Hollow Natural Area in 2020.

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