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"They're very cryptic," Holsinger said. "These things are usually found in groundwater and you can very rarely observe them firsthand." Goodbar said the Bureau of Land Management is planning for a series of monitoring wells near the Burton Flats caves to keep an eye on water levels once the mining company begins pumping water for its proposed operations. The agency is developing mitigation plans that call for an end to pumping in the area if a certain threshold is reached. The BLM is working on balancing protection of the new species and the area's water supply with development of the region's vast potash resources, Goodbar said. The water in the caves is replenished by rainwater soaking down through cracks and crevices in the Earth's surface and fresh water from a shallow underground aquifer. "I think the implications are that we really need to protect the groundwater aquifers because there are species there that live nowhere else on Earth," Goodbar said.
[Associated
Press;
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