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On the Origin of Species by Charles Darwin
Book, page 101 / 370



The eyes of moles and of some burrowing rodents are rudimentary in size,
and in some cases are quite covered up by skin and fur. This state of the
eyes is probably due to gradual reduction from disuse, but aided perhaps by
natural selection. In South America, a burrowing rodent, the tuco-tuco, or
Ctenomys, is even more subterranean in its habits than the mole; and I was
assured by a Spaniard, who had often caught them, that they were frequently
blind; one which I kept alive was certainly in this condition, the cause,
as appeared on dissection, having been inflammation of the nictitating
membrane. As frequent inflammation of the eyes must be injurious to any
animal, and as eyes are certainly not indispensable to animals with
subterranean habits, a reduction in their size with the adhesion of the
eyelids and growth of fur over them, might in such case be an advantage;
and if so, natural selection would constantly aid the effects of disuse.

It is well known that several animals, belonging to the most different
classes, which inhabit the caves of Styria and of Kentucky, are blind. In
some of the crabs the foot-stalk for the eye remains, though the eye is
gone; the stand for the telescope is there, though the telescope with its
glasses has been lost. As it is difficult to imagine that eyes, though
useless, could be in any way injurious to animals living in darkness, I
attribute their loss wholly to disuse. In one of the blind animals,
namely, the cave-rat, the eyes are of immense size; and Professor Silliman
thought that it regained, after living some days in the light, some slight
power of vision. In the same manner as in Madeira the wings of some of the
insects have been enlarged, and the wings of others have been reduced by
natural selection aided by use and disuse, so in the case of the cave-rat
natural selection seems to have struggled with the loss of light and to
have increased the size of the eyes; whereas with all the other inhabitants
of the caves, disuse by itself seems to have done its work.

It is difficult to imagine conditions of life more similar than deep
limestone caverns under a nearly similar climate; so that on the common
view of the blind animals having been separately created for the American
and European caverns, close similarity in their organisation and affinities
might have been expected; but, as Schiodte and others have remarked, this
is not the case, and the cave-insects of the two continents are not more
closely allied than might have been anticipated from the general
resemblance of the other inhabitants of North America and Europe. On my
view we must suppose that American animals, having ordinary powers of

 
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