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Abstract
Hellbenders are prehistoric salamanders that have thrived in cold rivers since before the continents divided. Once found throughout Appalachian watersheds, due to exploitation and habitat degradation only a few dozen healthy populations survive. Monstrous yet fascinating, hellbenders were often reviled historically, but in recent decades they have gained iconic status and are now celebrated as charismatic indicators for clean rivers. Hellbenders are symbols of the wild because of their ancient history, elusive nature, and contribution to ecosystem resilience. The same forces that drove the decline of these amphibian sentinels have sacrificed public health in Appalachia. Their demise echoes the struggle of human communities that continue to be jeopardized by extractive industries and betrayed by political kowtowing. As humans navigate the psychological and moral labyrinth of the mass extinction crisis that we are perpetrating, the fate of hellbenders and other wildlife is now at the mercy of human values. The saga of the hellbender shows how the long-term wellbeing of humanity and the integrity of the natural world are inextricably intertwined.
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This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-No Derivative Works 4.0 International License.
Recommended Citation
Curry, Tierra R..
"Planetary Thinking: Hellbenders as Emissaries of Appalachia."
Critical Humanities
4,
1
(2025).
DOI: https://doi.org/10.33470/2836-3140.1077
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