- Saratoga Springs pupfish
-
Saratoga Springs pupfish Scientific classification Kingdom: Animalia Phylum: Chordata Class: Actinopterygii Order: Cyprinodontiformes Family: Cyprinodontidae Genus: Cyprinodon Species: C. nevadensis Subspecies: C. n. nevadensis Trinomial name Cyprinodon nevadensis nevadensis
(Eigenmann & Eigenmann, 1889)The Saratoga Springs pupfish (Cyprinodon nevadensis nevadensis) is a subspecies of the Amargosa pupfish (Cyprinodon nevadensis) of the family Cyprinodontidae.[1] The native population is endemic to Saratoga Springs, a small wetland in Death Valley National Park in the United States.[2][3]
Contents
Taxonomy
The pupfish is a member of the genus Cyprinodon. Most divergence of Cyprinodon species likely took place during the early-to-mid Pleistocene, a time when pluvial lakes intermittently filled the now-desert region, though some may have occurred during the last 10,000 years. The evaporation of the lakes resulted in the geographic isolation of small Cyprinodon populations and the speciation of C. nevadensis.[3]
Ichthyologists Rosa Smith Eigenmann and Carl H. Eigenmann first identified Cyprinodon nevadensis in 1889. Later authors considered it the same species as Cyprinodon macularius. In the 1940s, Robert Rush Miller again described C. nevadensis as a distinct species, and identified six subspecies, including C. n. nevadensis.[3]
Other subspecies include the Amargosa River pupfish (C. n. amargosae), the Ash Meadows pupfish (C. n. mionectes), the Warm Springs pupfish (C. n. pectoralis), the Shoshone pupfish (C. n. shoshone), and the extinct Tecopa pupfish (C. n. calidae).[1]
Description
Male Saratoga Springs pupfish are bright blue in color, while females are a drab olive-brown. The fish have a standard length of 4 cm (1.6 inches), and the total length is rarely greater than 5 cm (2 inches).[3]
The diet of C. n. nevadensis is typical of pupfishes. Cyanobacteria (blue-green algae) are the primary food source, for which their lengthy guts are particularly well adapted. Ostracods, copepods, and the larvae of chironomids provide seasonal nutrition.[3]
Mating behavior differs from stream-dwelling pupfishes but is similar to other spring-dwellers. Males defend territories in which females lay eggs throughout the year. While the fish are capable of surviving a wide range of temperatures, reproduction is limited to a narrower range (75–86 °F, 24–30 °C).[3]
Distribution and habitat
The fish is only known to occur naturally at Saratoga Springs. A 30 foot (10 m) diameter, 3–6 foot (1–2 m) deep spring pool overflows into several ponds totaling about 4–6 acres (2–3 ha). The temperature at the spring is a near constant 82–84 degrees Fahrenheit (28–29 °C), while the ponds fluctuate seasonally between 50 and 120 degrees Fahrenheit (10–49 °C). Fish at all life stages are found in the ponds, but juvenile fish are not known to occur in the spring itself.[3]
A population was introduced at Lake Tuendae, an artificial pond in Zzyzx, California, but reports conflict as to its continued survival there.[3][4]
Conservation
The Saratoga Springs pupfish carries no official conservation status. The state of California has identified it as possibly qualifying as threatened based on its limited distribution and the possibility that distant groundwater pumping may deplete the aquifer that supplies Saratoga Springs. The aquifer may extend to as far away as western Utah. Groundwater depletion in Las Vegas, Nevada, 75 miles (120 km) miles to the northeast, is of particular concern.[3]
In order to protect the pupfish and several other sensitive species, the National Park Service prohibits visitors from entering the wetland at Saratoga Springs.[5]
References
- ^ a b "Cyprinodon nevadensis". Integrated Taxonomic Information System. http://www.itis.gov/servlet/SingleRpt/SingleRpt?search_topic=TSN&search_value=165638.
- ^ "Death Valley geology field trip: Saratoga and Valley Springs". USGS/NPS. http://geomaps.wr.usgs.gov/parks/deva/ftsar2.html. Retrieved 21 April 2011.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i Moyle, Peter B.; Yoshiyame, Ronald M.; Williams, Jack E.; Wirkamanayake, Eric D. (June 1995). "Fish Species of Special Concern in California". California Department of Fish and Game. https://dfgsecure.dfg.ca.gov/wildlife/nongame/publications/docs/fish_ssc.pdf. Retrieved 22 April 2011.
- ^ Hughson, Debra; Woo, Danette (15 July 2004). "Report on a Workshop to Revisit the Mohave Tui Chub Recovery Plan and a Management Action Plan". NPS. http://www.nps.gov/moja/naturescience/upload/ACF46F1.pdf. Retrieved 24 April 2011.
- ^ National Park Service sign at Saratoga Springs (2008)
External links
- Death Valley geology field trip: Saratoga and Valley Springs (Includes photo)
Death Valley and Death Valley National Park Fauna, flora and minerals Amargosa springsnail · Borax · Chuckwalla · Death Valley monkeyflower · Death Valley pupfish · Death Valley June beetle · Devil's Hole pupfish · Saratoga Springs pupfish
History Amargosa Opera House and Hotel · Badwater · Death Valley Railroad · Greenwater · Harmony Borax Works · Lake Manly (Badwater Basin) · Skidoo · Tonopah and Tidewater Railroad · Twenty-mule team
Places Amargosa Range / River / Valley · Ash Meadows NWR · Badwater Basin · Ballarat · Beatty · Black Mountains · Chloride City · Cottonwood Mountains · Darwin Falls · Death Valley Junction · Eureka Valley / Dunes · Funeral Mountains · Furnace Creek · Panamint City / Range / Springs / Valley · Racetrack · Rhyolite · Saline Valley · Saratoga Springs · Scotty's Castle · Stovepipe Wells · Telescope Peak · Trona · Ubehebe Crater · Zabriskie Point
Transportation Categories:- Cyprinodon
- Death Valley
- Fauna of the Mojave Desert
- Fish of the Western United States
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.