The extinction of this species and other
koa finches seems to have been caused by
habitat destruction, and not by climatic variation nor mosquito-vectored diseases. Koa finches were likely driven out of lowland habitat and into upland refugia before or shortly after the time of western contact in 1778. On the
island of Hawaiʻi, koa finches persisted until the late 19th century, when their upland refugium was degraded by logging, ranching, and intensified predation by the
black rat. The lesser koa finch was last recorded in 1891. ==References==