In 1936, Paul Needham, a fisheries biologist with the U.S. Bureau of Fisheries began a series of explorations (1936, 1937 and 1938) into the Rio Santo Domingo drainage in
Baja California seeking to bring back live specimens of the Baja rainbow trout as hatchery stock and further study. Although live specimens reached U.S. hatcheries, none ever survived to spawn. In 1952, 1955 and 1956 Needham again explored the Sierra Madre Occidental tributaries of the
Gulf of California. Needham's explorations led to the publication of
Rainbow Trout of Mexico and California (1959) with coauthor Richard Gard. It contains the first full color drawing of the Mexican golden trout. In 1964, Needham and Gard's proposed binomial name
Salmo chrysogaster was accepted as the scientific name for a new species of trout, the Mexican golden trout. The
specific name chrysogaster comes from
Ancient Greek χρυσός (
khrusós), meaning "gold", and γαστήρ (
gastḗr), meaning "belly". In 1989,
morphological and
genetic studies indicated trout of the
Pacific basin were genetically closer to Pacific salmon (
Oncorhynchus species) than to the
Salmos—
brown trout (
S. trutta) or
Atlantic salmon (
S. salar)—of the
Atlantic basin. Thus, in 1989, taxonomic authorities moved the rainbow, cutthroat and other Pacific basin trout, including the Mexican golden trout, into the genus
Oncorhynchus. == Etymology ==