Tecopa Hot Springs lies at an elevation of 1,411 feet (430 m), about 2 miles north of the town of
Tecopa in
Inyo County, California. The outflows of the two
hot springs are tributaries of the
Amargosa River, and were the only place where
C. n. calidae existed. The popularity of the springs in the 1950s and 1960s led to the extensive alteration of the pupfishes' habitat. During the construction of bathhouses, the hot spring pools were enlarged and the outflows diverted. In 1965, the outflows of the northern and southern hot springs were re-channeled and merged. The resulting swifter currents caused downstream water temperatures to rise above a level to which the pupfish were adapted. Modifications also allowed the related
Amargosa River pupfish (
C. n. amargosae) to migrate upstream from the Amargosa River and
hybridize with the Tecopa pupfish. In 1966, Miller found that the population at Tecopa Hot Springs was nearly extinct. A population was found at a reservoir at a nearby motel two years later, but its smaller scales suggested that it may have already hybridized with the
Amargosa River pupfish. In 1970, concerns over this habitat alteration and the presence of non-native species such as the
bluegill and the
western mosquitofish led to its inclusion in both Federal and California lists of endangered species. The last confirmed specimens of
C. n. calidae were collected on February 2, 1970, and the subspecies was probably extinct by the next year. Further surveys in 1972 and 1977 returned no examples of the fish. In 1978,
United States Fish and Wildlife Service announced that it was considering delisting the fish, with Assistant
Secretary of the Interior Robert L. Herbst calling the loss "totally avoidable" and saying, "The human projects which so disrupted its habitat, if carefully planned, could have ensured its survival." In 1981, after an exhaustive search of over 40 locations, the Fish and Wildlife Service officially declared the fish extinct. It was the first animal removed from the provisions of the 1973
Endangered Species Act as a result of its extinction. ==References==