To Live with the Death Valley Pupfish
The Death Valley Pupfish, or Salt Creek Pupfish (Cyprinodon salinus) is a species of pupfish found only in the Death Valley region of the Mojave Desert; within this region there are populations in Salt Creek, Cottonball Marsh, River Springs and Soda Lake. These locations are characterized by shallow water four times the salinity of the ocean, with temperatures regularly reaching peaks of 46 °C (116°F) and lows of 0 °C (32 °F), and limited vegetation.
Like other pupfish, Death Valley pupfish are quite small. Most adults are about 3.7 cm (1.5 in) in length. Females are rather drab, typically tan or brown with darker mottling. Males are larger than females, and turn bright blue and yellow during the breeding season. They also have larger dorsal and anal fins, which are used for display.
Salt Creek pupfish can reproduce several times a year, although their peak season is in the spring and the fall. When they're ready to mate, males will claim a small territory and vigorously defend it against rival males. Little is known about the physical aspects of their reproduction, but individuals typically live only a year or so.
C. salinus feed primarily on cyanobacteria and algae, and supplement their diets with available aquatic arthropods. Their only predator is the diving beetle Neoclypeodytes cinctellus, but their populations are also highly influenced by flooding and drought cycles. At the peak the rainy season, when flooding has increased habitat availability, the population of C. salinus can explode into the millions, but that number is then cut down to only several thousand when subsequent droughts dry up most pools and streams.
Conservation status: The Death Valley pupfish is considered Endangered by the IUCN. It has an extremely limited distribution, which is under threat from excessive draining of the aquifer that feeds their habitat.
Dr. Cynthia S. Shroba
Michael Hawk
Jim Boone















