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1 <br />Part I ' <br />The greenback cutthroat trout, (Oncorhvnchus clarki stomias, formerly Salmo ' <br />clarki stomias), is one of the moat colorful subspecies of cutthroats (Figure <br />1), and was one of the rarest. At the time of the enactment of the Endangered <br />Species Act in 1973, only two small historic populations of greenback <br /> <br />cutthroat trout were known to <br />exist - Como Creek and South Fork, Cache La ' <br />Poudre River - that conformed to the meristics of the type specimens. These <br />two small headwater streams of the South Platte River drainage collectively <br />represented 4.6 kilometers of stream habitat and supported less than 2,000 <br /> <br />greenbacks. Since then, seven <br />identified, five populations i <br />additional historic populations have been <br />n the South Platte River drainage and two ' <br />populations in the Arkansas River drainage. The historic populations are <br />listed in Table 1. <br />Contrary to the common name of the fish, the back of the greenback is not , <br />especially green in color. In older age classes (4 years or more), mature <br />males display crimson red colors along the ventral region during the spring <br />spawning season, especially in lake environments. ' <br />Historic Distribution <br />The greenback is native to the headwaters of the South Platte and Arkansas ' <br />river drainages within Colorado and a small segment of the South Platte <br />drainage within Wyoming. The greenback and the Rio Grande cutthroat trout <br />(Oncorhvnchus clarki virainalis), represent the easternmost limits of native ' <br />trout distribution in the western United States, (Behnke, 1984). <br />The greenback declined so rapidly in the 1800's that the original distribution <br />of the subspecies is not precisely known. Behnke and Zarn (1976) assumed the <br /> <br />original distribution included all mountain and foothill habitats of the , <br />Arkansas and South Platte drainages (Figure 2). The greenback was known to <br />occur within these drainages at lower elevations than it occupies today, <br />however, little is known of-its exact historic lake and stream distribution <br /> <br />and the range in elevation it once occupied. The only other trout thought to ' <br />have occurred within the greenback's native range was the yellowfin cutthroat <br />(Oncorhvnchus clarki macdonaldi) collected from Twin Lakes (Arkansas River <br />drainage) in 1889 (Behnke 1979). The yellowfin cutthroat became extinct in <br /> <br />the early 1900's. ' <br />Type SveciIDens <br />According to Behnke (1979), "There is considerable confusion concerning the , <br />name stomias in regard to where the original type specimens actually came <br />from. It is possible that the specimens on which the name is based were not <br />greenback trout taken from the South Platte drainage. Cope (1872), in the <br /> <br />same publication in which he names S. nleuriticus, named Salmo stomias from ' <br />specimens collected from: "The South Platte River at Fort Riley, Kansas." <br />The South Platte River drainage does not enter the State of Kansas. In later <br /> <br />1 <br /> <br /> <br /> <br />