| Scientific Name | Gila nigrescens |
| Category | F |
| Taxon | Fish |
| Climate Change Vulnerability Score | Extremely Vulnerable |
The Chihuahua Chub (Gila nigrescens) is a 20 cm (8 in) long minnow that lives along 7.5 km (5 mi) of the Mimbres River in New Mexico and in the Guzmán and Laguna Bustillos basins in Chihuahua, Mexico. It can be found in softly flowing pools in small creeks and rivers, especially where there is cover from terrestrial vegetation or undercut banks. It is absent or rare when non-native fish are present. The Chihuahua Chub will experience a high degree of climate exposure and has a low adaptive capacity. Overall, it has a Climate Change Vulnerability Index ranking of Extremely Vulnerable under both Representative Concentration Pathway (RCP) 4.5 and RCP 8.5 Scenarios. The Chihuahua Chub’s climate change vulnerability is impacted by factors related to distribution, evolutionary potential, and abiotic niche, which influence its ability to shift in space and respond to climate change impacts. It is impacted by barriers, land-use changes, and other anthropogenic and biologic factors that could increase the effects of climate change. It also has documented or modeled responses to climate change that impact its climate change vulnerability score.



