| Scientific Name | Notropis girardi |
| Category | F |
| Taxon | Fish |
| Climate Change Vulnerability Score | Highly Vulnerable |
The Arkansas River Shiner (Notropis girardi) is a small (5 cm [2 in]) minnow that has been extirpated from much of its range and currently only remains in an 818 km [508 mi] segment of the Canadian River in New Mexico, Oklahoma, and Texas and may persist in the Cimarron River in Kansas and Oklahoma. It was also introduced in the Pecos River in New Mexico (this population is not included on the list of Species of Greatest Conservation Need). It prefers shallow, cloudy channels of major streams and tends to congregate downstream of sand ridges. Spawning is associated with flooding from heavy summer rains. The Arkansas River Shiner will experience a high degree of climate exposure and has a low adaptive capacity. Overall, it has a Climate Change Vulnerability Index ranking of Highly Vulnerable under both Representative Concentration Pathway (RCP) 4.5 and RCP 8.5 Scenarios. The Arkansas River Shiner’s climate change vulnerability is impacted by factors related to distribution, movement, evolutionary potential, and abiotic niche, which influence its ability to shift in space and respond to climate change impacts. It is also impacted by anthropogenic or topographic barriers, land-use changes, and other anthropogenic and biologic factors that could increase the effects of climate change on this species.


