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4                                                                          CONTRIBUTIONS  IN  SCIENCE                                                                                                    No.  295









                                        be brought forth  to support the hypothesis that a species is introduced.  The failure of



                                        a species to be obseived or collected (negative data)  until recent times may be a result



                                        of recent introduction or from erroneous observation, identification or incomplete col-


                                        lection in the past.  Even if there is  a record of introduction,  the species may already



                                        have  been  present before the  introduction.  The confidence  pl~ced  in  the  conclusion



                                        based  on  historical  data  that  a  species  is  introduced  depends  on  the  quality  of the



                                       original  observation.  Reasoning  based  on  distribution  patterns,  the  presence  of ap-



                                        propriate  habitats  and  dispersal  routes  is  inferential.  Fishes  do  not  always  occur  in



                                        habitats that they can disperse  into and that appear to be appropriate for them.  Thus,



                                        as  much evidence as  possible  must be  brought to  bear on the question of whether a



                                        fish species is  native,  and the answer obtained  may  never be satisfactory.









                                                                                                                                         RESULTS





                                                                                                                     DESCRIPTION  OF STREAMS




                                                     The Santa Clara River system is composed of the Santa Clara River and a large



                                        number  of tributaries  primarily  draining  from  the  north  (Fig.  1).  The  drainage  is



                                        bounded on the southwest by  the Santa Susana Mountains and on the southeast by the



                                        San Gabriel Mountains.  No substantial tributaries of the Santa Clara River drain these



                                        mountain ranges.  The Santa Susana Mountains are drained to the  south by Calleguas



                                        Creek and  its  tributaries.  The southern  slope of the San Gabriel Mountains is drained



                                        by  tributaries of the Los Angeles  and San Gabriel Rivers.



                                                     In the west,  the headwaters of Sespe and Piru creeks are interctigitated with those


                                        of the Cuyama River,  a tributary of the Santa Marie River and tributaries of the small



                                        Ventura River system.



                                                     Drainage  north of the  Santa Clara  River  system  is  by  creeks  which  eventually



                                        disappear into the southern San Joaquin Valley. The eastern corner of the Santa Clara



                                        River system is  bounded  by  these  creeks  as  well  as  those of the  Los  Angeles  River



                                        system and some draining into the Mojave desert.



                                                     The Santa Clara River,  Santa Paula,  Sespe,  Piru and Castaic  creeks,  San  Fran-



                                        cisquito and  Arrastre canyons and Todd Barranca were studied.  Other tributaries east



                                        of Saugus  were  not studied because J.  N.  Baskin (personal communication) reported


                                        no fishes  there.  Some tributaries  in  the  western  portion of the  drainage could not be



                                        studied  or  received  cursory  examination  because  of  limitations  of time,  funds  or



                                        access.



                                                     The Santa Clara River was examined from  its  headwaters to its  mouth.  Flow is



                                        intermittent over substantial  lengths of the  stream (dotted  lines, Fig.  I) and the geo-



                                        graphic  extent  and  duration  of desiccation varies  yearly.  The  sectior1  between  Lang



                                        and  Saugus  is  dry  except  during  heavy  downpours,  a  condition  that  apparently  has


                                        existed  since  at  least the  middle of the  last century  (Miller  1960).  The Santa Clara



                                        River and its tributaries are subject to flooding some winters. The river flows through



                                        a  broad,  primarily sandy-bottomed valley.  In  most places,  the flood  plain is lined by



                                        earth  and  rock  or  wire  and  debris  barriers.  The  Southern  Pacific  Railroad  runs  the



                                        length  of the  Santa  Clara  River,  built  across  the  flood  plain  on  elevated  grades  in



                                        places.  Upstream of Saugus the  flood  plain  is occupied by  gravel  pits,  small recrea-
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