The fish's holotype and
paratypes were all collected in
Étang Saumâtre, Haiti.[2] Michael Leonard Smith writes this species is
endemic to this lake, on the border of Haiti and the Dominican Republic; some specimens collected from
Lago Enriquillo had been identified as being C. bondi, but Smith argues that this identification was mistaken.[3]
^
abSmith, Michael Leonard (1989). "Cyprinodon nichollsi, a New Pupfish from Hispaniola, and Species Characteristics of C. bondi Myers (Teleostei, Cyprinodontiformes)". American Museum Novitates (2953): 7–9.
hdl:2246/5108.
Further reading
Burgess, G. H. (1983). "Cyprinodon bondi Myers". In Lee, D. S.; Platania, S. P.; Burgess, G. H. (eds.).
Atlas of North American Freshwater Fishes: 1983 Supplement(PDF). North Carolina Biological Survey Contribution. Vol. 1983–6. Raleigh: North Carolina State Museum of Natural History. p. 52.
Costa, Wilson J. E. M. (2003).
"Family Cyprinodontidae (Pupfishes)". In Reis, Roberto E.; Kullander, Sven O.; Ferraris, Carl J. Jr. (eds.). Check List of the Freshwater Fishes of South and Central America. Porto Alegre: EDIPUCRS. pp. 549–550.
ISBN978-85-7430-361-1.