Warmer temperatures, reduced snowpack, and greater water demand for agriculture may reduce available water for natural ecosystems in the Southwest.

Submitted by sdhandler on

Water is central to the region’s productivity. Winter snowpack, which slowly melts and releases water in spring and summer, when both natural ecosystems and people have the greatest needs for water, is key to the Southwest’s hydrology and water supplies. Over the past 50 years across most of the Southwest, there has been less late-winter precipitation falling as snow, earlier snowmelt, and earlier arrival of most of the year’s streamflow. Streamflow totals in the Sacramento-San Joaquin, the Colorado, the Rio Grande, and in the Great Basin were 5% to 37% lower between 2001 and 2010 than the 20th century average flows. Projections of further reduction of late-winter and spring snowpack and subsequent reductions in runoff and soil moisture,, pose increased risks to the water supplies needed to maintain the Southwest’s cities, agriculture, and ecosystems.