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bronxiteforever

(9,287 posts)
Thu Aug 8, 2019, 10:20 PM Aug 2019

Report on Lake Tahoe "It is changing"

TheUnion
News for Nevada County, California
It is changing’
Environment | August 8, 2019

Justin Scacco
Special to The Union

...“We all love Tahoe,” said Schladow, director of the University of California, Davis Tahoe Environmental Research Center. “Tahoe’s beautiful. It’s like no other place on earth, but it is changing....During the past 107 years, daily air temperatures measured in Tahoe City have increased. The average daily maximum temperature has risen by 2.25 degrees Fahrenheit, and the average daily minimum temperature has risen by 4.43 degrees. According to the report, the number of days when air temperatures averaged below freezing has declined by about 30 days since 1911, though year-to-year variability is high.

Furthermore, rising temperatures are forecast to change the Tahoe area from a snow-based hydrology to a rain-based hydrology by the final third of the century, moving the time of peak streamflows from June to January.

“When you suddenly don’t have a snowpack storing water, you’re getting rain reaching the stream much sooner, much higher flows, potential for more erosion, potential for bridges to be washed out, and we as engineers can deal with that,” said Schladow. “Think, however, if you’re a fish and your time of year for spawning is when those flows are happening … used to happen in June, now it happens in January. I wish I could tell you what that means.”

While Schladow painted a grim picture for the future of the area as the climate warms, he indicated there is hope to protect the lake’s clarity against warming temperatures. “We cannot keep the lake cooler,” he said. “We cannot stop snow from turning into rain, but maybe we can maintain clarity in the face of all these things.”

https://www.theunion.com/news/environment/it-is-changing/

A study referenced in the article found, that if we do nothing about climate change, average maximum temperatures would rise by 9 degrees Fahrenheit in the basin by the end of the century.


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Report on Lake Tahoe "It is changing" (Original Post) bronxiteforever Aug 2019 OP
Clicking on the titles in this forum requires courage. Control-Z Aug 2019 #1
I know. Ignorance can be bliss for knowledge bronxiteforever Aug 2019 #2
Yes. That is exactly it. Control-Z Aug 2019 #4
Hmm, I didn't see anything about crops and irrigation - but crops need the water most in the progree Aug 2019 #3
Pffft...! FirstLight Aug 2019 #5

Control-Z

(15,682 posts)
1. Clicking on the titles in this forum requires courage.
Thu Aug 8, 2019, 10:50 PM
Aug 2019

It's seldom good news. I always take a calming breath before I start reading.

bronxiteforever

(9,287 posts)
2. I know. Ignorance can be bliss for knowledge
Thu Aug 8, 2019, 11:07 PM
Aug 2019

Has a psychic cost. But better to know truth than to live in a fantasy. At least that is what I tell my depressed self!

progree

(10,889 posts)
3. Hmm, I didn't see anything about crops and irrigation - but crops need the water most in the
Thu Aug 8, 2019, 11:54 PM
Aug 2019

spring and summer, not in January! So that's another consequence of the changing hydrology

Furthermore, rising temperatures are forecast to change the Tahoe area from a snow-based hydrology to a rain-based hydrology by the final third of the century, moving the time of peak streamflows from June to January.


Same when glaciers melt all over the world, like the ones that feed the rivers of south and east Asia -- historically their seasonal partial melt provides the river flows needed throughout the summer for irrigation. But if there are no more glaciers or snowpacks storing water, then forget river flows when needed the most.

FirstLight

(13,355 posts)
5. Pffft...!
Fri Aug 9, 2019, 02:22 AM
Aug 2019

"..
By the end of the century.."

My ass! It's happening faster than that and its obvious even more so over the past few years especially. The snow is still coming, but there's been rain mixed in with it too...and sometimes it seems to last longer on the spring...
But we also are not getting the summer rainstorms either...the long period between spring storms and later summer monsoons is getting longer. And it's hotter...way more days than usual...

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