Calif. drought leads to lowest snowpack in 500 years
California’s years-old drought has led to the lowest overall snowpack in the state since at least the 1500s, according to a new study released on Monday.
The study, published the journal Nature Climate Change, concluded that the snowpack in California’s Sierra Nevada mountains was only 5 percent of its historic average this past spring.
{mosads}The researchers used monitoring stations and combed tree ring records to get a handle on historic winter snowfall totals and determined that “the 2015 low is unprecedented in the context of the past 500 years.”
Because melting snow is responsible for 30 percent of California’s overall annual water supply, the snowpack level is especially important for alleviating drought conditions in the state. Researchers said the levels “present an ominous sign of the severity of this drought.”
“A multi-year and severe snowpack decline can acutely impact human and natural systems, including urban and agriculture water supplies, hydroelectric power and wildfire risk,” the study said.
“We were expecting that 2015 would be extreme, but not like this,” senior study author Valerie Trouet told the Los Angeles Times.
California’s historic drought has led to first-of-its kind water restrictions across the state. Officials note that residents have begun to cut their water usage to adapt to the drought.
Researchers last month concluded that the drought is a mostly natural phenomenon, but said climate change is responsible for intensifying it.
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