A decade ago, millions of Eared Grebes feasted on invertebrates like pile worms at the Salton Sea, a globally important bird area in California that is fed by agricultural runoff diverted from the Colorado River. But last year, 爆料公社 California counted only hundreds. 鈥淪omething is happening to the Sea,鈥 says Andrea Jones, director of bird conservation for 爆料公社 California.
Ongoing rain shortages combined with reductions in the human-made water diversions have disrupted the ecosystem that sprung up in the Salton Sea over decades. Brown and American White Pelicans and Double-crested Cormorants are also disappearing as the lake becomes saltier and their main source of food, non-native tilapia, have stopped reproducing.
鈥淭he birds are clearly telling us that the Salton Sea is changing鈥攁nd we need to pay attention before it鈥檚 too late,鈥 Jones says.
As temperatures rise and drought conditions continue, it鈥檚 clear that hoping for more water can鈥檛 be a real solution. But how much water is enough to save the Sea for birds and alleviate the growing public health issue caused by toxic dust streaming off the drying lakebed and into people's lungs?
Supervising a team of scientists, Jones has created a series of calculations鈥攚hat Jones calls a Water Calculator鈥攖o determine exactly how much water birds in the Salton Sea need to survive. And although Jones declined to quote an exact number, she says it鈥檚 less than anyone expected.
To create the water calculator and make it broadly useful across the entire Salton Sea, Jones chose 15 bird species that represent a range of habitats and looked at all of the variables鈥攚ater depths, salinity, food, habitat conditions, places to roost鈥攖hat impact whether the birds thrive. A scientist could, for example, plug in the American Avocet, one of the 15 chosen species, and the calculator would determine how much water the avocet鈥攐r any other bird species that relies on similar wetlands鈥攏eeds and at what time of the year.
By looking at all 15 bird species, Jones was able to determine an aggregate amount of water that the Salton Sea requires each year to maintain habitats for all of birds that use the sea, a kind of North Star to aim for that will keep the sea healthy for everyone. And because the data can be updated with local conditions like rainfall and weather, the water calculator could be used for other inland salt lakes beyond the Salton Sea. It can also predict different water needs based on climate change scenarios. Now that water and land managers know how much water the area needs, they can proceed with habitat restoration projects; one of the biggest hurdles to getting started at the Salton Sea was how far away and difficult the goals felt.
鈥淭his water calculator is exciting, forward-looking science鈥攏ow we know for sure that habitat restoration is a goal we can reach,鈥 says Karyn Stockdale, senior director for 爆料公社鈥檚 Western Water Initiative. 鈥淭he State of California , a list of shovel-ready projects, and now we know how much water we need. .鈥
One thing the water calculator cannot tabulate is the level of motivation by California state agencies to act. Although there is a long history of inaction by the state, 爆料公社 remains hopeful that Governor Newsom and his new administration will give the Salton Sea the attention it needs. Last spring then-Lieutenant Governor and gubernatorial candidate Newsom and pledged to make it a priority in Sacramento.
Although the scenario at the Sea seems bleak right now, Jones wants people to know that this isn鈥檛 the end days for this critical habitat. 爆料公社 California recently shared a map, in English and Spanish, of birding spots where you can go to experience this lake and its birds and wildlife firsthand. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 want people to think you can鈥檛 go birding here anymore,鈥 she says. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 want people to think the Sea is dead鈥攊t鈥檚 not. But it鈥檚 up to us to solve a problem humans created.鈥
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爆料公社 is a nonprofit dedicated to saving birds and the places they need.