Document Details

California’s Stream Flow Monitoring System Is Essential for Water Decision Making

Kathleen Miller, Nell Green Nylen, Holly Doremus, Andrew Fisher, Graham E. Fogg, Dave Owen, Samuel Sandoval Solis, Joshua Viers, Michael Kiparsky | April 1st, 2018


With California’s drought risk, flood risk, and demand for water all increasing, effective monitoring is more important than ever to water decision making. Stream gages monitor the most basic vital
sign of California’s waterways—stream flow.1 Stream flow data support day-to-day decisions about how to manage water and operate water infrastructure. In turn, those decisions have important implications for flood control and the water supplies upon which residential, industrial, agricultural, and environmental water users depend. Stream flow information also provides technical insights into basin hydrology, and those insights aid long-term water planning. As pressures on the state’s water systems intensify, the need for accurate and timely stream flow information will continue to grow. Opportunities for better water management created by groundbreaking legislation such as the Sustainable Groundwater Management Act (SGMA), the Open and Transparent Water Data Act, and Proposition 1 will be severely limited without an effective network of continuous stream gaging.

Keywords

flows, monitoring, planning and management