North Coast

The North Coast region spans over 19,000 square miles and is quite diverse, from coastal areas and redwood forests to inland mountain valleys and the semi-arid Modoc Plateau. Land use is similarly diverse including aquaculture, ranching, farming, timber harvesting, vineyards, marijuana cultivation, US Forest Service lands, and parklands. The climate varies from high precipitation along the coastal areas to desert conditions in the Modoc Plateau. Several tribes live in the region, including the Yurok Tribe, the state’s largest.

Conjunctive Water Management Resource Management Strategy

California Department of Water Resources (DWR) | April 29th, 2024

Summary

Conjunctive water management, also referred to as conjunctive use, is broadly defined as the coordinated and planned use and management of the different sources of water

Conserving California’s Coastal Habitats: A Legacy and a Future with Sea Level Rise

Nature Conservancy | May 15th, 2018

Summary

The California coast that we know today will not be the coast of the future. Sea level rise and other climate change impacts will have profound effects on o

Conserving for the common good: Preferences for water conservation policies during a severe drought in Northern California

Water Resources and Economics | December 3rd, 2021

Summary

During the 2011–2017 drought in California, water providers used a variety of demand-side management (DSM) policies to successfully reduce water consumption by over 20

Control of the Clear Lake Gnat in California

Entomological Society of America (ESA) | August 1st, 1951

Summary

Counties Wresting Control: Local Responses to California's Statewide Water Market

University of Denver Water Law Review (UDWLR) | January 1st, 2003

Summary

Coupling a spatiotemporally distributed soil water budget with stream-depletion functions to inform stakeholder-driven management of groundwater-dependent ecosystems

Water Resources Research, American Geophysical Union | November 12th, 2013

Summary

Groundwater pumping, even if only seasonal, may significantly impact groundwater-dependent ecosystems through increased streamflow depletion, particularly in semiarid and

Coupling a spatiotemporally distributed soil water budget with stream‐depletion functions to inform stakeholder‐driven management of groundwater‐dependent ecosystems

American Geophysical Union (AGU) | November 12th, 2013

Summary

Groundwater pumping, even if only seasonal, may significantly impact groundwater‐dependent ecosystems through increased streamflow depletion, particularly in semiarid a

Dam removal and anadromous salmonid (Oncorhynchus spp.) conservation in California

Reviews in Fish Biology and Fisheries (Springer) | June 4th, 2014

Summary

Dam removal is often proposed for restoration of anadromous salmonid populations, which are in serious decline in California. However, the benefits of dam removal vary du

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Hydrological Region