North Lahontan

The North Lahontan region is located in the northeastern part of the state, encompassing part of the western Great Basin and the eastern slopes of the Cascade Range and the Sierra Nevada. It includes arid high deserts as well as the California portion of the Lake Tahoe Basin. The region covers 6,122 square miles and accounts for 4% of California’s total land area, but is sparsely populated, being home to only 0.3% of the state’s population.

Hydroclimate Variability in Snow-fed River Systems

American Meteorological Society (AMS) | June 25th, 2019

Summary

Snow-fed river system communities are highly sensitive to climate change because the majority of their water supply is derived from snow. A warmer climate shift

Hydroclimate volatility on a warming Earth

Nature Portfolio (Springer Nature) | January 9th, 2025

Summary

Hydropower capacity factors trending down in the United States

Nature Portfolio (Springer Nature) | June 27th, 2024

Summary

Impact of current and warmer climate conditions on snow cover loss in burned forests

American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) | September 17th, 2025

Summary

Wildfires are increasingly burning in snow-dominated watersheds and can alter snowmelt dynamics. However, the spatial variability of snow cover loss in burned forests has

Implementing Climate-Smart Conservation

Public Policy Institute of California (PPIC) | March 4th, 2025

Summary

In our first report, Climate-Smart Tools to Protect California’s Freshwater Biodiversity (Sommer et al. 2024), we reviewed a broad suite of tools available to a

Implications of projected climate change for groundwater recharge in the western United States

Journal of Hydrology (Elsevier) | March 1st, 2016

Summary

Existing studies on the impacts of climate change on groundwater recharge are either global or basin/location-specific. The global studies lack the specificity to inform

Improving Groundwater Security in the United States

The White House | December 14th, 2024

Summary

The U.S. is facing a serious and unprecedented groundwater challenge. In many aquifers, groundwater withdrawal has outpaced natural recharge, which is exacerbated by the

Inaction’s Economic Cost for California’s Water Supply Challenges

University of California, Davis (UC Davis) | May 14th, 2025

Summary

California’s water system is in for challenges in coming decades as climate, groundwater policy, and environmental regulations reduce availability and increase variabil

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