Snow monitoring at strategic locations improves water supply forecasting more than basin-wide mapping

Nature Portfolio (Springer Nature) | August 15th, 2025

Summary

In the Western United States, water supply forecasting has traditionally relied on snow water equivalent measurements at ground-based stations due to their strong correla

Snowmelt risk telecouplings for irrigated agriculture

Nature Portfolio (Springer Nature) | October 31st, 2022

Summary

Climate change is altering the timing and magnitude of snowmelt, which may either directly or indirectly via global trade affect agriculture and livelihoods dependent on

Storage in California’s reservoirs and snowpack in this time of drought

University of California, Davis (UC Davis) | June 30th, 2015

Summary

The San Francisco Bay and Sacramento–San Joaquin Delta (Delta) are the recipients of inflows from a watershed that spans much of California and that has ties to nearly

The 2010/2011 snow season in California’s Sierra Nevada: Role of atmospheric rivers and modes of large-scale variability

American Geophysical Union (AGU) | October 17th, 2013

Summary

The anomalously snowy winter season of 2010/2011 in the Sierra Nevada is analyzed interms of snow water equivalent (SWE) anomalies and the role of atmospheric rivers (AR

The Case of Shifting Snow

Climate Central | February 5th, 2020

Summary

Whether you live among palm trees or pine trees, snow plays a critical role in our climate. Snow keeps our planet cooler, significantly affects water resources, and is a

The Role of Snowpack, Rainfall, and Reservoirs in Buffering California Against Drought Effects

U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) | August 1st, 2016

Summary

California’s vast reservoir system, fed by annual snow and rainfall, plays an important part in providing water to the State’s human and wildlife population. There ar

The uneven response of different snow measures to human-induced climate warming

American Meteorological Society (AMS) | June 25th, 2013

Summary

The effect of human-induced climate warming on different snow measures in the western United States is compared by calculating the time required to achieve a stat

Trends in Snowfall versus Rainfall in the Western United States

American Meteorological Society (AMS) | September 15th, 2006

Summary

The water resources of the western United States depend heavily on snowpack to store part of the wintertime precipitation into the drier summer months. A well-documented

Filter Results

Type

Topic

Keywords

Publisher

Basin

Hydrological Region