Current:Home > MarketsCalifornia's destructively wet winter has a bright side. You'll want to see it -WealthMindset
California's destructively wet winter has a bright side. You'll want to see it
View
Date:2025-04-15 04:37:42
CARRIZO PLAIN NATIONAL MONUMENT, Calif. — The roads are still rutted where rainwater carved them and farms are still flooded down the valley, but here in California's largest remaining grassland, the benefits of the state's destructively wet winter are on full display.
And they're spectacular.
Wildflowers — yellow, purple, blue and orange — are splattered across the landscape in sweeps and pools like a clumsy airbrush painting.
A superbloom. Seas of wildflowers so vast they can be seen from space.
"This is definitely one of the benefits to a wet year like we just had," said Gabe Garcia, the head of the Bakersfield field office of the Bureau of Land Management, while standing amid a field of purple phacelia, yellow goldfields, hillside daisies and tidy tips. "For perspective, last year this area [looked like] it was mowed. No vegetation coverage. Almost like dirt."
Now the flowers reach his knees.
The flourish of color and buzz of new life do little to alleviate the suffering that thousands of Californians have experienced in recent months. Estimates for economic damages from one series of storms in early January are in the billions of dollars alone. California has proclaimed states of emergencies for 47 counties since the start of February. And in some parts of the state's Central Valley, a national agricultural hub, people are preparing to be flooded, possibly, for years.
"I try to look at it as: these floods are devastation for some but they're also opportunities," said Matt Kaminski, a regional biologist for Ducks Unlimited.
Wetlands, long severed from the rivers and streams that nourished them, are being flooded with freshwater. Biologists are seeing baby salmon, fattened by new food sources in flood plains, make their way to sea. Endangered birds and waterfowl are nesting next to flooded fields.
"When we see water spread across the landscape, as you're driving through the Central Valley, you think of this as a really negative thing," said Carson Jeffres, a researcher at the Center for Watershed Sciences at the University of California, Davis. "And yet there are so many benefits that happen because of it."
California is a state of extremes
California, more than any other U.S. state, is a place of climatic extremes. Weather whiplash. "Going back-and-forth between extreme dry and extremely wet," said Julie Kalansky, a climate scientist at the Scripps Institution of Oceanography.
For centuries, Native Americans learned to live with the changing conditions, moving with the ebbs and flows of inland lakes. Plants and animals evolved to withstand periods of extreme dryness. Bulbs for many of California's native wildflowers can lie dormant for years, outlasting invasive species while waiting for rainy winters and springs like this.
While those natural cycles in the climate continue — intensified, scientists say, by human-caused climate change — the landscape they're occurring on has dramatically changed.
Where waters from rivers like the Kern, Kaweah and Tule used to spill out of the southern Sierra Nevada, spreading across the desert in alluvial fans and coalescing in basins like Tulare Lake, they now meet a highly engineered system. Dams slow and collect snowmelt. Streams are channeled into canals, carrying water to a vast grid of orchards and farms.
In normal years, most of the water that comes down from the mountains is used up by agriculture. Low-income rural communities, wetlands and riparian areas are lower in the water pecking order. Years of drought forced California to cancel its $1.4 billion salmon fishing season this year, for just the third time in history. Some wetlands, "oases of habitat," Kaminski said, haven't received surface water during the drought either, relying instead on landowners like duck-hunting clubs to pump groundwater to the surface.
"The only wetlands that are on the landscape here now are when big floods happen, sort of re-creating the wetlands that were here historically," he said, driving along a water- and bird-filled wetland northeast of Bakersfield, "and then these duck clubs that traditionally have drilled wells and pumped groundwater to flood their wetlands."
This year, the few wetlands that remain are getting their share of water up and down the Central Valley, helping alleviate the flood risks to the towns and farms that are slowly displacing them.
Idling along a levee on the wetlands' edge, along the channeled waters of Poso Creek, Kaminski gestured to the south. The levee on the other side had breached a couple of weeks earlier, as rainwater filled the creek, flooding part of a dairy farm.
"I look at that [and see] devastation for some," he said. "But then for other conservation-minded people, there's opportunities."
Opportunities to show the value of wetlands in flood mitigation during wet years like this one. Opportunities to provide habitat for the migratory birds that travel the Pacific Flyway from South America to Alaska. And opportunities to see what once was.
Kaminski looks at the muddy scar and flooded field beyond. "It's kind of like stepping back in time."
veryGood! (3)
Related
- Warm inflation data keep S&P 500, Dow, Nasdaq under wraps before Fed meeting next week
- Biden's top health expert travels to Alabama to hear from IVF families upset by court ruling
- US Rep. Lauren Boebert’s son arrested in connection with string of vehicle break-ins, police say
- Prince Harry Loses Legal Challenge Over U.K. Security Protection
- Elon Musk's skyrocketing net worth: He's the first person with over $400 billion
- Hunter Schafer was among protestors arrested during President Joe Biden’s appearance on ‘Late Night’
- Wendy's explores bringing Uber-style pricing to its fast-food restaurants
- Oreo to debut 2 new flavors inspired by mud pie, tiramisu. When will they hit shelves?
- FACT FOCUS: Inspector general’s Jan. 6 report misrepresented as proof of FBI setup
- Crystal Kung Minkoff talks 'up-and-down roller coaster' of her eating disorder
Ranking
- Costco membership growth 'robust,' even amid fee increase: What to know about earnings release
- Fate of Biden impeachment inquiry uncertain as Hunter Biden testifies before House Republicans
- 2 charged with using New York bodega to steal over $20 million in SNAP benefits
- Oreo to debut 2 new flavors inspired by mud pie, tiramisu. When will they hit shelves?
- A South Texas lawmaker’s 15
- A pregnant Amish woman is killed in her rural Pennsylvania home, and police have no suspects
- Boston Celtics misidentify Lauren Holiday USWNT kit worn by Jrue Holiday
- US economy grew solid 3.2% in fourth quarter, a slight downgrade from government’s initial estimate
Recommendation
Behind on your annual reading goal? Books under 200 pages to read before 2024 ends
Schumer describes intense White House meeting with Johnson under pressure over Ukraine aid
Public health officer in Michigan keeps her job after lengthy legal fight over COVID rules
Starbucks and Workers United agree to resume contract negotiations
Gen. Mark Milley's security detail and security clearance revoked, Pentagon says
2024 NFL draft: Ohio State's Marvin Harrison Jr. leads top 5 wide receiver prospect list
FBI offers $15,000 reward in case of missing Wisconsin boy
Public health officer in Michigan keeps her job after lengthy legal fight over COVID rules