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Environmental Science ENSC 2800

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Spring 2002. Class 4. The Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta and Estuary and San Francisco Bay ... Some Facts about the Bay-Delta (adapted from CALFED 1999) ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Environmental Science ENSC 2800


1
Environmental Science ENSC 2800
  • Spring 2002
  • Class 4
  • The Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta and Estuary and
    San Francisco Bay
  • AKA The Bay-Delta
  • Contextual Overview

2
Bay-Delta regionpolitical geography (counties)
Source University of California's Center for
Environmental Design Research (CEDR)
3
Bay-Delta region urbanization (1990) and
projected growth
Built-up areas (gray) Planned residential
(yellow) Planned industrial (light blue) Planned
commercial (purple).
Note the major urbanization planned around the
Delta cities of Sacramento, Stockton, and Tracy.
Source University of California's Center for
Environmental Design Research (CEDR)
4
Bay-Delta historical terrestrial-aquatic margins
Source Preliminary map of historic margins of
marshland, San Francisco Bay, California / by
Donald R. Nichols and Nancy A. Wright. Menlo
Park United States Geological Survey, 1971.
5
Bay-Delta hydrology is very complex
Note the tremendous number of individual streams
draining down toward the bay and estuary from
surrounding hills, adding to runoff from the
Sacramento and San Joaquin watersheds.
Source University of California's Center for
Environmental Design Research (CEDR)
6
The Bay-Delta from Space (Spring 1994)
NASA Photo ID STS059-213-009
7
Some Facts about the Bay-Delta (adapted from
CALFED 1999)
  • Area of the watershed The system drains more
    than 61,000 square miles, or 37 of all
    California.
  • Area of the Delta 738,000 acres.
  • Annual runoff into it Inflow ranges from 2
    trillion gallons to 22.5 trillion gallons per
    year average is 7.8 trillion gallons.
  • Diversions out of it Over 7,000 different
    entities divert water from the system into canals
    and pipes.
  • Delta exports The State Water Project and
    Central Valley Project draw an average of about 4
    trillion gallons each year, mostly to southern
    CA.

8
Major Southward Diversions from the Bay-Delta
Source CA DWR
9
The major conveyance and storage infrastructure
in California (source DWR 1998)
10
Source DWR 1998
11
California rain and snow are mostly in the north
but the majority or people live south of
Sacramento.
Source DWR 1998
12
Californias complex plumbing bypasses the
Bay-Delta or siphons water from it to send south.
Source DWR 1998
13
Source DWR 1998
14
Source DWR 1998
15
Source DWR 1998
16
Droughts in California occur in multi-year
periods and even without global warming, experts
expect much longer, dried periods in the future
based on ecological evidence.
Source DWR 1998
17
Important Details About the Bay-Delta
  • Delta flora Includes over 400 plant species, not
    including agricultural crops.
  • Delta fauna Includes 225 birds, 52 mammals, and
    22 reptile and amphibian species.
  • Delta fish Includes 130 fish species.
  • Marshes The Delta still has 8,000 acres of tidal
    marsh (but originally there were 345,000 acres).
  • Levees and channels Land adjacent to some 700
    miles of waterways are protected by 1,100 miles
    of levees.
  • Delta farmland Over 52,000 acres are farmed,
    mostly for wheat, alfalfa, corn and tomatoes.
  • Population Some 12 million people live and
    recreate in the Bay-Delta region.

18
Bay-Delta Subject of Great Concern
  • Owing to the economic and environmental
    importance of the Bay-Delta, the CALFED Bay-Delta
    Program was established by a State and Federal
    partnership in 1995 to address the many and
    complex issues facing the estuary system.
  • It was set up in 1994 by President Bill Clinton
    and Governor Pete Wilson as part of the Bay-Delta
    Accord.
  • CALFED's mission is to develop a long-term
    comprehensive plan that will restore ecological
    health and improve water management for
    beneficial uses of the Bay-Delta system.
  • The full program, when implemented, will have
    cost some 9 billion to 10.5 billion in todays
    dollars, with about 5 billion going to increase
    water storage from wet to dry years.
  • A massive range of programs are planned, funded
    by state and federal tax dollars and by payments
    from water purchasers.
  • See http//www.calfed.water.ca.gov/general_info.h
    tml.
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