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Climate-Smart Tools to Protect California’s Freshwater Biodiversity

Ted Sommer, Jeffrey Mount, Brian Gray, J. Letitia Grenier, Jennifer Harder, Gokce Sencan | May 28th, 2024


California’s freshwater ecosystems—and the native plants and animals that rely on them—have been in decline for decades. Roughly half of California’s native freshwater species are highly vulnerable to extinction within this century. But efforts to protect and recover native species now face an additional serious threat: climate change, which is accelerating and compounding the impacts of past and current land and water management issues. Simply working harder, using the same insufficient approaches to conservation, is unlikely to be successful. New approaches, including some that are experimental or highly controversial, are urgently needed. Although California has recently made important strides in setting goals for salmon, the state lacks a comprehensive approach to protecting native biodiversity in the face of climate change. We have identified a portfolio of actions that can help California rise to this urgent challenge.

Keywords

ecosystem management, fisheries, streams, vernal ponds, wetlands