Climate Change and the Delta

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Abstract

Anthropogenic climate change amounts to a rapidly approaching, “new” stressor in the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta system. In response to California’s extreme natural hydroclimatic variability, complex water-management systems have been developed, even as the Delta’s natural ecosystems have been largely devastated. Climate change is projected to challenge these management and ecological systems in different ways that are characterized by different levels of uncertainty. For example, there is high certainty that climate will warm by about 2°C more (than late-20th-century averages) by mid-century and about 4°C by end of century, if greenhouse-gas emissions continue their current rates of acceleration. Future precipitation changes are much less certain, with as many climate models projecting wetter conditions as drier. However, the same projections agree that precipitation will be

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Dettinger, M., Anderson, J., Anderson, M., Brown, L. R., Cayan, D., & Maurer, E. (2016). Climate Change and the Delta. San Francisco Estuary and Watershed Science, 14(3), 1–26. https://doi.org/10.15447/SFEWS.2016V14ISS3ART5

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