UC Davis Center for Watershed Sciences

UC Davis Center for Watershed Sciences The center is dedicated to independent problem-solving research on California's critical water issues.

Where are they now: Dylan Stompe“Where are they now” is a series on the California WaterBlog that celebrates the alumni ...
05/24/2026

Where are they now: Dylan Stompe

“Where are they now” is a series on the California WaterBlog that celebrates the alumni who got their start at the Center for Watershed Sciences (CWS) and have now gone on to bigger and better things. Blog posts from the “Where are they now” series will be peppered throughout our regular blog lineup, highlighting both former students and past employees of CWS....

https://californiawaterblog.com/2026/05/24/where-are-they-now-dylan-stompe/

Resilient California Fishes: Prickly SculpinBy Peter B. Moyle and Thomas L. Taylor . . . The fresh waters of California ...
05/17/2026

Resilient California Fishes: Prickly Sculpin

By Peter B. Moyle and Thomas L. Taylor . . . The fresh waters of California support a diverse, highly endemic fish fauna. Many of them are on extinction trajectories. In this blog series, however, we discuss native fishes that are not considered to be in trouble, but that instead have sufficient resiliency to keep populations large and sustainable, even in highly altered habitats....

https://californiawaterblog.com/2026/05/17/resilient-california-fishes-prickly-sculpin/

Durable Solutions in California Disaster ResilienceBy Nicholas Pinter . . . Earlier this month, California released its ...
05/10/2026

Durable Solutions in California Disaster Resilience

By Nicholas Pinter . . . Earlier this month, California released its Natural Catastrophe Resiliency Study. The study addresses thorny issues in managing California’s disaster risk, and particularly the crises in wildfire insurance and utility liability. We Californians and our leaders should applaud the study and efforts to address these sweeping challenges. The Resiliency Study focuses on wildfire risk management, generally leaving aside additional hazards like flooding that might seem too daunting for policy action....

https://californiawaterblog.com/2026/05/10/durable-solutions-in-california-disaster-resilience/

Putah Creek Fishes: A Class Gyotaku ProjectBy Christopher M. Dewees . . . On a crisp and sunny November morning last fal...
05/03/2026

Putah Creek Fishes: A Class Gyotaku Project

By Christopher M. Dewees . . . On a crisp and sunny November morning last fall, along the shores of Putah Creek, a group of students quickly dropped their beach seining net when it was suddenly filled with returning adult salmon (which were immediately released!). That moment would have been unimaginable in the 1990s. Putah Creek is a major Northern California stream that flows eastward from Lake County for more than 100 miles, past the towns of Winters and Davis, before entering the Sacramento River....

https://californiawaterblog.com/2026/05/03/putah-creek-fishes-a-class-gyotaku-project/

AI Water Use Distractions and Lessons for CaliforniaBy Jay Lund Artificial intelligence (AI) will affect many economic a...
04/26/2026

AI Water Use Distractions and Lessons for California

By Jay Lund Artificial intelligence (AI) will affect many economic and natural resource sectors as these new technologies develop and mature. We are in the early years of this process. Like most new things, AI has become an object of small and great hopes and fears – from hopes for saving and helping humans to fears for destroying human minds and civilizations....

https://californiawaterblog.com/2026/04/26/ai-water-use-distractions-and-lessons-for-california/

A chance to multiply your support for the Center for Watershed SciencesCalifornia WaterBlog is a long-running outreach p...
04/17/2026

A chance to multiply your support for the Center for Watershed Sciences

California WaterBlog is a long-running outreach project from the UC Davis Center for Watershed Sciences, a research center dedicated to interdisciplinary study of water challenges, particularly in California. We focus on environmentally and economically sustainable solutions for managing rivers, lakes, groundwater, and estuaries. This weekend, for UC Davis Give Day (April 17 – 18, 2026), we have a matching gift challenge from emeritus Director (and current Vice Director) …...

https://californiawaterblog.com/2026/04/17/a-chance-to-multiply-your-support-for-the-center-for-watershed-sciences/

Walling off nature: Exploring the consequences of our urge to claim ecosystemsBy Andrew L. Rypel [This article first app...
04/12/2026

Walling off nature: Exploring the consequences of our urge to claim ecosystems

By Andrew L. Rypel [This article first appeared on Tangled Nature.] Fig 1. Attempt to privatize a lake, photo taken by author in 2025. It's one of the first memories. Getting into the little v-hull aluminum boat with Dad on the shoreline of a small sandy lake. It's summer in northern Wisconsin and water lilies surround the deep parts of the lake like ancient ecological armor....

https://californiawaterblog.com/2026/04/12/walling-off-nature-exploring-the-consequences-of-our-urge-to-claim-ecosystems/

California and the West’s Current Snow Drought in a Long-Term Context: Key Points for ResearchersBy Kyle Greenspan . . ....
04/05/2026

California and the West’s Current Snow Drought in a Long-Term Context: Key Points for Researchers

By Kyle Greenspan . . . We are well into the 2026 water year in the western United States, and so far, it appears to be an unseasonably warm one. Media across California, the western states, and the nation are covering the impact of our warm winter on snowpack and water resources. This post attempts to put headlines and current events into a longer-term context, explaining long-term changes we expect in snowpack water storage....

https://californiawaterblog.com/2026/04/05/california-and-the-wests-current-snow-drought-in-a-long-term-context-key-points-for-researchers/

04/01/2026

By Christine Parisek & Jon Walter . . . Food webs are the backbones of ecosystems: they chart the flow of energy through ecosystems in terms of who eats whom, and their structure helps determine whether an ecosystem will be stable over time. While food web studies often focus on relationships within...

Fish domination of avian food websBy Christine Parisek & Jon Walter Food webs are the backbones of ecosystems: they char...
04/01/2026

Fish domination of avian food webs

By Christine Parisek & Jon Walter Food webs are the backbones of ecosystems: they chart the flow of energy through ecosystems in terms of who eats whom, and their structure helps determine whether an ecosystem will be stable over time. While food web studies often focus on relationships within a particular habitat type – a lake or a forest, for example – broader predator-prey relationships can couple a lake to the forest that surrounds it....

By Christine Parisek & Jon Walter . . . Food webs are the backbones of ecosystems: they chart the flow of energy through ecosystems in terms of who eats whom, and their structure helps determine whether an ecosystem will be stable over time. While food web studies often focus on relationships within...

Life history differences between natural and hatchery-origin winter-run Chinook present opportunities and challenges for...
03/29/2026

Life history differences between natural and hatchery-origin winter-run Chinook present opportunities and challenges for managing the endangered species

By Emily Chen, Katherine Lumahan, Rachel Johnson, Corey Phillis, George Whitman, Anna Sturrock, Will Satterthwaite, and Stephanie Carlson . . . Wild Pacific salmon and trout exhibit complex variation in completing their life cycle. Within a single population, some individuals leave their natal (birth) streams soon after they emerge from the nest to begin their seaward migrations, while others remain for several months or years before migrating downstream....

By Emily Chen, Katherine Lumahan, Rachel Johnson, Corey Phillis, George Whitman, Anna Sturrock, Will Satterthwaite, and Stephanie Carlson . . . Wild Pacific salmon and trout exhibit complex variation in completing their life cycle. Within a single population, some individuals leave their natal (birt...

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