Wild Fish, Working Landscapes
It’s time California updated its water system and put nature back in the mix.
California may be home to Silicon Valley and represent the tenth largest economy in the world, but it still relies on water infrastructure built when rivers and fish were poorly understood. Our water technology—dams, levees and canals—is from a previous era and was never intended to support fish and wildlife.
In California’s Central Valley, levees now cut off 95% of the historic floodplain—separating fish from their food supply. We’ve effectively conquered the landscape. And the fish have suffered. The Central Valley’s wild salmon are endangered, some on the verge of extinction.
Today it would be hard to purposely design a system that would be more hostile to fish than the one we have inherited.
It’s time for an update. The old operating system separated species from the landscape. It’s time to put nature back into the mix and re-create fish abundance on this working agricultural landscape.
You can make a difference. Your signature will help us influence California water policy and leverage state and federal agencies as we chart a political path forward to a more prosperous future for California’s fish, wildlife and people.
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Dams block access to historical spawning and rearing habitats. Downstream, dams alter the timing, frequency, duration, magnitude, and rate of change of flows decreasing habitat quality and survival.