Authors
John L Sabo, Tushar Sinha, Laura C Bowling, Gerrit HW Schoups, Wesley W Wallender, Michael E Campana, Keith A Cherkauer, Pam L Fuller, William L Graf, Jan W Hopmans, John S Kominoski, Carissa Taylor, Stanley W Trimble, Robert H Webb, Ellen E Wohl
Publication date
2010/12/14
Journal
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Volume
107
Issue
50
Pages
21263-21269
Publisher
National Academy of Sciences
Description
Increasing human appropriation of freshwater resources presents a tangible limit to the sustainability of cities, agriculture, and ecosystems in the western United States. Marc Reisner tackles this theme in his 1986 classic Cadillac Desert: The American West and Its Disappearing Water. Reisner's analysis paints a portrait of region-wide hydrologic dysfunction in the western United States, suggesting that the storage capacity of reservoirs will be impaired by sediment infilling, croplands will be rendered infertile by salt, and water scarcity will pit growing desert cities against agribusiness in the face of dwindling water resources. Here we evaluate these claims using the best available data and scientific tools. Our analysis provides strong scientific support for many of Reisner's claims, except the notion that reservoir storage is imminently threatened by sediment. More broadly, we estimate that the equivalent of nearly 76 …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
JL Sabo, T Sinha, LC Bowling, GHW Schoups… - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2010