Las Vegas Sun

May 13, 2024

Dry fields, lost lawns: A look back at California’s drought

Brown

Rich Pedroncelli / AP

This July 8, 2014 file photo shows a sign alerting visitors to water conservation efforts at the state Capitol in Sacramento, Calif. On Friday, April 7, 2017, California Gov. Jerry Brown declared an end to the state’s water emergency following a five-year drought that reduced rivers to trickles, farmland to dust fields and forests to swathes of dead trees. At the peak of the drought, the state urged Californians to slash their water use, and led by example by letting the Capitol lawn die.

LOS ANGELES — California Gov. Jerry Brown has declared an end to the state's water emergency following a five-year drought that reduced rivers to trickles, farmland to dust and forests to graveyards of dead trees.

Four of the driest years in state history marked the period, which cost California's economy billions of dollars. Here's how the drought played out across the state:

BROWN FIELDS

Water is life for California's $47 billion farming industry, which grows nearly half the nation's fruits, nuts and vegetables. Government-supplied irrigation supplies were slashed. Fields were left fallow or reduced to cracked mud. Farmers also dug thousands of new wells, sucking up groundwater in the Central Valley and causing the ground to sink.

LOST LAWNS

At the peak of the drought, the state called for a mandatory 25 percent cut in urban water use compared with 2013 levels.

Water districts issued strict conservation rules and paid property owners to rip out water-slurping lawns and replace them with less thirsty plants.

Californians responded, saving tens of billions of gallons of water. Some even kept a sharp eye on water wasters. "Drought shaming" snoops outed homes and businesses in places such as Beverly Hills that let their sprinklers run too long.

SHRINKING WATERWAYS

The drought stressed forests, leaving trees more susceptible to pests such as the bark beetle. More than 100 million trees in the Sierra Nevada died.

Threatened native species suffered as creeks and lakes shriveled. The shores of Folsom Lake retreated more than 100 yards.

Last year, toxic algae showed up in more than 40 state lakes and waterways from Los Angeles to the northern reaches of California, the highest count in state history. Experts said the naturally occurring cyanobacterium blossomed because nutrients that built up during the drought were washed off hills when rains finally arrived.

THE PAST IS THE FUTURE

And then, finally, the rains returned.

Storms hit in 2015 and returned with a vengeance last year, filling reservoirs, overflowing dams, swelling creeks and pumping up the snowpack. Flood warnings went up and drought restrictions began to ease.

But those who look back at the drought see something else: California's future.

Water conservation will become a way of life in the state, said Felicia Marcus, chairwoman of the State Water Resources Control Board.

"This drought has been one for the record books, but it won't be our last or longest," said Marcus. "It's a wakeup call and we can't hit the snooze button."