Abstract
Climate over the watershed of the San Francisco Bay Delta estuary system varies on a wide range of space and time scales, and affects downstream estuarine ecosystems. The historical climate has included mild to severe droughts and torrential rains accompanied by flooding, providing important lessons for present-day resource managers. Paleoclimate records spanning the last 10,000 years, synthesized across the Estuary, watershed and key regions beyond, provide a basis for increased understanding of how variable California’s climate can be and how it affects the Bay Delta system.This review of paleoclimate records reveals a gradual warming and drying in California from about 10,000 years to about 4,000 years before present. During this period, the current Bay and Delta were inundated by rising sea level so that by 4,000 years ago the Bay and Delta had taken on much of their present shape and extent. Between about 4,000 and 2,000 years ago, cooler and wetter conditions prevailed in the watershed, lowering salinity in the Estuary and altering local ecosystems. Those wetter conditions gave way to increasing aridity during the past 2,000 years, a general trend punctuated by occasional prolonged and severe droughts and occasional unusually wet, cool periods. California’s climate since A.D. 1850 has been unusually stable and benign, compared to climate variations during the previous 2,000 or more years. Thus, climate variations in California’s future may be even more (perhaps much more) challenging than those of the past 100 years. To improve our understanding of these past examples of climate variability in California, and of the linkages between watershed climate and estuarine responses, greater emphases on paleoclimate records in and around the Estuary, improved temporal resolutions in several record types, and linked watershed-estuary paleo-modeling capabilities are needed.
Highlights
The San Francisco Bay-Delta system forms a transition zone where freshwater runoff from upland watersheds, including the Sierra Nevada to the east and the Coastal Ranges to the west, meets and intermingles with ocean water to yield variably salty waters
This paper provides a review of the scientific literature regarding California’s climate during the past several thousand years, and a summary of available paleoclimatic proxies and resources for characterizing the natural climate of the Sacramento-San Joaquin Bay-Delta and its watershed
Paleoclimate records from the San Francisco Bay Estuary and its larger watershed region provide the basis for characterizing the natural variability of precipitation and runoff in California over the past several thousand years
Summary
The San Francisco Bay-Delta system forms a transition zone where freshwater runoff from upland watersheds, including the Sierra Nevada to the east and the Coastal Ranges to the west, meets and intermingles with ocean water to yield variably salty waters. The climate that California will face in the future, and that water resource managers will face during the 30-year planning period, is likely to reflect some combination of the kinds of climate (and runoff) variability described by California’s paleoclimatic proxies (e.g., as described in this review), variations like those observed during its historical period (e.g., NRC 1999), and variations like those projected by current models of global climate change induced by human activities (e.g., Hayhoe et al 2004) These climate variations need to be characterized (monitored, predicted, or reduced to statistical distributions, depending on application) to the extent possible, to provide the soundest possible scientific and engineering basis for upcoming decisions regarding the future of resource systems in the San Francisco Bay-Delta, and associated watershed region. A much more detailed description of the archives and past variations in climate is provided by Malamud-Roam et al (2006)
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