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sci / sci.geo.rivers+lakes / A toxic California landmark could render parts of the state 'uninhabitable'

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o A toxic California landmark could render parts of the state 'uninhabitable'useapen

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Subject: A toxic California landmark could render parts of the state 'uninhabitable'
From: useapen
Newsgroups: sci.geo.rivers+lakes, ca.environment, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh, talk.politics.guns, sac.politics
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Date: Tue, 19 Dec 2023 11:28 UTC
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From: yourdime@outlook.com (useapen)
Newsgroups: sci.geo.rivers+lakes,ca.environment,alt.fan.rush-limbaugh,talk.politics.guns,sac.politics
Subject: A toxic California landmark could render parts of the state 'uninhabitable'
Date: Tue, 19 Dec 2023 11:28:18 -0000 (UTC)
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For decades, the Salton Sea has mystified public imagination.

Positioned in a rural desert region just miles from popular travel
destinations like Palm Springs, it�s California�s largest inland lake �
and one of its biggest ecological disasters.

Millions of dollars of federal government funding, however, may help
prevent the disaster from getting even worse.

Both a sump for agricultural runoff and refuge for endangered wildlife,
the terminal sea � which has no outflow � is linked to Imperial Valley�s
ongoing air quality issues, which have been called some of the worst in
the nation. Many children throughout the region�s border towns already
have from asthma, studies show, and scientists believe it�s linked to the
sea�s receding shoreline, or playa, which emits toxic dust particles
containing arsenic, selenium and pesticides from nearby agriculture.

Because the sea is a dumping ground for runoff, it�s also prone to
eutrophication, a process that leads to so much plant overgrowth, it
consumes the oxygen in the water, choking wildlife. But it�s also home to
a rare and endangered fish � the desert pupfish, which is the only fish
indigenous to the hypersaline lake. The mighty, 2-inch creature can
survive extreme environments that are almost twice as salty as the ocean,
along with water temperatures that reach as high as 108 degrees or as low
as 40.

But it�s been common knowledge for years now that its unique habitat is
shrinking.

The Salton Sea Authority, which includes Imperial Irrigation District
officials and council members for the tribe of Torres Martinez Desert
Cahuilla Indians, warns that if nothing is done, �the roughly 220 square
miles of exposed playa will cause an air quality disaster of such enormous
proportions that the valleys of Coachella and Imperial as well as
southerly into Mexico may become uninhabitable.�

�The agriculture of the Coachella and Imperial Valleys will be ruined and
the economy of the Coachella and Imperial valleys will become non-
existent,� officials wrote.

Amid dire warnings, the Biden-Harris administration gave California $70
million in federal funds to restore wildlife habitat by the sea before it
spirals out of control, a Dec. 8 press release from the governor�s office
announced.

But researchers are skeptical that it�s the right solution.

�Potential outcomes of these efforts are highly uncertain�
This recent funding is part of a �landmark agreement� to spend $250
million on Salton Sea restoration efforts, according to a California
Natural Resources Agency news release. The funding is slated to go toward
conserving 400,000 acre-feet annually for the next four years, the release
said, even though it�s unclear whether it will actually help restore the
lake.

Previous reports from the UC Riverside accuse state agencies of lacking
the scientific knowledge needed to successfully save the sea from collapse
� and wrote that �mismanagement and competition� between federal, state
and local agencies already led to critical delays.

�The Salton Sea Management Program, led by a consortium of state agencies,
aims to achieve its desired outcomes by constructing 30,000 acres of bird
habitat and dust suppression projects by 2028. Progress has been slow,
however, with only 755 acres completed by the end of 2020,� a 2021 report
from UCR�s Salton Sea Task Force said.

�Potential outcomes of these efforts are highly uncertain,� it continued,
and �the degree to which restoration efforts will produce viable bird
habitats is similarly uncertain.�

�Birdwatchers care about habitat restoration, right? But what about people
who live near the lake and their kids have asthma? They may have a
slightly different prior set of priorities,� David Lo, a professor of
biomedical sciences at the UCR School of Medicine, told SFGATE.

Lo, who contributed to the report, told SFGATE that officials haven�t been
paying attention to the Salton Sea crisis � if they were, he said, they
wouldn�t have diverted water from the Colorado River to San Diego, the
main water source that keeps Salton Sea flows steady.

�The main communities that are affected are immigrant Mexican agriculture
workers living under relatively poor conditions,� Lo told SFGATE. �As the
dust gets worse, and it spreads to places where rich white people live,
like Palm Springs, maybe there will be more attention to the question.�

In a 2022 article, the university wrote that terminal lakes are shrinking
all over the world due to global warming and water diversion � the
Colorado River Basin drought has been affecting lakes across the
southwest.

In response, California, Nevada and Arizona scrambled to conserve water,
successfully averting an ecological crisis � and the recent federal
funding for the Salton Sea is yet another move that aims to prevent
another disaster from unfolding.

For now, officials are hopeful that it will help restore one of the
state�s most haunting landmarks, protecting the sea�s unusual wildlife and
nearby communities in the Imperial Valley.

�This major investment continues momentum for the critical work underway
to stabilize and restore the Salton Sea for the benefit of Imperial and
Coachella Valley communities and wildlife that rely on the Sea,� Gov.
Gavin Newsom said in a Dec. 8 press release. �Working closely with our
federal, tribal, state and local partners, California will continue to
make progress on our ecological, health and economic goals in this key
region.�

But scientists on the ground say that the future of the lake remains a
looming question mark.

�I think the question is going to be: Are people going to talk to each
other and do the research and come to some kind of consensus of like, what
needs to be done?� Lo said. �There are proposed answers all over the map.�

�People need to talk to each other,� he added.

https://www.sfgate.com/bayarea/article/salton-sea-restoration-california-
imperial-18556684.php

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