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Ducks Out
Of Water
By
Scott Yaich, Ph.D.
As demands on
our freshwater supplies continue to increase, certain water users and interest
groups may find themselves becoming increasingly disregarded and dehydrated
Without
question, water is the single most important habitat requirement for waterfowl
and many other wildlife species. Continental duck populations rise and fall in
direct response to wet-and-dry cycles on their breeding areas, which influences
the number of wetlands available to support breeding pairs in the spring.
Unfortunately,
the growth and complexity of society are exerting ever-increasing pressure on
North America 's finite water resources. The United States has already lost 115
million acres of wetlandsmore than half the original totaland continues to
lose more than 100,000 acres of wetlands every year. If wetland losses continue
at that pace, waterfowl are destined to face the equivalent of permanent
drought conditions on many of their most important breeding, migration, and
wintering areas.
Wetlands and
water are equally important to people. Our bodies are mostly (65 percent)
water. Water makes up most of the volume of the foods we eat (beef, 74 percent;
potatoes, 80 percent, etc.). Only 3 percent of the earth's entire water supply
is made up of freshwater, however, and only a tiny fraction of that is
contained within lakes, rivers, wetlands, and reservoirs. (The majority of the
planet's freshwater is locked as icecap in Antarctica and Greenland .) With the
global human population projected to increase by 4 billion during this century,
water quality and conservation are clearly among the most important issues
facing people and wildlife in North America and beyond.
Their
resourcefulness in managing water has enabled humans to advance from primitive
hunter-gatherers to modern agriculturalists and industrialists. The earliest
known water development in North America dates back about 1,300 years to the
Hohokam Indians of southern Arizona , who dug irrigation canals to water their
cornfields. Water development on the continent began in earnest much later,
however, when the arid West was settled, and in 1847 the first modern
irrigation project was constructed in Utah . The first municipal water
reservoir in the nation was completed in 1916, and today there are 75,000 dams
and more than 2 million small impoundments and farm ponds in the United States.
By 1988, more than 90 percent of the river reaches in the lower 48 states were
dammed, channeled, or otherwise developed. In 2000, water use in the United
States was estimated to be 408 billion gallons per day, or 1,427 gallons for
every person in the country. About 48 percent of that water is used to generate
electricity; 34 percent is directed to irrigating cropland; 11 percent is
maintained as public water supplies; 6 percent is utilized by mining and
industry; and less than 1 percent is directed for domestic uses such as
livestock and aquaculture production.
Experts
predict that a 100-million person increase in the U.S. population by 2040 will
increase nationwide demand for freshwater by as much as 37 percent. The biggest
problem is that no one knows where that much more water would come from. Most
significant water sources have already been identified or developed. Some
western water sources are already over-allocated. Not only is competition for
water intensifying, it is expanding from the arid West into previously
water-rich areas such as the southeastern United States .
Increasing
demands have generated unrealistically hopeful discussions of finding and
developing new water sources. However, there are really no new sources of
water. It's all out there already, either directly supporting society's basic
needs (e.g., drinking water and power generation), or sustaining critical
natural resources that maintain significant components of our nation's economy
and quality of life (including waterfowl hunting).
Water
projects don't create any new water, they simply redistribute it from one place
to another, a situation that inevitably benefits one water use at the expense
of another. It is up to society to collectively determine which values
associated with various water uses are most important, and what balance of
water use best conforms to the vision we collectively have for our future
quality of life.
There are
important water allocation lessons to be learned from examples such as the
Colorado , Klamath, and White rivers. These three rivers illustrate three
stages of water projects in North America and the tremendous impacts that
competition for water can have on critical waterfowl habitats.
Colorado
River Delta:
A River Used to Run Through It
The Colorado
River is one of the most alarming examples of what can happen to waterfowl when
competing interests divvy up water resources without considering that the water
was sustaining critical wetlands and associated natural resources. In this
case, the consequences were devastating.
The Colorado
River, draining portions of six western states and Mexico , once annually
carried about 13.5 million acre-feet of water into the Gulf of California .
Over millennia, the river's heavy silt load created an 80-mile-long,
2-million-acre delta covered with shallow, braided river channels, wetlands,
and riverside forests. Aldo Leopold visited the area in 1922 and described it
as a jaguar-infested jungle, in admiration of the region's wildlife
productivity and diversity. It was one of the Pacific Flyway's greatest
waterfowl wintering areas.
Change began
when the Colorado was first tapped to irrigate southern California 's Imperial
Valley croplands in 1901, and accelerated dramatically in 1922 when the
Colorado River Compact allocated the river's entire flow to users in seven
states. Later, rights were reallocated to allow 10 percent of the flow to
Mexico . President Herbert Hoover conveyed the attitude of the time when he
said: The waters of this great river, instead of being wasted in the sea, will
now be brought into use by man. President Hoover clearly did not share Aldo
Leopold's appreciation of the Colorado River Delta's 2-million-acre wetland or
the waterfowl and other wildlife that lived there.
Things went
from bad to worse when it was realized that the compact allocated 33 percent
more water than the river actually contained. As a consequence, the Colorado now
carries only 10 percent of its flow into Mexico , which also uses virtually all
of its allocation for irrigation and municipal water.
So, the
mighty Colorado River, carver of the Grand Canyon , no longer flows to the rich
delta it once created and sustained. In average years, the last trickle of the
Colorado River now disappears into the Mexican desert, and the original 2
million acres of the river's former delta wetlands have shriveled to about
150,000 acres of riverbank wetlands. The millions of waterfowl that once
wintered in the fertile deltaic wetlands were forced to search for food and
water elsewhere among other dwindling wetland habitats. In perspective, the
loss of more than 1.7 million acres of Colorado River delta wetlands was one of
the greatest losses within a single wetland system in the world, happening
before anyone was aware of the consequences.
The Colorado
River and its delta represent almost a worst-case scenario for waterfowl and
wetland wildlife. Although Ducks Unlimited has studied wetland restoration
potential in the region, the lack of reliable water and water-quality problems
make restoration there imprudent, at least for now.
The
Klamath River Basin : Unending Litigation
In the case
of the Klamath River basin of southern Oregon and northern California , all
water uses, including those to sustain natural resources, have been recognized
and acknowledged, an incremental improvement over the Colorado River situation.
However, for various reasons, the equivalent of no-holds-barred competition for
the basin's water has led to unending legal battles.
More than 30
percent of the Pacific Flyway's waterfowl (about 6 million ducks and geese) use
the Klamath Basin 's habitats. Average peak populations exceed 1.1 million
birds during the migratory and wintering periods each year. Also, 50 percent of
the female mallards nesting in California 's Central Valley use the Klamath's
marshes as summer molting habitat, and almost all Pacific Flyway pintails
depend on the region for spring staging habitat.
About a
century ago, however, settlers discovered that the waters of the basin could
bring agricultural productivity to surrounding arid lands, and since 1905 the
Klamath Basin has been steadily re-plumbed. Depending on one's perspective, the
result is something between a miracle of modern agriculture that brought
unimagined productivity to some of the arid West, or an ecological disaster
that destroyed the river's wetlands, fish, and wildlife productivity.
The waters of
the Klamath Basin long have been at the center of a clash of values and
cultures. The four primary water interests in the basin, in order of current
court-ordered priorities are: (1) federally endangered species threatened with
extinction; (2) Native American tribes with a strong cultural link to the
river's salmon fishery and other resources; (3) agricultural interests
dependent upon irrigation water; and, (4) National Wildlife Refuges (NWRs) that
require water to sustain wetland habitats for waterfowl and other trust
responsibilities. The one thing everyone agrees upon is that the Klamath's
waters have been over-allocated. Legal rights exist to more water than there is
actual water. This unsustainable situation resulted from an almost
incomprehensibly complex interplay of factors including U.S. government-Native
American tribe relations dating to the 19th century, congressional mandates,
agricultural development of an arid landscape, water developments that drove
some salmon and other fish toward extinction, and the establishment of NWRs to
protect significant waterfowl habitats.
Chronic water
shortages in the basin have had and will continue to have serious consequences
for waterfowl. Recent decisions made by the U.S. Department of Interior's
Bureau of Reclamation on water allocations may leave up to 70 percent of all
wetland habitat in the Lower Klamath Refuge dry in 7 of 10 years, and,
consequently, waterfowl food production in the basin's wetland habitats will
decline dramatically. Furthermore, water shortages that typically occur between
June and November will unfortunately coincide with the period of greatest
waterfowl need.
The
geographically broad interconnectedness of water issues is evident in the
example of the Klamath. Less water and habitat will force waterfowl to accelerate
their migration south into the Central Valley . But, the problem with that is
that the Central Valley has already lost 96 percent of its wetlands. With the
large human population of the valley expected to more than double in the next
35 years, pressure on water supplies there will only continue to increase.
Thus, the margin of safety for the whole flyway, woven together by its water
and migratory waterfowl resources, grows thinner as its collective wetland
habitats dwindle.
In the
Klamath Basin , DU has emphasized wetland restoration to maximize the waterfowl
benefits of limited water, while increasing the effectiveness of water use.
Current analyses focus on type of wetland, water availability, food resources
provided, and energetic needs of waterfowl. This science-based approach can
maximize waterfowl use with minimal water in drought conditions.
The heart of
much of the controversy is Upper Klamath Lake home to two species of
endangered fish, the major source of water for irrigation, the site of two
NWRs, and the source of river water for migratory salmon. Excessive runoff of
nutrients into the lake has reduced its water quality, and this increases the
risk of endangered fish die-offs. If water quality in the lake were improved,
less water may be needed to maintain the endangered fish, which in turn would
provide more flexibility in managing lake levels. This could ultimately mean
more water for wetland habitats and waterfowl on the NWRs and elsewhere. Thus,
DU has focused on working with landowners and farmers in the region to identify
and restore wetlands that would not only produce habitat to directly benefit
waterfowl, but also provide incremental water-quality benefits to Upper Klamath
Lake .
Water
Issues Spread Eastward
Although most
major water conflicts have been in the arid West, where average annual
precipitation is 10-20 inches or less, competition for water is spreading
eastward into areas formerly considered water rich. In light of the lessons of
our western experiences, can we avoid the contentiousness that inevitably
results from the win-lose mindset that has framed outright competition for
water resources? Can we choose a better path for the future use and
conservation of this essential, but limited, natural resource?
Eastern Arkansas
is an example of a water-rich region (receiving approximately 50 inches of rain
per year) where competition for water is beginning to drive a wedge of discord
between its citizens. The White River basin , at the heart of this largely
agricultural region, has historically been the single most important wintering
area for mallards in North America , famous for its bottomland hardwood forests
and other wetland habitats. Much of the basin was designated as a Wetlands of
International Importance under the Ramsar Convention, an international
agreement that identifies and recognizes the world's most important wetland
ecosystems, particularly for waterfowl.
The leading
rice-producing state in the nation, Arkansas ' growing thirst for irrigation
water is the principal factor driving the issue. Although the Alluvial Aquifer
(which underlies Arkansas 's Grand Prairie rice-production area) has long been
a primary source of irrigation water, pumping is far outpacing the aquifer's
ability to recharge itself, and its waters are projected to be exhausted in
some areas in just 10 years. Eyes are now looking toward diversions from the
White River for additional irrigation water.
The Grand
Prairie Area Demonstra- tion Project, the first of several proposed to divert
significant amounts of water from the White River , has been approved by
Congress to be constructed by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, but the project
is highly controversial. Project proponents and opponents occupy nontraditional
lines, and in fact, even the farmers in the project area are nearly evenly
divided in their opinions of this irrigation scheme. Lawsuits were filed in
March 2004 to halt construction of the river-water-withdrawal components of the
project.
Does this
mean that western water history is doomed to repeat itself as demands begin to
exceed water supplies elsewhere? We don't know the ultimate answer to that
question, but a good answer for now is that it doesn't have to. Although
conflicts are brewing in emerging problem areas such as east Arkansas , water
in these areas is typically not yet irrevocably over-allocated. Thus, options
remain available for willing parties to work together and recognize all the
values provided by the water, and proactively deal with the issues by
cooperating to find sustainable solutions.
Conservation
and maximizing efficiency are the first rules in wisely using any finite
resource. DU has long been dedicated to finding win-win solutions to problems,
and has worked in partnership with hundreds of farmers to improve the
efficiency of their on-farm water-management capabilities for both agricultural
production and waterfowl habitat. For example, DU, the Arkansas Game and Fish
Commission, and other members of the Arkansas Partners Project provide
water-control structures to farmers to capture abundant and less costly winter
precipitation to flood agricultural fields. These flooded fields are used by
waterfowl as foraging and roosting areas. Flooding the fields also helps reduce
farmers' use of irrigation water and restores some of the hydrologic functions
once provided by the more than 7 million acres of natural wetlands that
Arkansas has lost.
Is A
Sustainable Future Possible?
Demands on
water, our most valuable natural resource, continue to increase across the country.
In areas as widely spread as the White River basin, as well as portions of
south Texas, Nebraska, and Georgia, the key element to dealing successfully
with emerging water supply issues will be agreement by all parties to strive
for the long-term sustainability of water resources. Ultimately, all interests
must acknowledge that water is a limited resource that must meet all of
society's expectations and desires, from agricultural food production to
waterfowl habitat and duck hunting opportunities. Compatible long-term goals
will have to be agreed upon by leaders among dissimilar interest groups. To
achieve that critical step, all parties will need to engage in the process
early, well before unrealistic beliefs about what limited water supplies can
support become expectations. Waterfowl enthusiasts and other people who care
about wetlands and wildlife need to engage in these discussions from the
beginning to speak on behalf of waterfowl and the habitats that they require.
A mark of an
intelligent, healthy society is the ability to learn from the past. Future
waterfowlers may look back at our generation and judge our legacy by how well
we learned lessons from past experiences with limited natural resources, and
how we applied those lessens to conserve and sustainably use water, wetlands,
natural grasslands, and other resources. Everyone who cares about waterfowl and
waterfowl hunting will have to participate in developing solutions to
challenges presented by future water uses in the United States . As competition
for water intensifies, waterfowl will lose if we don't all give voice to our
interests as the debates continue to grow. The future of wetland and waterfowl
conservation, and the hunting opportunities and other enjoyment they provide,
depend upon it.
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