News - Arizona
News - National
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First NRCS-AZ Snowpack Report Released for 2009
Snowpack measures well above 30-year average, normal spring runoff expected
PHOENIX, Jan. 7, 2009— Water resources specialists from the
Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS) and cooperating partners are
reporting that snowpack levels in Arizona’s river basins are well above normal,
ranging from 131 percent to 334 percent of average. Despite the heavy early
snowpack, however, the long-range forecast calls for normal to below normal
streamflow levels for the spring runoff period.
Statewide, the Jan. 1 snowpack measured at 248 percent of the 30-year average,
compared with 98 percent a year ago. The Verde River Basin snowpack was measured
at an impressive 334 percent of the average for this time of year. “Several
major snowstorms during the latter half of December resulted in the heavy
snowpack we now see throughout the mountains of northern and eastern Arizona.”
said NRCS water resources specialist Dino DeSimone.
On the Salt River near Roosevelt, the runoff forecast calls for 100 percent of
median streamflow levels (385,000 acre-feet) for the January-May forecast
period. On the Verde River at Horseshoe Dam, the long-term runoff prediction
calls for 86 percent of median streamflow levels (190,000 acre-feet) for January
through May.
As of Jan. 1, the combined Salt River Project (SRP) system is at 90 percent of
capacity with 2,072,000 acre-feet in storage. The SRP system covers the Verde
and Salt River watersheds and includes six reservoirs; Horseshoe and Bartlett on
the Verde River, and Roosevelt, Apache, Canyon, and Saguaro on the Salt River.
At San Carlos, reservoir storage stands at 217,000 acre-feet, or about 25
percent of capacity.
NRCS makes snow measurements throughout the winter to forecast and track the
state’s surface water supplies for the coming year. As a result of these snow
measurements, an Arizona Basin Outlook Report is developed and issued every two
weeks beginning January 1 through April 1. The report is used by farmers,
ranchers, municipal water suppliers, and other water users to help manage
limited water supplies.
The snow survey season began Jan. 1 when specialists with the NRCS, U.S. Forest
Service, National Park Service, and the Navajo Nation took the first of many
manual measurements of snow depth and snow water content at 23 snow courses
across northern and eastern Arizona. The same locations are measured each year,
for over 50-years in some locations.
Data on snow water content, total precipitation and air temperature are also
collected daily from Arizona’s 18 SNOTEL (snow telemetry) sites. The data
collected by the SNOTEL system is transmitted by radio signals, which bounce off
meteor trails 50 miles above the earth. "It’s a reliable system for reaching
over high mountains and relaying data over great distances to master data
collection stations located in Ogden, UT and Boise, ID.” said DeSimone.
The NRCS and its cooperative snow surveyors have been measuring snowpacks and
estimating spring runoff in Arizona since 1935.
JANUARY 1, 2009 SNOWPACK LEVELS
Percent (%) of 30-Yr. Average
Snowpack Levels as of January 1
Watershed
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Salt River Basin 209%
Verde River Basin 334%
San Francisco-Upper Gila River Basin 131%
Little Colorado River Basin 256%
Other Points of Interest
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Central Mogollon Rim 286%
Chuska Mountains 265%
Grand Canyon 196%
San Francisco Peaks 195%
Statewide Snowpack 248%
For more information, call NRCS Water Resources Specialist Dino DeSimone at
602-280-8786.
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