TY - JOUR
T1 - Climate, water management, and policy in the San Pedro Basin
T2 - Results of a survey of Mexican stakeholders near the U.S.-Mexico border
AU - Browning-Aiken, Anne
AU - Morehouse, Barbara
AU - Davis, Allison
AU - Wilder, Margaret
AU - Varady, Robert
AU - Goodrich, David
AU - Carter, Rebecca
AU - Moreno, Denise
AU - McGovern, Emily Dellinger
N1 - Funding Information:
Acknowledgments This study was initiated in 2002 under the auspices of the Dialogue on Water and Climate (DWC), an international project aimed at better understanding the link between water resources and climate variability. The project received additional funding in 2003 under a NOAA/OGP grant to examine in greater depth the use of climate-information products by stakeholders in the upper San Pedro Basin. The Udall Center and CLIMAS, both located at the University of Arizona, and the USDA’s Southwest Watershed Research Center collaborated with San Pedro Basin water stakeholders in an effort to address specific hydrologic and climate research needs and to build the capacity of water management partnerships or task forces to coordinate transboundary water management. We also wish to thank the interview team members for their hard work: Francisco Delgado of the School of Renewable Natural Resources, University of Arizona; Arturo Rodriguez and Felix Villaseñor of the Asociación Regional Ambiental Sonora-Arizona, Cananea, Sonora; and Mireya Cons, with the Instituto Nacional de Estadística Geografía e Informática, in Hermosillo, Sonora.
PY - 2007/12
Y1 - 2007/12
N2 - This paper reviews regional climate knowledge and vulnerability in the northern Mexico San Pedro River Basin, with a focus on water quality, quantity, and management issues on the Mexican side of the border. A discussion based on the available literature is supplemented by a survey assessing concerns about water and the quality and usability of climate and hydrologic information available to water managers and communities. The surveys indicate that the central concern for urban residents is the lack of reliable potable water due to frequent service breakdowns-with climate change and variability, specifically drought and high temperatures, as contributing factors. Water managers desire appropriate meteorological and hydrologic information to improve planning strategies, but access to this information remains limited. Considerable disagreement exists about who should pay for previously free or low-cost water and wastewater treatment. Urban users have little incentive to conserve because of the present flat, low rate and frustration with service. In rural areas, while a majority of ranchers recognize that variable climate and water loss could increasingly jeopardize their lifestyle, they seldom use meteorological information in planning or modify their water consumption. Climate vulnerability also includes potential for serious environmental health issues due to the presence of heavy metals and organic contaminants in the San Pedro.
AB - This paper reviews regional climate knowledge and vulnerability in the northern Mexico San Pedro River Basin, with a focus on water quality, quantity, and management issues on the Mexican side of the border. A discussion based on the available literature is supplemented by a survey assessing concerns about water and the quality and usability of climate and hydrologic information available to water managers and communities. The surveys indicate that the central concern for urban residents is the lack of reliable potable water due to frequent service breakdowns-with climate change and variability, specifically drought and high temperatures, as contributing factors. Water managers desire appropriate meteorological and hydrologic information to improve planning strategies, but access to this information remains limited. Considerable disagreement exists about who should pay for previously free or low-cost water and wastewater treatment. Urban users have little incentive to conserve because of the present flat, low rate and frustration with service. In rural areas, while a majority of ranchers recognize that variable climate and water loss could increasingly jeopardize their lifestyle, they seldom use meteorological information in planning or modify their water consumption. Climate vulnerability also includes potential for serious environmental health issues due to the presence of heavy metals and organic contaminants in the San Pedro.
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U2 - 10.1007/s10584-007-9302-z
DO - 10.1007/s10584-007-9302-z
M3 - Review article
AN - SCOPUS:36249009930
SN - 0165-0009
VL - 85
SP - 323
EP - 341
JO - Climatic Change
JF - Climatic Change
IS - 3-4
ER -