Benjamin Khoh is a geography and environmental science undergraduate student working in the Nevada State Climate Office with Associate Professor of Geography and Nevada State Climatologist Steph McAfee. Khoh recently prepared an update about Nevada’s drought which was shared through the program and is published below. Living with Drought is a collaborative program that provides information to help Nevadans prepare for, respond to and recover from drought. More information about flood safety will be provided in the April Quarterly Report, which will be available this week.
There were dramatic reductions in drought across much of Nevada. Much of the state is now drought-free and potentially at risk for flooding. Drought lingers in far southern Nevada.
Current drought conditions in Nevada and across the West
Until March all of Nevada had been in some sort of drought or at least Abnormally Dry (D0) since October 2020. This winter has brought much needed precipitation (and then some) to the region. Areas of western Nevada adjacent to the central Sierra Nevada and parts of Eureka, Elko and White Pine Counties emerged from March with no drought or Abnormally Dry conditions on the map. Nye, Lincoln, and Clark Counties are still on a Drought Watch per state guidelines. Across the rest of the state, conditions are still improving with a one-class drought improvements over much of the state and two-class improvements in areas of western, northeastern, and southern Nevada. As of March 28, 2023, only 5% of the state is classified as D2-Severe Drought, a substantial decrease from just a month ago when 51.35% of the state was D2-Severe Drought.
In the western US, D4-Exceptional Drought and D3-Extreme Drought remain only in eastern Oregon and in far eastern Wyoming, Colorado and New Mexico. That deep drought in the east is the western edge of significant drought centered over Kansas and Oklahoma. Moderate to Severe drought remain in northern Idaho and Montana, as well. Due to record-setting rain and snowfall, there were widespread one or two drought class improvements over California. Most of the coast, Central Valley, central and southern Sierra are not in drought.
March Temperature, Precipitation and Snowpack
March delivered vast amounts of precipitation across the state in a series of . Areas up and down the state received precipitation amounts approaching 200% of usual for March. Parts of Elko County saw precipitation amounts that were closer to what is typically observed, while northern Pershing County and Clark County were somewhat drier than normal.
In what has seemed like an endless winter, March also brought colder than normal temperatures statewide. Much of the state was 4° - 8°F cooler than normal. The Las Vegas area was slightly cooler than normal.
Snowpack in the Great Basin and much of the Sierra were at least 220% of usual for this time of year. A notable outlier located in the Sierras is the Mono-Owens basin, which has recorded a snowpack nearly 400% of its normal snowpack.
Snowpack in the Upper Colorado, which feeds Lakes Powell and Mead, is also above normal. By late March, it was the highest since 1986 (which is as far back at the Natural Resources Conservation Service Interactive charts go). As of late March, snowpack ranged from 119% of normal in the north to over 500% of normal in the Lower San Juan watershed of southern Utah. The overall basin snowpack was at 158% of normal at the end of the month.
In the Walker River basin, there are about 60 inches of water stored in the snowpack, about 10 inches more than previously recorded by SNOTEL stations in the basin. Further east in the Lower Humboldt basin, the snowpack is not record-breaking, but it is still about twice the usual for this time of year and in the top 5%. Perhaps more critical, the snowpack wasn't yet showing substantial melt, which normally starts in late March.
Soil Moisture
The heavy precipitation has led to much wetter than normal topsoils and wet subsoils throughout much of the Sierras, southeastern and central Nevada. Both surface and subsoils are drier than normal across the northernmost part of the state. Although subsoils are wet in southern Nevada, subsoils remain drier than normal from Clark County through western Nye County.
Water Resources
Water levels for many reservoirs throughout the Sierras are near or above normal for March. Boca Reservoir in particular is at 134% of its usual March amount. Rye Patch Reservoir is still low at 6% capacity, just 22% of its normal amount at this time. Some reservoirs may be below normal to have space when the record snowpack melts in the coming weeks and months or to accommodate other planned water storage.
Lake Mead dropped almost a foot from 1047.02 feet at the end of February to 1046.03 in late March and is at 28% capacity. Forecasts for probable inflows have Lake Mead dropping to a low of 1,030 feet during the middle of summer 2023. Under maximum probable inflow, Leak Mead's elevation could top 1,050 feet this spring and summer. Many of the streams in western Nevada reported above normal flows, with many gauges seeing record highs. Up north, amounts were around average, with a select few reporting much below normal streamflow. Flows in the South were variable, with record highs and unusual lows observed.
Looking forward
This winter has been exceptionally wet over much of the state. In places rain and snowfall were record-breaking. However, large parts of already dry Clark County and southern Nye County got only near-normal precipitation.
As anticipated, the announced that the La Niña is over. ENSO-neutral conditions will prevail into early summer 2023, with increasing odds of El Niño developing by fall.
The chance of higher-than-normal precipitation remains slightly elevated over northern Nevada through April. There is also a slight indication that southern Nevada could be drier than normal. Continuing into the spring, the outlook suggests reasonable chances of cooler than normal temperatures but does not provide much information about precipitation, except in far southern Nevada, where there are slightly elevated chances of a drier than normal spring.
Southern Nevada is likely to remain in drought through June. Resolution of the remaining drought in the rest of the state is likely.
Currently, the indicates normal or below normal chances of major wildfires in the coming months, though spring is not a major fire season in Nevada, anyway. However, wet winters can mean lots of grass and high fire risk at lower elevations.