The text on this site is presented as an archival version of the script of "Ocean Planet," a 1995 Smithsonian Institution traveling exhibition. The content reflects the state of knowledge at the time of the exhibition, and has not been updated.
Bonneville Dam, completed in 1938
Before the 56 Columbia River dams were built for irrigation and
hydroelectric power, 16 million wild salmon swam upriver each
year. Today, streams and tributaries yield only 2.5 million
salmon, most bred in hatcheries §.
photo © Gary Braasch/Woodfin Camp & Associates
San Joaquin/Sacramento Delta, San Francisco Bay
More than a hundred dams and water-diversion systems built to
provide irrigation and reclaim cropland have transformed the
watersheds that feed San Francisco Bay. Water withdrawals have
depleted the San Joaquin River's flow by up to 90 percent §.
Salinity has spread into the delta §. Combined losses of
salmon, striped bass, shad, and other estuarine fisheries have
exceeded $3 billion. Control structures have been built to
reduce the amount of salt water entering the delta.
photo © California Department of Water Resources
Aswan High Dam, Nile River, Egypt, 1983
In the early 1960s Egypt dammed the Nile to generate electricity
and provide year-round irrigation for agriculture §. During
droughts, the Aswan High Dam diverts up to 95 percent of the
Nile's normal water flow, holding back silt §.
The dam has deprived the Nile Delta and Mediterranean shores of
more than 1 million tons of nutrient-rich silt §. Sardine and
shrimp fisheries in the southeastern Mediterranean have declined
sharply.
photo © Robert Caputo
Early in 1993, California and federal authorities imposed a new balance among the water demands on the enormous San Joaquin- Sacramento Delta that feeds fresh water into San Francisco Bay.
San Joaquin/Sacramento Delta, San Francisco Bay
New regulations sharply reduce pumping from the estuary system
during fish migrations.
photo © California Department of Water Resources
Conserving water frees up more water for wildlife. Water- efficient toilets, shower heads, and faucets reduce domestic water consumption--a good thing, since flushing, bathing, and hand-washing use more than three-quarters of the water in a typical American home.
Traditional toilets turned in under a rebate program, Los
Angeles, 1993
Although Los Angeles County spent $100 for each turned-in toilet,
the state will save millions of gallons of water as residents
switch to low-flow toilets that use less than 2 gallons per
flush.
photo © Rick Rickman/National Geographic Society
Subsurface drip irrigation developed by USDA scientist Claude J. Phene
Although drip irrigation systems are expensive to install, they
are a good investment. Farmers have doubled their yield with
only half the water other growers use.
photo © James A. Sugar
Ocean Planet Exhibition Floorplan
gene carl feldman (gene@seawifs.gsfc.nasa.gov) (301) 286-9428