tularebasinwildlifepartners.org
Contact us:
  • Home
  • About
    • How We Work
    • Leadership and Team
    • History
    • Partners
    • Contact
  • Our Work
    • One Watershed Series >
      • OW#1: TB Watershed Intro
      • OW#2: Making Sense of Water
      • OW#3: Groundwater Management
      • OW#4: Native Lands
      • OW#5: Climate Change
      • OW#6: Forest Management
      • OW#7: Flood History
      • OW#8: Environmental Justice
    • Tulare Basin Watershed Initiative >
      • Reports
    • AAAT Project
    • A+A WBL Program
    • Tulare Basin Working Group
    • Conceptual Project List
    • Tulare Basin Regional Conservation Reports >
      • Buena Vista/Kern Lake
      • Goose Lake
      • Sand Ridge/Tulare Lake
      • Riparian & Wildlife Corridor
      • Water Supply Strategies Report
      • Fresno County Corridor Report
      • Tulare County Corridor Report
    • Conservation Toolkit >
      • Land Protection
      • Land Restoration
      • Resources
  • One Watershed
    • Tulare Basin Watershed Connections Collaborative
    • Integrated Regional Water Management >
      • IRWM Plans
    • Sustainable Groundwater Management in the Tulare Basin >
      • Tulare Basin GSAs & GSPs
    • Climate Change Adaptation Solutions >
      • Land Use and Natural Resource Integration
      • Integrated Resource Management
      • Climate Change Adaptation Projects in the Tulare Basin >
        • Conceptual Project List
      • Adaptation & Mitigation News and Legislation
    • Local Rural Community Resources
  • About the Tulare Basin
    • Water >
      • Hydrology
      • History
      • Floods and Droughts in the Tulare Lake Basin
    • Habitats >
      • Herbaceous Plants
      • Shrubs
      • Trees
      • Vernal Pools
    • Species >
      • Wildlife
      • Plants
    • Maps
    • Recreation and Education
    • Glossary of Terms
  • Donate

Water in the Tulare Basin


The Tulare Basin has an astonishing array of natural and man-made water features. From lakes, ponds, sloughs, marshes and vernal pools, to irrigation ditches, pumping structures, canals, and waterways, these water elements provide flood control, groundwater recharge, conveyance, water storage, and habitat. Through its Tulare Basin Watershed Initiative, the Tulare Basin Wildlife Partners work with Integrated Regional Water Management (IRWM) groups and other stakeholders to predict and meet the demand for agricultural, municipal, industrial, and environmental water supply, quality and flood control needs now and into the future. The TBWP is committed to make partnership and develop projects that combine the needs of communities, industry, agriculture, wetlands, and wildlife to meet the long-term sustainable needs of the region.

Read more about the Hydrology and History of water in the Tulare Basin. 

Powered by Create your own unique website with customizable templates.