five

Water availability for cannabis in northern California: intersections of climate, policy, and public discourse

收藏
DataONE2022-04-15 更新2024-06-08 收录
下载链接:
https://search.dataone.org/view/sha256:5070a3ff8858092114418d7e76975311f7039d26a0015e91d46047b4adf45059
下载链接
链接失效反馈
官方服务:
资源简介:
Availability of water for irrigated crops is driven by climate and policy, as moderated by public priorities and opinions. We explore how climate and water policy interact to influence water availability for cannabis (Cannabis sativa), a newly regulated crop in California, as well as how public discourse frames these interactions. Grower access to surface water covaries with precipitation frequency and oscillates consistently in an energetic 11–17 year wet-dry cycle. Assessing contemporary cannabis water policies against historic streamflow data showed that legal surface water access was most reliable for cannabis growers with small water rights (<600 m3) and limited during relatively dry years. Climate variability either facilitates or limits water access in cycles of 10–15 years—rendering cultivators with larger water rights vulnerable to periods of drought. How-ever, news media coverage excludes growers’ perspectives and rarely mentions climate and weather, while public debate over growers’ irrigation water use presumes illegal diversion. This complicates efforts to improve growers’ legal water access, which are further challenged by climate. To promote a socially, politically, and environmentally viable cannabis industry, water policy should better represent growers’ voices and explicitly address stakeholder controversies as it adapts to this new and legal agricultural water user.
创建时间:
2022-04-15
二维码
社区交流群
二维码
科研交流群
商业服务