Great Salt Lake-The Largest Saltwater Lake in the Western Hemisphere is at risk.

Wilson's Phalaropes on the Great Salt Lake

Increased water demand from a growing Utah population, in combination with decreasing river flows—a symptom of drought and changing climate—has degraded ecosystems in and around Great Salt Lake, a critical stopover point for migrating birds in an arid landscape.

Great Salt Lake, with its five globally Important Bird Areas, is drying up. Less water means fewer wetlands and the elimination of vital bird habitat, increased salt content threatening the food supply for birds in the lake, and, in several situations, vast areas of dry lakebed, exposing dust that impact neighboring communities.

In the face of this predicament, water leaders and policymakers are being forced to systematically rethink how water is used and managed in the West, and figure out how to do more with less. As these new water-sharing plans are hammered out, it’s critically important that the water needs of birds and other wildlife aren’t just carved out of the new agreements that emerge, but are built into them from the start.

With Audubon’s expertise in both Western water policy and conservation science, we are uniquely positioned to identify long-term water-management solutions that will secure a reliable water supply for Great Salt Lake and for the birds, businesses, and Utahns that depend on it. >>>READ MORE>>>

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