Respiratory within the rain-scrubbed air and absorbing the splendor of Topanga Creek, because it danced and pooled earlier than her eyes, Rosi Dagit needed to smile.
“That is like heaven for a steelhead,” mentioned Dagit, a senior biologist with the Useful resource Conservation District of the Santa Monica Mountains. “If I used to be a steelhead, that is the place I might lay my eggs.”
This winter’s sturdy and protracted rains have revived a creek that, lately amid a punishing drought, had been diminished to a sequence of ponds and puddles. The much-needed water enormously enhances the prospects of replica for the endangered southern steelhead. And it has revived habitat for myriad different species within the Topanga Creek watershed, from a tiny minnow to frogs and newts to the coyotes and mountain lions that roam the canyon.
The persistent storms have helped clear the air in Southern California. The primary 86 days of the 12 months have produced much less air pollution than any time since nice particulate monitoring started in 1999.
(Luis Sinco / Los Angeles Instances)
People share within the watery bounty, as a result of the rocks and sediment washing down Topanga Creek replenish an eroding seashore and bolster a beloved browsing spot. Topanga regulars say the newly configured ocean mattress has reshaped waves, even barely growing the prospect they may catch a tasty little “barrel.”
Dagit makes use of phrases like “fabulous” and “spectacular” to explain the scenes of rebirth and replenishment alongside watersheds that feed into Santa Monica Bay. It’s a sentiment of surprise and reduction repeated round a lot of California in latest weeks, because the wettest winter in latest reminiscence has given approach to a moist spring.
The precipitation that has all however ended the state’s three-year drought has, doubtless, introduced devastation to some areas of the state, leading to catastrophic flooding, mudslides and snowfall that price some Californians their houses, their jobs, even their lives. However in lots of corners of the state which have averted calamity, super-wet 2023 has been a boon.
The state’s largest reservoirs are stuffed to close capability. Groundwater has begun to recharge after years of overpumping. Hillsides have exploded with a profusion of California poppies, sky-blue lupine and different wildflowers. Moisture-starved bushes, together with the state’s signature pines and mighty oaks, seem on the rebound.

A moist winter has fueled a superb explosion of California poppies in Walker Canyon close to Lake Elsinore.
(Allen J. Schaben / Los Angeles Instances)
And the air in Southern California doesn’t simply really feel cleaner, it’s cleaner: The primary 86 days of the 12 months have produced much less air pollution than any time since nice particulate monitoring started in 1999, mentioned the South Coast Air High quality Administration District.
“I simply had a way of reduction — absolute reduction and pleasure — that every one the bushes on this state can be watered,” mentioned Janet Cobb, government officer of the California Wildlife Basis/California Oaks. “Particularly in rural areas, the place the water desk has been so depleted, they’ve lastly had a giant drink!”
And the place oaks are completely happy, so is different wildlife. Analysis has discovered that greater than two-thirds of California’s ingesting water provide is saved in oak woodlands. And almost three dozen vertebrate species depend on oak habitats, many feeding on acorns dropped by the bushes.
A late-March stroll within the hills east of Berkeley revealed oaks, solely not too long ago a steely grey, have turned sharply inexperienced; even the lichen masking their bark appeared refreshed within the morning mist.
Cobb rhapsodized concerning the “clearing of the air” and the acidic scent of damp oaks. “It makes a beautiful perfume. It’s one thing you possibly can’t replicate,” mentioned Cobb, whose group focuses on preserving oak woodlands. “They make a big contribution to our method of being. It’s soul-enriching.”

Angela Moskow, with the group California Oaks, stands alongside a fallen coast stay oak in Berkeley’s Tilden Regional Park. Practically three dozen vertebrate species depend on wholesome oak habitats.
(Paul Kuroda / For The Instances)
The southern steelhead trout that Dagit has labored for many years to bolster just isn’t the one fish benefiting from this 12 months’s repeated rains. The runoff has delivered an enormous load of vegetation and different vitamins to creeks, rivers and lakes. It has additionally eased the watery treks to and from spawning grounds.
In Lake County, simply north of the San Francisco Bay Space, water had been so sparse in mammoth Clear Lake that the inhabitants of hitch — an elongated, silvery minnow that when served as a major meals supply for the Pomo tribe, in addition to space fish and wildlife — had dwindled to dangerously low ranges.
Tributaries into what’s the largest pure lake in California ran so dry final summer time that state Fish and Wildlife officers rescued a number of hundred hitch that grew to become stranded in ponds above the lake. An annual summer time survey of Clear Lake, which usually data a whole lot of hitch, netted simply 4 adults and two juveniles final summer time, mentioned Luis Santana, a fisheries biologist with the Pomo tribe’s Robinson Rancheria. However following the rains, hitch can once more be seen spawning in Clear Lake creeks.
“These storms do carry water to the lake and to the creeks, and that may be a excellent factor,” Santana mentioned.
The trail for spawning salmon additionally might be eased by the surfeit of water.
“Once we’re in drought, it makes it very tough for fish to maneuver upstream and likewise for juvenile salmon making an attempt to get again to the ocean,” mentioned Ted Grantham, a freshwater ecologist and hydrologist with UC Berkeley’s Division of Environmental Science, Coverage and Administration. “All this water ought to clean their method.”
Excessive rivers have additionally created extra overflows into pure and human-made floodplains. The water soaks up vitamins, enriching the waterways. “That creates excellent circumstances for lots of wildlife, together with for fish development,” Grantham mentioned. “Salmon can get fats earlier than transferring out to the ocean and meaning they’re much more healthy and have a greater likelihood for survival.”
“I do really feel a way of reduction,” he added. “These ecosystems are adaptive and attuned to those form of occasions. They’ve regenerative properties.”

Extra water and vegetation alongside the wetlands of the Pacific Flyway imply higher diet and nesting for migratory birds.
(Carolyn Cole / Los Angeles Instances)
Migratory geese, geese and different birds who ply the Pacific Flyway between Canada and factors south are sharing within the reprieve. The drought had considerably diminished wetland acres alongside the flyway lately. Biologists and hunters reported skinny and malnourished birds alongside the essential north-south migratory route.
However already this 12 months, the complicated of wetlands alongside the Sacramento River Nationwide Wildlife Refuge has been promised a full allocation of water from state reservoirs. And 100,000 acres of surrounding farmland are anticipated to renew rice cultivation, including immensely to the forage for migrating birds.
The extra water will permit birds to unfold out alongside the flyway, decreasing the unfold of avian influenza and cholera, mentioned Craig Isola, deputy venture chief within the wildlife refuge complicated. Extra vegetation alongside the wetlands means higher nesting for mallards, northern harrier hawks and different species.
“We’re in a position to put extra contemporary, oxygenated water by the wetlands and that simply means a more healthy ecosystem, throughout,” mentioned Isola, mentioning a bald eagle preening atop a cottonwood tree.
For farmers within the Sacramento Valley, the Central Valley’s largely rural northern half, the watch for enough crop water appeared limitless. In Glenn and Colusa counties, commonplace cultivation of about 100,000 acres of rice fell to only 1,000 acres final 12 months.
“I by no means thought we’d see a day the place we had primarily zero rice,” mentioned Fritz Durst, a sixth-generation grain farmer within the valley. “We bought a little bit little bit of water, but it surely wasn’t a dependable sufficient supply to make an funding within the crop.”
Fellow farmer Don Bransford concurred: “It wasn’t a hearth, such as you had up in Paradise, or it wasn’t a flood. It was an invisible catastrophe, and the one actual visible was naked floor.”

The latest storms have revived habitat for myriad species within the watersheds that feed into Santa Monica Bay.
(Luis Sinco / Los Angeles Instances)
When the primary storms of 2023 inundated different elements of the state, the Sacramento Valley bought a lot much less moisture. Shasta Lake, the state’s largest reservoir, remained properly beneath capability. “We thought, ‘Oh no, not once more,’“ mentioned Lewis Bair, normal supervisor of an irrigation and flood management district serving Colusa and Yolo counties.
Then, as one storm piled on one other, “fortunately, all the things modified,” Bair mentioned.
Jerry Cleek, a nut farmer whose household has been within the area for the reason that 1860s, mentioned: “The bottom is getting saturated, the reservoirs are filling up and by way of the water, we haven’t had any harm to talk of. It’s a great feeling.”
Again at Topanga, almost 500 miles to the south, Dagit and different ecologists have massive plans, together with reconstruction of a Pacific Coast Freeway bridge to present Topanga Creek a better path to the ocean. She referred to as the steelhead a “Subject of Desires” creature: construct a extra accessible waterway and they’re going to come.
“They’re actually a keystone species,” Dagit mentioned. “So if we make it good for steelhead, we make it good for all the things else that should stay in and across the creek, and we make good water high quality for all these folks going to the seashore.”