Utah Public Radio (UPR)
Legendary angler gives plenty of reasons to protect the 'best' river in the world
September 19th 2024 by Sheri Quinn / Utah Public Radio (UPR)
Fly fishing is Emmett Heath's heaven and the Green River is his god. Heath got hooked on angling as a young teen while fishing with his father in Utah. It became more than a past-time or a sport and...
Audio: Researchers create a new tool to inform about post-2026 Colorado River management
September 19th 2024 by Erin Lewis / Utah Public Radio (UPR)
Over 40 million people in seven states in the southwestern U.S. rely on the Colorado River. It provides water for crops that feed the entire country. A management plan helps govern how the water is us...
Researchers look to expand restoration efforts within Green River tributaries
September 12th 2024 by Erin Lewis / Utah Public Radio (UPR)
Utah researchers are working to restore Green River tributaries with a host of strategies including reintroducing beavers and removing invasive plants. There have been significant changes to ecosyst...
Audio: How a business, water district, and farm are sending water to Great Salt Lake
August 26th 2024 by Erin Lewis / Utah Public Radio (UPR)
Water conservation efforts across the state have increased over recent years. We visited a business, a farm, and a water district, all utilizing strategies that will save water and benefit Great Salt...
Audio: A group of women come together through rafting Western rivers
August 21st 2024 by Erin Lewis and Sheri Quinn / Utah Public Radio (UPR)
There is a group of women who have come together each year for decades to raft western rivers. Zan Merrill is one of those women. “Rivers are so enchanting. They're so all encompassing. When you're fl...
Wild About Utah: An auto tour of the Bear River Migratory Bird Refuge
July 1st 2024 by Emily Calhoun / Utah Public Radio (UPR)
I recently drove through the Bear River Migratory Bird Refuge Auto Route Tour alongside Sheri Quinn and Colleen Meidt. Come along with us as we weave around the wetlands of Great Salt Lake with prime...
Box Elder farmers shared concerns at the first Great Salt Lake Roadshow
June 28th 2024 by Katie White / Utah Public Radio (UPR)
Utah lawmakers are asking for ideas about managing the Great Salt Lake. UPR’s Katie White attended the first ever Great Salt Lake Road Show where Utah farmers voiced concern about proposed water conse...
The surprising history and sexualization of Great Salt Lake's brine shrimp
May 28th 2024 by Emily Calhoun / Utah Public Radio (UPR)
Jaimi Butler started her career as the only woman on a brine shrimp harvesting rig on Great Salt Lake. Butler has since made a name for herself as a Great Salt Lake scientist, an advocate, writer, and...
Utah teens are 'going global' to save salty lakes
May 13th 2024 by Sheri Quinn / Utah Public Radio (UPR)
In its first year, the Youth Coalition for Great Salt Lake, comprised of about 15 high school and college age students, has accomplished a lot. They are working with organizations and lake stakeholder...
Audio: Here's why you will be hearing a lot more about the Colorado River
May 10th 2024 by Sheri Quinn / Utah Public Radio (UPR)
The Colorado River, considered the lifeblood of the southwest, is so depleted that it no longer reaches the ocean. It supplies water to more than 40 million people, including two million residents alo...
Climate change could reduce Great Salt Lake's biodiversity
April 2nd 2024 by Erin Lewis / Utah Public Radio (UPR)
The Friends of Merrill-Crazier Library hosted David Parrott, associate professor of biology at Westminster University and assistant director of Great Salt Lake Institute, as their spring 2024 speaker...
Collaborative panel and film screening asks, 'Is Great Salt Lake a Person?'
March 4th 2024 by Erin Lewis / Utah Public Radio (UPR)
UPR hosted an event on Tuesday with Bridgerland Audubon Society and Grow the Flow called “Is Great Salt Lake a Person?” The event brought 90 community members to Cache Bar in Logan. A screening of a...
Farmers fear fallow fields
November 16th 2023 by Sheri Quinn / Utah Public Radio (UPR)
Utah program pays farmers to fallow crops and it’s saving a little bit of water for the Colorado River. Whether it should be a solution for Great Salt Lake is still a thorny issue with ripple effects...
Great Salt Lake rally brings Native and youth voices to Utah’s Capitol Hill
November 16th 2023 by Aimee Van Tatenhove / Utah Public Radio (UPR)
“We were born in water. We were delivered in water. We know what water is. Water sustained us from conception, and water sustains us as we go throughout life.” Goshute chair Virgil Johnson shared the...
Audio: How Utah seeks to improve ag water optimization accountability
November 10th 2023 by Sheri Quinn / Utah Public Radio (UPR)
Utah is spending more than $200 million to get agriculture to switch to water saving technologies. But is the saved water getting to the Great Salt Lake? Listen to the UPR story here.
Audio: Agricultural community turns to optimization
November 10th 2023 by Sheri Quinn / Utah Public Radio (UPR)
Utah program helps farmers grow crops with less water. Is it helping the Great Salt Lake? Listen to the UPR story here.
Cache Valley's unique karst geology makes water monitoring a necessity
September 20th 2023 by Erin Lewis / Utah Public Radio (UPR)
Parts of Cache Valley are surrounded by mountains with geologic layers that have dissolved enough to create sinkholes, caves and springs among other porous geologic features. This is generally referre...
SLC Council addresses environmental justice issues of Northpoint development
September 7th 2023 by Aimee Van Tatenhove / Utah Public Radio (UPR)
The Salt Lake City Council convened Tuesday to discuss a development plan for the 1500 acre Northpoint neighborhood at the southeastern tip of Great Salt Lake. The neighborhood, which currently has no...
Reporter interview: American White Pelican colony abandons Great Salt Lake nesting site
July 21st 2023 by Erin Lewis / Utah Public Radio (UPR)
Aimee Van Tatenhove is a science reporter at UPR, who has largely focused on Great Salt Lake issues. However she has even greater ties to the lake ecosystem as a PhD student in the Wildland Resources...
Utah's migratory shorebird surveys started up again after a 30-year hiatus and so far, numbers remain comparable
July 6th 2023 by Erin Lewis / Utah Public Radio (UPR)
Utah is home to a number of water bodies that serve as endpoints or stopover sites for migratory shorebirds on their long seasonal journeys. Three decades ago, biologists conducted shorebird surveys...
Great Salt Lake wildlife mural bridges continents through migratory birds
July 5th 2023 by Aimee Van Tatenhove / Utah Public Radio (UPR)
A new mural at the Eccles Wildlife Education Center in Farmington Bay is connecting people across the Americas through migratory birds. The mural, which depicts plants and animals found around Great...
Salt Lake City residents can now easily track their water use
June 29th 2023 by Erin Lewis / Utah Public Radio (UPR)
Salt Lake City's utility service is rolling out a water management analysis and planning software — otherwise known as waterMAPS — to residents. It can be used to track water use, and is a useful tool...
Growing Water Smart workshop encourages collaboration on water conservation
June 15th 2023 by Erin Lewis / Utah Public Radio (UPR)
Utah Growing Water Smart is a program that hosts workshops put on by four major organizations: the Utah Division of Water Resources, Babbitt Center for Land and Water Policy, Western Resource Advocate...
Great Salt Lake commissioner explains why Utahns should avoid 'Great Salt Lake fatigue'
May 31st 2023 by Heather May / Utah Public Radio (UPR)
Brian Steed has a big job ahead of him, if the Utah Legislature confirms his new role as Great Salt Commissioner. If so, his official work overseeing the rescue of Great Salt Lake could start as early...
This winter's record snowfall is making its way to Great Salt Lake
May 11th 2023 by Erin Lewis / Utah Public Radio (UPR)
Ecoflights is an Aspen, Colorado based nonprofit that provides a big picture perspective on changing landscapes across the West. They take scientists, activists, legislators, community members and pre...
Looking to Israel to help save the Great Salt Lake on Tuesday's Access Utah
May 11th 2023 by Tom Williams / Utah Public Radio (UPR)
Fox 13 reporter Ben Winslow recently traveled to Israel with a delegation of Utah leaders. He wrote this for the Great Salt Lake Collaborative: “One of the driest countries in the world, Israel once s...
Great Salt Lake is a 'pit stop' for 12 million birds
April 20th 2023 by Anna Johnson / Utah Public Radio (UPR)
The wetlands of Great Salt Lake host 12 million birds — over 300 different species — every year as they migrate along the Pacific Flyway. “It’s kind of like a gas station on a road trip for birds,”...
USU landscape architecture students are 'All Hands on Deck' to save Great Salt Lake
April 20th 2023 by Max McDermott / Utah Public Radio (UPR)
On Friday, USU’s landscape architecture seniors are presenting their capstone projects under the theme of “All Hands on Deck,” an effort aimed at saving the Great Salt Lake. The students have formulat...
Reporting Project: Great Salt Lake Wetlands
April 11th 2023 by Aimee Van Tatenhove / Utah Public Radio (UPR)
The Great Salt Lake Collaborative has created an interactive website to help Utahns understand the critical role Great Salt Lake and its wetlands play in the ecosystem that is crucial to 10 million bi...
Ambitious initiatives and shorebirds connect two saline lakes hemispheres apart
March 9th 2023 by Aimee Van Tatenhove / Utah Public Radio (UPR)
Laguna Mar Chiquita is a large saline lake in central Argentina. Much like Great Salt Lake, Mar Chiquita hosts millions of migratory birds each year, and has faced fluctuating water levels, pollution...
Bear River Massacre site commemorates 160th anniversary with ambitious restoration plans
January 27th 2023 by Aimee Van Tatenhove / Utah Public Radio (UPR)
Over 150 years ago, the United States Army attacked and killed as many as 500 Shoshone men, women and children in Northern Cache Valley. The attack resulted in one of the largest slaughters of Native...
Shorebird population health tied to saline lakes across western hemisphere
January 8th 2023 by Aimee Van Tatenhove / Utah Public Radio (UPR)
Wilson’s phalaropes are small, salt-loving shorebirds that migrate thousands of miles between distant saline lakes in South America, and those in our own backyard, like Great Salt Lake. New research s...
You can still have an “oasis” in the desert
November 8th 2022 by Sheri Quinn / Utah Public Radio (UPR)
Removing all high-water-use plants is not the panacea in times of rising temperatures and droughts across the southwest, according to a new study. Deadly flooding of the Indus River in Pakistan bac...
Great Salt Lake's only North-South opening modified to control salinity
November 2nd 2022 by Max McDermott / Utah Public Radio (UPR)
Union Pacific’s Great Salt Lake Causeway is a 20-mile railroad crossing that physically separates the lake into North and South arms. The only opening in the causeway is a 160 ft wide gap called the W...
Monthly Utah Clean Air Caucus meeting focuses on Great Salt Lake
September 26th 2022 by Aimee Van Tatenhove / Utah Public Radio (UPR)
This month’s Utah Clean Air Caucus meeting focused on Great Salt Lake, and the role it plays in Utah’s air quality. Craig Miller, the manager at the Utah Division of Water Resources, gave an update...
Increasing Great Salt Lake salinity predicted to impact Utah brine shrimp
September 26th 2022 by Aimee Van Tatenhove / Utah Public Radio (UPR)
New research suggests that as Great Salt Lake shrinks and gets saltier, brine shrimp, a staple food for migrating birds and a boon to Utah’s economy, may be in danger of dramatic population declines...
Flyover of Great Salt Lake underscores the environmental challenges it faces
August 10th 2022 by Aimee Van Tatenhove / Utah Public Radio (UPR)
An environmental nonprofit is offering Utahns a new perspective on the challenges facing Great Salt Lake, by giving them a bird's eye view of its shrinking shoreline, as dry conditions and human water...
New online one-stop-shop for all things Great Salt Lake
August 9th 2022 by Sheri Quinn / Utah Public Radio (UPR)
The Great Salt Lake Hydro Mapper is a user-friendly webpage with information about what’s happening with Great Salt Lake in real-time, like the water and salinity levels and most importantly, what’s h...
New irrigation research and tech helps Utah farmers produce food and save water
August 3rd 2022 by Sheri Quinn / Utah Public Radio (UPR)
Matt Yost is a Utah State University professor in Plants, Soils & Climate and USU Extension specialist. He knows farming first-hand. He grew up on a dairy farm in Burley Idaho. “My father still oper...
Utah releases third chapter of state water action plan
July 27th 2022 by Aimee Van Tatenhove / Utah Public Radio (UPR)
Utah Governor Spencer Cox released the third chapter of Utah’s Coordinated Action Plan for Water on Wednesday, which aims to balance water conservation, agriculture and state growth. The Action Plan...
An Antelope Island vigil raises awareness for the Great Salt Lake
February 22nd 2022 by Aimee Van Tatenhove / Utah Public Radio (UPR)
Drought and water diversions have been draining Great Salt Lake for decades, generating concern about the waterbody and its impacts on humans and wildlife. This past weekend, a group gathered at Antel...
A brine shrimp bid for Utah’s state crustacean
February 1st 2022 by Aimee Van Tatenhove / Utah Public Radio (UPR)
Brine shrimp are an abundant crustacean in Great Salt Lake, providing a critical source of food for migratory birds, and brine shrimp eggs are sold across the world as feed for aquaculture facilities,...
Salt Lake middle schoolers are taking brine shrimp to a new level
February 1st 2022 by Aimee Van Tatenhove / Utah Public Radio (UPR)
A group of Utahns are looking to get brine shrimp named as Utah’s state crustacean. The idea started with a student at Westminster College, but an aspiring sixth grade class in Salt Lake City is doing...
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