“…As the contribution of snowmelt to runoff declines [70], warm season recreation and tourism suffers from low river flows, air quality reductions from local or long-range transport, as well as forest, road, and trail closures from increasingly large and frequent wildfires moving upslope into the seasonal snow zone (Figure 4; [6,23,71]). Snowpack loss over the Great Basin and changing synoptic circulations suggests increasing chances of hot and fire-favoring fall and winter season Santa Ana winds [24,72], which bring forth numerous negative economic and health impacts on large populations [73,74]. Additional reductions in streamflow from major rivers once flowing into the Sacramento-San Joaquin River Delta, particularly during the dry and extended warm season (June-September; [75]) will exacerbate the existing suite of widespread problems arising due to changes in ecosystem health, water quality, water availability and electricity generation [11,76,77].…”