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The Great Basin Desert Research Paper

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When thinking of a desert, one would think of a large, dry, and sandy area like the Sahara Desert. The Great Basin Desert is different because it is a cold desert. A cold desert is completely different from the typical desert with average temperatures of 55-57 degrees Fahrenheit in summer, and in winter it averages around 4 degrees Fahrenheit. Cold deserts will normally have much more water. Water is the lifeline of The Great Basin Desert (Pellant), which is a good thing and a bad thing. The term “basin” is used with the meaning no water from the ocean ever reaches this region (National Park Service). Water rights to the Great Basin Desert have been a problem for a long time and with the risk of water loss and risk of losing groundwater.
The …show more content…

The ranchers have also been trying to buy rights to this land. Despite every offer, over the past three years, the owners have been claiming that the land is not for sale. They want to install a pipeline 306 miles long (Grange). Where they want to install this pipeline is home to many livestock, fish, and nature. Animals in this area include water shrew, yellow-bellied marmot, beaver, sagebrush vole, porcupine, bighorn sheep, pygmy rabbit, ringtail cat, and many more. During the process of building this pipeline, it could destroy or affect many animal’s homes and move or remove parts of nature in that area such as tree roots, plants, and soil. “This project is seen as a threat by Indian tribes and rural communities and is expected to do immense damage to many rare endemic species, desert vegetation, and the land itself, much of what is open range” (Carter). The price of the construction is estimated to cost anywhere from $3.5 billion to $15 billion …show more content…

“Change in the timing and amount of stream flows and spring and seep discharges will affect a wide range of wildlife species, livestock, and wild horses and burros. Water availability from these sources could dry up earlier in the summer as a result of the early melt of the snowpack causing increased competition for water and forage across the landscape. Pipelines and troughs installed by BLM and livestock permits that provide water for livestock, wild horses, and wildlife species over tens of millions of acres may have a reduced capacity to meet these needs” (Pellant). “The Great Basin Desert is home to more than 77,000 mountainous acres of land, 5 distinctive habitats, 71 different kinds of mammals, 18 types of reptiles, and 800 different plant species” (Grange). With all this changing it will be difficult for the desert’s water to meet animal and nature’s needs for life. One animal this has an effect on is the Bull Trout an endangered fish and facing extinction in this desert

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