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California Water Today 131 <br /> to deal with daily crises,have no program for coordinated development of net- <br /> works that better account for and analyze water movement and management." <br /> Without this information, successful adaptation to changing conditions will <br /> be hindered or foreclosed. <br /> Costs of"Combat"Science <br /> The failure to organize, integrate, and fund robust science and technical pro- <br /> grams to support decisionmaking imposes a high cost on California.The lack of <br /> strong,coherent governmental scientific and technical programs has provoked <br /> efforts to attack or augment(depending on one's perspective)existing govern- <br /> mental and academic scientific and technical conclusions. Weak government <br /> scientific programs contribute to the proliferation of"combat" science—the <br /> selective development and presentation of facts and analysis primarily for the <br /> political or regulatory advantage (or disadvantage) of one stakeholder group <br /> or agency. When the National Research Council (2004) was asked to review <br /> the biological opinions governing the operations of the Klamath Project, the <br /> authors of the report were struck by the amount of combat science on the <br /> basin and how little trust existed in the science being used to make decisions <br /> (Doremus and Tarlock 2008). <br /> The recent dust-up over the role of ammonium in the decline of delta smelt is <br /> another example.For several years,concern existed in the scientific community <br /> over ammonium in the Delta and its potential to disrupt food webs on which <br /> native fish depend. Consultants were hired to help the Sacramento Regional <br /> County Sanitation District with press releases and studies claiming that <br /> although they are the primary source of ammonium in the Delta,the ammo- <br /> nium poses no problem and the Delta's problems are from downstream water <br /> exports(www.sresd.com).To counter this combat science,a coalition of water <br /> contractors, led by the Metropolitan Water District of Southern California, <br /> funded a researcher from the University of Maryland with no experience in the <br /> Delta who drew a sharply different conclusion,suggesting that the ammonium <br /> was the cause of the decline of delta smelt and that the exporters were blameless <br /> 61. Data-collection efforts are typically fragmented and incomplete.For example,the SWRCB collects annual water <br /> use reports from surface water right-holders,but these often bear little relation to actual volumes used,and the exercise <br /> neglects groundwater users and many riparian and pre-1914 surface water rights holders.Regional water quality control <br /> boards collect a substantial volume of water quality data,but there is little synthesis that would enable the use of these <br /> data in basin management.Similarly,DWR had a wide range of data-collection and assessment activities but lacks a <br /> coherent technical organization that would allow such data to inform or guide integrated water management at regional <br /> or statewide scales. <br />