Nevada
Tahoe Environmental Observatory Network looks beyond the lake | University of Nevada, Reno
The University of Nevada, Reno, in collaboration with the U.S. Forest Service Pacific Southwest Research Station and the Tahoe Science Advisory Council, is launching the Tahoe Environmental Observatory Network (TEON), a new initiative to better understand the health of the Lake Tahoe watersheds and ecosystems, and make collected data accessible to everyone.
Sudeep Chandra, director of the University of Nevada, Reno’s Global Water Center and Ozmen Institute for Global Studies, and Gina Tarbell, research ecologist with the U.S. Forest Service at the Pacific Southwest Research Station, have been on the project since its inception and are excited about its holistic nature. Both are members of the Tahoe Science Advisory Council.
“A lot of the focus in the past has been on the lake and water quality,” Tarbell said. “In this project, we’re trying to zoom out and look at the forest and how changes to the forest can affect the lake and the watershed of Tahoe altogether.”
This new project looks beyond the lake’s basin to the streams, rivers, wildlife, weather and runoff that impact the lake, giving researchers and policymakers a more complete picture of how to best protect the lake, its famed clarity and its natural ecosystems. To accomplish this, TEON is setting up a grid of data-capturing systems around the lake, creating a network of sensors that update regularly with live information. With this data, researchers can assess conditions and changes in real-time across the covered area, an important tool in understating the health of Lake Tahoe.
“In this network, we use not only high-tech tools that can sense the environment every hour, every minute within the system, but we also make direct observation of ecosystems that have been measured in the past,” Chandra said. “The Tahoe Environmental Observatory Network builds upon previous research projects and monitoring programs. In the past, we established research programs that characterize a baseline of understanding of the watershed down to the lake and lake conditions, over short- and long-term periods. What we’re trying to do now is put in high-frequency sensors to understand environmental change within the systems. For example, we’re putting in game cameras to track when wildlife is present in certain regions. We’re putting in sensors in the water that allow us to understand oxygen and temperature in real-time conditions during different climatic events.”
The network is one of the first of its kind in the area, with sensors collecting wildlife, geographic, watershed and environmental data, allowing for an overarching understanding of lake changes in the past, present and future. To get the most accurate picture of lake conditions, Tarbell’s team is also working to set up sensors that capture effects from urbanization.
“What we are trying to do is set up a monitoring system that can look at the entire basin as a whole,” Tarbell states. “This is difficult because the Tahoe Basin is really different depending on what side of the lake you’re on or what elevation you’re at. We’re trying to create a system that is representative of all these different parts of Tahoe. To do that, we have to set up a grid across many different habitats while also thinking about the sub watersheds, which also need to be represented, because they differ depending on how much urbanization there is or what kind of habitats they are in. Those factors have impacts on water quality and the lake as a whole.”
As data streams in from TEON, researchers will be able to make the most timely and accurate assessments of current conditions in the Lake Tahoe Basin and compare it to data sets from the past to understand implications for the future. Already, with initial data, scientists like Tarbell and Chandra have confirmed past research showing ecosystem changes, including a diminishing old-growth forest, fluctuating water temperatures and inconsistent loads of nutrients in the water, potentially affected by climate change and general urbanization of the basin. The development of TEON is contributing to a pool of current data that could help predict future changes, allowing scientists and policymakers to address issues before they affect Lake Tahoe.
A Successful Collaboration
Unique to the project is its basin-wide multi-organizational collaboration. The group is notably interdisciplinary, with partners including the U.S. Forest Service Lake Tahoe Basin Management Unit, California Tahoe Conservancy, Tahoe Regional Planning Agency, Nevada Division of State Lands, California State Parks, Tahoe Institute for Natural Sciences, Tahoe Fire and Fuels Team, Biologist Interagency Group and the Tahoe Fund. The organizations’ interest in the data network range from using it for scientific study, for enhancing climate adaptation and for policy creation in the Lake Tahoe Basin.
“The University of Nevada, Reno at Lake Tahoe is a strategic partner in implementing the Tahoe Environmental Observatory Network,” Chandra said. “We utilize the campus along with our collaborations with the U.S. Forest Service Pacific Southwest Research Station as our home base, and we’re trying to implement this program right here in Tahoe so it can be utilized as a model for understanding environmental change in other ecosystems.”
This collaborative project is a multi-organizational approach to understanding and preparing for climate changes in the Lake Tahoe Basin. The impetus to create this network stemmed from a need for interdisciplinary partnership, which is crucial in caring for the ecosystem of the lake while also protecting its economies and cultures. With these groups working together, the network can focus on questions important to climate change mitigation efforts.
“We live in a dynamic world,” Chandra stated. “We have shifting climate, the introduction of species in the lake, wildfires that come through. Our goals are to try to understand and link how these extreme events would change forest structure, animal behavior and eventually the water quality in the lake. We expect to learn about the resilience of Lake Tahoe and the streams and watersheds when there are these environmental perturbations. We are asking questions like when do these changes last for a long time? Or maybe when do we see immediate recovery?”
Most unique to this program is that the data collected will be open for public use on a user-friendly website. Avid birders, for example, other scientists, policymakers and interested community members will be encouraged to use this as a resource for planning and to spark curiosity about the Lake Tahoe ecosystem.
“We plan to put everything in a database that is available online,” Tarbell said. “The general public, scientists, researchers and managers in the basin and other areas can access that data and use it to inform their own research or management decisions. For example, we’re going to be taking wildlife photos at camera stations and recording birdsong so that we can identify the bird community in the area.”
For those who have been connected to the lake their whole lives, to communities who depend on it as a resource, and for those who have found their connection to nature by spending time outside, the protection of Lake Tahoe is imperative. TEON serves as an example of innovation in scientific data collection and successful interdisciplinary collaboration between The University of Nevada, Reno, U.S. Forest Service Pacific Southwest Research Station and partners within the Tahoe Science Advisory Council. The hope is that this project can mitigate the harmful effects of climate change before they occur.
“I think understanding the effects of climate change is the most important thing we can do right now,” Tarbell said. “We need to know what has happened and be able to better predict what will happen so that we can ensure that we have these forests and this beautiful lake forever.”
Nevada
Gas prices climb in northern Nevada amid tensions in the Middle East
$3.99 on Sunday, $4.09 just days later.
An extra dime for the same gallon of gas, but why?
Conflict in the Middle East has impacted prices at the pump for drivers here in northern Nevada and across the country.
According to AAA, the national average for a gallon of gas has jumped nearly 27 cents since last week, coming in at $3.25. In Reno, the average price is roughly $4.26.
Experts say for every $5 to $10 increase in oil prices, drivers could pay 15 to 25 cents more per gallon.
The increase primarily comes down to the Strait of Hormuz, a narrow waterway between Iran and Oman, which controls roughly 20% of the world’s oil supplies. Amid the tensions, traffic through the area has recently ground to a halt.
Michael Goldman, General Manager of Caru Containers North America, said many of the shippers who typically go through the Strait have changed course.
“We’re seeing the routes ships need to take be much longer, much more costly. Going around the Horn of Africa instead of going through the Strait of Hormuz and the Red Sea. And we’re definitely seeing cost increases to those carriers to make those journeys,” said Goldman.
Jayce Robinson from Sparks said he’s always looking for the best deal in town on gas.
“I mostly fill up here for work, so it’s not my money, but when I do fill up, I definitely look for the cheapest place because money’s tight and gas is expensive,” Robinson said.
Nevada
10-month-old found safe, North Las Vegas police cancel AMBER Alert
LAS VEGAS (KSNV) — Authorities have canceled an AMBER Alert after they say a 10-month-old child taken by a non-custodial parent was found safe.
North Las Vegas Police said Thursday that Leilani Williams (aka Leilani Duke) was taken by her father, Roderick Duke.
Duke and Leilani were last seen at an apartment complex in the area of Martin L. King Boulevard and Cheyenne Avenue at 1:40 a.m.
“An AMBER Alert has been activated due to Roderick being in emotional crisis and making threats to harm himself and 10-month-old Leilani,” NLVPD said in a statement.
By 10:05 a.m., NLVPD said that Leilani was located unharmed.
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Officers took Duke into custody without further incident, and the AMBER Alert has been canceled.
Nevada
California Gov. Gavin Newsom speaks to Nevada Democrats in Las Vegas
California Gov. Gavin Newsom addressed Nevada Democrats who packed a Las Vegas brewery Wednesday evening for a discussion about his upbringing, his political life and efforts his state has taken to combat the Trump administration agenda.
Newsom, who has been floated as a possible White House contender for 2028, sidestepped a quip from former Nevada Gov. Steve Sisolak who introduced him as the next U.S. president amid cheers from the crowd.
“I’m very grateful for your friendship, and a friendship that’s only strengthened over the course of the last year or so,” Newsom told Sisolak.
Book tour stop
The event, which served as a book tour stop for the California governor, was organized by the Nevada Democratic Party. It took place at Nevada Brew Works near Summerlin.
Nevada Assemblymember Daniele Monroe-Moreno, the state party chair running for North Las Vegas mayor, moderated the discussion.
It was part of the party’s Local Brews + National Views series that’s been bringing Democrats for similar discussions at intimate venues. Past speakers have included former President Joe Biden, Arizona U.S. Sen. Mark Kelly, and Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker.
Criticizing President Donald Trump, Newsom spoke about the immediate aftermath of the 2024 general election.
“We were handwringing, a lot of finger pointing, and a sense of weakness,” Newsom said. “And just incapable of dealing with this moment, this existential moment.”
He said he is taking account for what he described as his own complicity.
“This happened on my watch. This is all happening on our watch,” Newsom said. “And so I realized that I needed to be better.”
That included his advocacy to redraw California’s Congressional map after Trump called for the same in Texas, he said.
“They’re not screwing around, nor are we,” he said about Trump and his administration. “All of us.”
‘You’re giving us a voice’
Newsom spoke out against the surge of federal immigration enforcement operations in California and later Minnesota, calls from the Trump administration to nationalize elections, and cuts to government funding due to the One, Big, Beautiful Bill Act.
He said that pushback against Trump’s policies, including dozens of lawsuits filed by California, were making the president retreat on some of his proposals and policies.
“You’re filling the void, you’re giving us a voice, you’re giving us courage,” he told the crowd. “For things to change, we have to change. And it’s changing.”
The Republican National Committee reacted to Newsom’s Las Vegas visit. Earlier in the day, Newsom attended a private Boulder City event.
“Democrats are selling out to the spoiled, phony rich kid governor from California for years,” RNC spokesperson Nick Poche wrote in a statement. “President Donald Trump and Republicans are delivering major tax cuts and keeping Nevadans safe, unlike Democrats.”
The national Republican Party also criticized California’s policies, and tied them back to Nevada Democrats.
Most of Newsom’s remarks weren’t specific to Nevada. He didn’t take any questions from media.
Polling shows Newsom and Vice President JD Vance leading in hypothetical races for their parties’ nomination. That includes a survey of likely Nevada voters conducted one by Emerson College Polling in November.
Contact Ricardo Torres-Cortez at rtorres@reviewjournal.com. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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