Water Smarts Podcast

Warm Springs Natural Area: Playing a role in our water resource story and history

September 21, 2021 Southern Nevada Water Authority Season 1 Episode 16
Water Smarts Podcast
Warm Springs Natural Area: Playing a role in our water resource story and history
Show Notes

Located an hour north of Las Vegas, the Warm Springs Natural Area (WSNA) is an oasis in the Mojave Desert that has provided shelter to people and wildlife for centuries. The site has more than two dozen springs that feed into the Muddy River, which flows into Lake Mead. The WSNA is home to 28 endangered, threatened and sensitive species, including the Moapa dace which are found nowhere else in the world but in the WSNA’s warm, spring-fed waters. Zane Marshall, the director of Water Resources for the Southern Nevada Water Authority (SNWA), talks about why the springs are an important part of Southern Nevada’s watershed, what SNWA is doing to protect the area, and how biologists protect the tiny Moapa dace to ensure their population health on episode 16 of the Water Smarts Podcast.