Tulare Lake, once known as Pa’ashi to the Tachi Yokut tribe, has made a surprising comeback. This rare event shows how a long-gone terminal lake can regain its original basin. It was once the largest freshwater lake west of the Mississippi River until it was drained for agricultural purposes in the late 1800s. By 2023, however, extreme weather and record snowfall in the Sierra Nevada had refilled the basin to more than 100,000 acres. The incident highlighted California’s unpredictable water cycle and pointed out the limitations of modern flood control measures. In addition to impacting the Central Valley’s economy, the lake’s return sparked an ecological renaissance, attracting many migratory birds and renewing indigenous cultural areas.
The Tulare Lake basin is the terminus of the Kings, Kaweah, Tule and White rivers, according to the California Department of Water Resources. Although considered “extinct” due to water diversion and farmland reclamation in the 20th century, the basin remains a natural topographic depression. In 2023, runoff from the Sierra Nevada exceeded the capacity of man-made canals and dams, causing water to follow a natural gravity-driven path back to Ghost Lake.
This re-emergence was driven by a series of “big fill” events triggered by more than a dozen atmospheric rivers. The California Department of Water Resources noted that these storms produced nearly 300% of the normal average snowpack in the southern Sierra Nevada. As the record snowpack melts, it floods the King and Tule river basins, causing ongoing flooding of low-lying agricultural polders in the Tulare lakebed.
Despite the catastrophe to local infrastructure, the resurfaced lake immediately became an important stopover on the Pacific Flyway. Ornithological observations documented tens of thousands of waterbirds nesting in the newly formed wetlands, including American alligators, black-necked stilts, and various species of ducks. This rapid colonization demonstrates the “ecological memory” of the landscape, in which dormant seeds and biological cycles are reactivated upon inundation.
For the Tachiyokut tribe, the return of the lake is the restoration of Paasi. Research shows that the lake was a center of biodiversity and indigenous livelihoods in the region for centuries before it was diverted. The resurgence allowed tribal members to hold traditional ceremonies on the water for the first time in generations, emphasizing that “the lake was never dead,” just suppressed by industrial engineering.
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