Climate Change: Visitor Experience

Yosemite National Park is a refuge not just for wildlife, but for visitors from California and across the world. Many people arrive seeking towering waterfalls, iconic views, majestic sequoia groves, outdoor recreation, or the promise of undisturbed wilderness. Global climate change is already impacting many of these experiences, and the coming years will bring further shifts.

 
Photograph of tall waterfall pouring down granite cliff. Photograph of tall waterfall pouring down granite cliff.

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Yosemite Falls is fed by snowmelt, and typically reaches peak flow in April or May and is dry by August.

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Decreasing snowpack and warmer spring temperatures may cause the falls to dry up by late spring.


A Shortening Window for Waterfalls

Many of Yosemite’s iconic waterfalls, including Yosemite Falls, Vernal Fall, Nevada Fall, and Horsetail Fall, are fed almost entirely by snowmelt. Models project that by the end of the century, Sierra Nevada snowpack may drop by nearly two thirds, while snowmelt may arrive up to a month earlier. Waterfalls are likely to dwindle over the coming years, reaching peak flow during heavy winter rainstorms rather than spring snowmelt. Cliffs may be largely dry by the time July crowds arrive in Yosemite Valley, changing the experience of visiting the park in summer.

 
Tourists stand in front of smoke-obscured viewpoint
Yosemite Valley is obscured by smoke from the Creek Fire in 2020. Smoke is likely to block vistas and limit outdoor recreation more regularly as wildfire season lengthens in California.

Smoke and Visibility

Wildfire and smoke are natural parts of summer and fall in the Sierra Nevada. However, recent decades have brought increased fire activity across the western US. In Yosemite, the annual burned area has quadrupled since the 1970s, while fire season has lengthened by over two months. There is a strong correlation between low snowpack and high fire activity in the park, and declines in snowpack are likely to lead to more fire over the coming decades. Smoky air and obscured views may become more common during more of the year, degrading visibility of Yosemite’s iconic features. Inhaling smoke can also impact people’s health and limit outdoor recreation.

Hiking, Climbing, and Skiing

Most outdoor recreation in Yosemite is seasonal. Downhill skiers await winter’s first big storm before hitting the slopes at Badger Pass, while hikers anticipate the spring snowmelt and opening of Tioga Road for access to Yosemite’s vast high country. Climate change may widen some windows of opportunity while narrowing others, recalibrating the timetable of outdoor adventure.

The park currently experiences around 14 days of 90°F-plus temperatures a year; this may double by 2050 and approach 50 days by 2100. Long stretches of hot weather may pose new challenges for strenuous hiking, backpacking, and climbing in exposed areas. At the same time, shrinking snowpack is likely to leave high country creeks and water sources dry earlier in the year. The Lyell Fork of the Tuolumne River, an important water source for backpackers on the John Muir and Pacific Crest Trails, is especially vulnerable due to being glacially fed. Without the Lyell and Maclure Glaciers, the waterway stands to lose up to 90% of its late-season flow in some years.

However, as the window narrows for late-season backpacking, it may expand for early-season wilderness travel. Trails and high-elevation roads may be snow-free and passable earlier in the spring. The same shrinking snowpack that expands springtime opportunities may limit winter travel; backcountry skiers and snowshoers are already encountering melting snow bridges and multiplying stream crossings. The season for downhill skiing at Badger Pass may also narrow.

 
People on a boardwalk look up at large sequoia trees.

Threatened Sequoias

Yosemite protects three groves of giant sequoias, out of around 75 known to exist. Sequoias are symbols of resilience and longevity, with mature trees surviving thousands of years of changing conditions. Historically, the main cause of death for giant sequoias has been occasional toppling during storms. During and after California’s historic drought of 2012–16, however, dozens of mature trees in Sequoia and Kings Canyon National Parks and several in Yosemite’s Mariposa Grove died of beetle infestation and climate-linked drought stress. As coming years bring warmer temperatures and declining water availability from snowpack, researchers fear more mature sequoias could be lost. Unlike other natural communities altered by climate change, the sheer age of giant sequoias means that lost trees cannot be restored or replaced for thousands of years. For over a million people that visit Yosemite’s sequoias each year, these ancient trees can inspire a sense of awe and wonder; climate change threatens our ability to preserve this experience for coming generations.

Wilderness

Some people come to Yosemite specifically to find solitude. Nearly 95% of the park is protected under the Wilderness Act, which defines wilderness as “an area where the earth and its community of life are untrammeled by man … which is protected and managed so as to preserve its natural conditions.” However, even in landscapes far removed from human development and presence, climate change is having widespread and lasting impacts. As warming temperatures produce shifts in snowpack, fire patterns, water availability, and natural communities, the meaning of a “wilderness experience” may shift as well.

Park Visitation

As summers warm in California’s urban areas, more residents may seek to beat the heat by heading up into the mountains. Historically, warmer weather has reliably meant larger crowds: researchers can predict monthly visitation with 99% accuracy based on temperature alone. Based on future climate estimates, annual visitation may rise 8–29% by mid-century. However, the same rising temperatures that boost visitation may impact the vistas, waterfalls, and experiences that many people arrive seeking; ultimately, it is impossible to predict how large future crowds may be.

 
El Capitan rises through smoke from a wildfire
Climate Change in Yosemite

What does it mean to conserve and protect a place during a time of large-scale environmental change?

A volunteer team in reflective vests pulls thistles from a sunny meadow in front of cliffs.
How is the park responding?

Yosemite serves as a unique living laboratory for climate scientists and a center for teaching, learning, and connection.

Two passengers board a blue YARTS bus.
What can we do?

Simple choices can change the environmental impact of your trip to Yosemite. How can we shrink the carbon footprint we leave behind?

 

Last updated: January 17, 2024

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