Because the beaver isn't just an animal; it's an ecosystem!

Month: April 2008


Check out today’s Mark Trail for some advice from very familiar faces. This year he did an entire series about a landowner attempting to remove a pesky beaver dam and failing, only to find that when a fire started on his property the pond provided the only standing water available to put it out. Hmmm. The Earthday message is an excellent reminder that this Saturday is the Friend’s of Alhambra Creek cleanup and any friend of the beavers should naturally be a friend of the creek. At least some members of the council usually make an appearance at these events. Wouldn’t it be very convincing if turnout was double this year, because of the increased interest in the creek? Put on your old sneakers and head down to the Martinez Adult School staging area where you can be put to very good use. The link is to last years clean up but the rules are the same:

9 AM to Noon , Staging at Martinez Adult Education Campus (Alhambra & F Street) – need volunteers to go in teams to drag dumped things out of creeks for City crews to pick up and haul away. Be prepared to get wet & muddy and to have the satisfaction of working with others to clean the creeks. Eligible for community service hours.

Tempted? While we were working on the Birthday-Earthday celebration, I had an excellent conversation with Mark Westwind who organized the Kayak Regatta event. We talked about putting together a volunteer schedule for paddlers to regularly clean the downtown creek. The idea would be to have volunteers sign up for one or two weekends a year, and kayak the creek area picking up trash. Mark had the excellent idea of using a child’s float ring as a trash bin to pull along behind the boat, and storing a skim net somewhere it can be used as well. Bottles, cans and light trash can be easily removed, although heavier items can just be noted for city staff. Although the creek is far too small for sea kayakers, white water boats fit easily in the channel. It might be possible to arrange a loaned boat from some of our local supporters as well.

Details to be worked out would be the exact put-in and take-out sites, and the necessary volunteer waiver with the city, but if the idea of helping out from the water (beavers’-eye-view) interests you, shoot me an email and give some idea of your availability. We should have all the manpower necessary to keep this creek area clean.


Have you checked out the children’s beaver artwork? Our web guru Michael has made these images available as epostcards to send to friends and family. I’m thinking that when children learn to care about the environment everyone’s a winner.This weekend we had several visits to the dam site from out-of-towners. Linda met some adventurers from Carmel who read about the beavers in the chronicle and wanted to see for themselves.

Yesterday I was contacted by Bonnie Eichler who works in Martinez and stopped in to see the beavers after a day of house-hunting. She took these photos of our beavers at the primary day on the evening of 4-19-08. Linda also reported seeing one kit feeding upstream towards starbucks like the old days. The beavers still look like they’re in residence to me, but don’t take my word for it…


At the April 16th meeting the mayor invited Mary Tappel to rebut the subcommittee’s report (and if you haven’t read this morning’s Gazette article about this meeting you really should). Ms. Tappel referred to parts of it as mythology and said that the beavers were moving on because their food source was depleted. She added that 7 of the 7 flow devices she has seen installed have failed because the beavers simply relocated, and she included ours as the eighth. She had clearly visited this website and referred to the picture at the top of the kit eating blackberries as evidence of the food depletion because there was “no nutritional value in blackberries”. She had visited the dam early that morning and determined that the lodge was abandoned and that they had moved downstream. She proposed the city look into one town that had decided to deal with its beavers by keep them in a pit and charging admission.

Ms. Tappel’s history of involvement with beavers is complex at best, but she is certainly no advocate for our beavers. Her resume shows a BS in Botany with graduate coursework in water sciences. She serves part time on the State Waterboard, and has been involved with riparian restoration and beaver management. However, her name intially caught my attention with this quote in the Sacramento Bee, long before I ever knew about beavers in Alhambra Creek.

“But birth control isn’t the answer,” Tappel said. “Where you live-trap the male beaver and sterilize it, it’s complicated and expensive,” she said. “It puts stress on the animal, being captured and removed from the environment and held in captivity while the surgery occurs. What’s more, she said, the population growth resumes in just a few years.”

Aside from the obvious thought that perhaps killing a male in a conibear trap puts stress on the animal too (and if you’ve ever seen the horrific youtube footage showing how this can often mean slow drowning for an animal you know what I’m talking about) but aside from this, the statement about the population growth returning is simply bad science. Is she suggesting that it won’t return if the animals are killed? Would any other expert say that it was possible to successfully kill every single beaver in the area? Would any other expert deny that as the habitat recovers, the population will likely boom?

You may recall that she is the expert who the Gazette quoted on November 24th saying that “beavers breed for 50 years” and that the kits should be relocated at 10 months. This is untrue and unsound and I worked hard to document this in our report, [1],[2],[3]. After these misstatements were challenged she refused to appear before the subcommittee directly and answer questions but returned to meet with staff in private. She advised them, among other things, that as a way to control population, the adult male should be removed so that the mother would be forced to breed with one of her kits eventually.

I had thought that her presentation that night did everything required to discredit her argument, until I saw the substantial reporting by the press that gave weight to her position that the beavers were leaving after having depleted their food supply. This is simply not true and is another example of the media obligingly reporting myths that benefit those who want the beavers gone. Yesterday I spoke with person after person who had heard that news and believed it, so I thought I would address it here at beaver central.

  • Yes the beavers will leave some day, of their own accord, which is what beavers do all the time, but there is no evidence that this is happening now.
  • No, we don’t want to keep ours in a pit and charge admission.
  • Yes, our female is very pregnant and was just photographed working on the lodge.
  • No, beavers are not like the story of the baby Jesus, wandering off looking for a new residence right before delivery.
  • Yes, that particular kit was photograped eating blackberries in the summer at the height of available food season. That beaver just liked them and would go out of his way every day (passing up willow) to eat them.
  • Yes, the beavers have built a secondary dam which is not a “do-over” dam but more like a terrace which gives them greater feeding range.
  • No, the beavers have not run out of food. They are currently eating primarily tulle roots which they pull up, wash and crunch like carrots. Diet variety is essential for beaver health and all the beavers in the Delta survive on tulle because there are few trees. We still have willow for them to take, their coppicing will encourage growth eventually, and other trees can be added as needed through volunteer support. In discussion with Skip Lisle he said that apples and blackberries are a natural food source for beaver, they sometimes enjoy the sweetness. Beavers eat ferns, fennel, acorns, water plants and a wide range of foods besides willow. Check out the area near the secondary dam and you can see how close we are to running out of tulle.

There is a unique value in having a beaver population so entirely accessible that at least 30 people can view their habits every day. When a new behavior is observed, such as the kits building an addition to the lodge as was noted last week, it can be documented and discussed. Ms. Tappel’s observations, however experienced, are simply incorrect, and not relevant to our beavers. They certainly should have no more weight than the reports of the many people who see and photograph them every day.


[1] Steve Boyle & Stephanie Owens (2007) North American Beaver: A technical Conservation Assessment http://www.fs.fed.us/r2/projects/scp/assessments/northamericanbeaver.pdf

[2] Baker, B. W., and E. P. Hill. 2003. Beaver (Castor canadensis). Pages 288-310 in G. A. Feldhamer, B. C. Thompson, and J. A. Chapman, editors. Wild Mammals of North America: Biology, Management, and Conservation. Second Edition. The Johns Hopkins University Press, Baltimore, Maryland, USA.

[3] Collins TC (1976). Population characteristics and habitat relationships of beavers, Castor canadensis, in northwest Wyoming. Unpublished Ph.D. Dissertation, University of Wyoming, Laramie


The beavers were a very popular presence at the John Muir Birthday Earthday Celebration today. We had a prominent display between the national parks inventory and Alhambra Creek. During the day we chatted with an array of beaver supporters and environmentalists. While swapping stories we collected contact information and invited children to do beaver artwork which will be appearing on the web page soon. People reported that distant family had seen our beavers on the news in Nevada, LA, Minnesota, Virginia and Georgia. Animal Portraitist Fro Butler stopped by to demonstrate the painting she is working on based on a photo taken of our beavers. Her artistic talent encouraged a brigade of more than 70 children to enter drawings for the contest. Our youngest artist was only three, and all were interested in the beavers and their story. Besides a collection of photos and a martinez beaver scrapbook, we displayed two large stumps chewed by the beavers. Everyone agreed that beaver dentists must be very well paid. Children were unanimous in their support for the animals; one girl reported the mayor had recently visited her school and said the beavers “might be moved.” She clearly hoped that didn’t happen.

At the days’ end we held a raffle for the Alpha and Omega beaver t-shirts. Congratulations to Alice Barlettani who won the very first shirt designed for the candlelight Vigil back in November, and also to Steve Sokol who won the latest t-shirt distributed at the April 16th meeting. The day was full of happy faces, excellent music, and perfect weather. I hadn’t been out to the Muir site in a while, and I was reminded what a peaceful, natural place it is. Ohh and John Muir himself came over to greet Worth A Dam and said in his lovely Scottish lilt….”Martinez should keep the beavers”.

Aye, Mr. Muir, that we should. Look for children’s artwork soon.


Tomorrow the John Muir site will host a free combination Birthday-Earthday celebration from 10-4. Worth A Dam will be there to raise awareness and support for the Martinez Beavers. There is an obvious link between our local keystone species and the man who changed the way America looked at wilderness/nature forever. Stop by and see our display, talk to our members, and if you missed out on a particular beaver t-shirt, enter a free raffle to win the design of your choice. Children will be encouraged to participate in a beaver art contest, with winning designs posted on the webpage. This year’s event theme is “Healthy Planet: Healthy You” but we think a fine subtitle would read “Healthy Beavers:Healthy Creek”. Worth A Dam will be one of more than 50 booths set up with information and activities for children and adults. Downtown events will include a Kayak regatta and environmental living fair. Look for us and help strenghten the relationship between the John Muir Site and the Martinez Beavers. For more information and a listing of events visit their website. Hope to see you there!

BEAVER FESTIVAL XVI

DONATE

Beaver Alphabet Book

TREE PROTECTION

BAY AREA PODCAST

Our story told around the county

Beaver Interactive: Click to view

LASSIE INVENTS BDA

URBAN BEAVERS

LASSIE AND BEAVERS

Ten Years

The Beaver Cheat Sheet

Restoration

RANGER RICK

Ranger rick

The meeting that started it all

Past Reports

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