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

Month: April 2009


Of Not Voting on the fate of the beavers, Martinez City Council! And Happy Anniversary of saying the beavers were leaving any moment, Mary Tappel. It’s been a heckuva year.

Happy Anniversary! It’s been a year since the city of Martinez heard the report delivered by the beaver subcommittee, and a year since the city’s “expert” reported that the lodge was abandoned and the beavers were leaving the habitat. During that time Martinez enjoyed a beaver festival, beaver presentations at the elementary and High Schools, and the publication of a beaver book. Worth A Dam has lectured at the Audubon Society, the Sierra Club, and will be teaching a class for Wild Birds Unlimited. In twelve months Worth A Dam raised over ten thousand in donations to maintain the beavers, planted 30 trees, developed a popular web site, pursued a grant for interpretive signs, and had original photos entered in the EPA curriculum for state wide use.

The city, for its part, installed a sheet pile wall through the beaver lodge and still hasn’t voted on their continued presence.

The 2007 yearlings have officially “dispersed”. Three 2008 kits are alive and well. Mother is quite pregnant with the 2009 brood, and father and is seen daily. Stop by Earth Day at the John Muir Site, or visit the dams and wish the beavers and their supporters a happy anniversary.


So this little fellow was found yesterday in downtown Hutchinson looking “distressed” next to a manhole and a nearby watcher called  Advance Termite Pest Control to come take care of the problem. The article speculates that the yearling was probably trying to get to “another beaver down there”. With a few magical phone calls,”Termite” (as he was cleverly dubbed by his captors) was invited on an all expense paid trip to the Hutchinson Zoo, whose own beaver had, sadly, just died two weeks ago. The article goes on to speculate that “Because the beaver was on land instead of in the water it was easy to trap without harming it.” And for the past few days the beaver has been enjoying a bowl of carrots under zoo quarantine.

Now before I let slip the dogs of war, let me say that putting a beaver named Termite in the zoo is much, much better than doing the what mostly happens to things named termite. I’m sure the zoo director is very well intentioned in offering him asylum and the beaver equivalent of “three hots and a cot” (three cools and some pools?)

But SERIOUSLY???

Lets start at the beginning. That beaver wasn’t standing lost by a manhole because there was another beaver down there (sewer beavers? like the pale new york alligator myth?) He heard running water and he wanted to get back to it. He’s a disperser, leaving his family as they do and going overland as they do, to look for his new start in life. It is heartbreaking to me that this adventure now ends in concrete.

And second, if you are looking outside and see a beaver and wonder who to call, Advance Termite Pest Control is probably not the most compassionate choice.

And third, if you want to pat yourself on the back for not harming a beaver by trapping him on land, you might have a conversation with this lady, who has done it for a living since Reagan was president.

I could go on…but I’m late for work…here’s my letter and maybe you want to write one of your own.

Dear Hutchinson Zoo Director Charlotte Poepperling,

Yesterday’s news speaks excitedly of the new beaver successfully displaced to your zoo. It is certainly much better that the little confused disperser (juvenile seeking his fortune) is protected at a zoo rather than killed by an exterminator or hit by a car. Surely you can imagine, though, that not everyone shares your same enthusiasm about the “kit-napping”.

Beavers are a keystone species, and contribute in the wild by increasing bird and wildlife, improving water quality, trapping silt and filtering water, and making habitat for other popular game animals. A huge national conference was just held in Washington state regarding the use of beavers as aquatic engineers to regulate drought conditions. The idea that one juvenile picked up off the street wins the opportunity to replace your last beaver specimen that died, saddens me.

I understand that zoo’s have an important role in helping children and families understand wildlife and our own role as responsible stewards. But you’d be teaching the children of Hutchinson much more if you found a suitable relocation site for “termite”, allowed him to be reintroduced, and brought the children into helping observe and document his improvements to the habitat.

Worth A Dam would be happy to help you connect with interested professionals, enlist supporters, and educate your young animal lovers.

Heidi Perryman. Ph.D. President & Founder Worth A Dam


[youtube:http://youtube.com/watch?v=6Fde1PIucS4]

This is what you missed wednesday morning.


This morning Linda and I caught a grand display of beaver prowess when two kits took on a massive wrestling match in the water by the dam. Mom was on the other side making sure there was plenty of mud on the downstream, and for a while juniors 1 & 2 were hard at work laying mud upstream.

After some fairly adept poking of sticks through the dam, the children decided life was too short not to fool around a bit. They embarked on some fairly epic struggles trying to dunk each other or just make the other one give up. This produced a water tango worthy of the Spanish channel, and was lovely to see.

Mom was in full display, and I wanted an inspiring picture of her being very pregnant. I was only able to achieve one of her being very blurry. Here’s Cheryl Reynolds picture from last year to remind you what a pregnant beaver looks like and if that isn’t clear enough, come down some morning and see for yourself.


The fourth (almost) dam to be exact. Jon spied 7 mallard ducklings yesterday and this specimen, a western Grebe.

This isn’t our photo, but that’s our fella. We’ll get the photographers out soon. I’m happy to see the ducklings again this year, and wondered when they’d appear. One of the treats last year was seeing how much more protected family numbers were by the beaver dams. Instead of seeing a progressive attrition (one day 8 baby ducks, then five, then three) we saw family ranks that kept their numbers until maturity. The dams make a more protected habitat, and this year the would have been 4 times as protected, although the city interfered with the progress by removing vegetation and installing sheetpile. The beavers did what they could to mitigate.

Still, baby ducks are always a good thing.

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

April 2009
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