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

Month: August 2009


Our New Zealand beaver friend, William Hughes-Games, is getting ready for his presentation to the council about the Hurunui dam project, and is doing a lot of thinking about how beavers raise the water table with their dams. I thought his writing was an easily understood overview of this seemingly magical process, and I wanted to pass it along. If you’d like to read it in novel form, go check out the book he introduced me to “Three against the Wilderness” by Eric Collier. It  describes in lively detail what happens to the habitat when beavers are reintroduced to the Canadian Wilderness around the turn of the century.

First, how does the beaver increase the amount of effective water?

Beavers make a series of low dams across streams.  If unimpeded, water falling in a catchment flows down the stream and river as fast as the slope and stream characteristics allow.  All that fresh water goes straight down to the sea.  With a beaver dam, there is a pond which is wider than the original steam bed and a water surface which is higher.  The pond itself is a store of water.  However this is only a minor part of the water storing capacity created by beavers. With the greater surface area of water in contact with the land and the higher water level, water flows into the surrounding water table.    Once underground,the water is protected from evaporation.  It seeps seaward at a much slower rate than water in the stream and seeps back into the stream further down stream.  Instead of a short sharp flood peak, the water is slowed down and spread out over time.  .

A fast running stream provides a certain number of ecological niches for a limited number of plants and animals.  Beaver ponds and the eventually produced wetlands provide far more niches.    As mentioned, beaver dams settle out suspended mineral material and provide clear water.  All sorts of plants can take root on the bottoms of these ponds as well as bull rushes around the edges and water lilies somewhat deeper.  All these provide habitat for fish, water insects, ducks etc. and watering places for terrestrial animals. The native people of western Canada called the beaver the Sacred Centre of the earth because they understood the tremendous benefits brought by beavers.

I’ll confess, I’m boning up on my beaver facts to get ready for Saturday’s interview. In addition to Williams fantastic analysis, I reread my section on beavers and the environment from the subcommittee report. Not to toot my own instrument here, but dam(n)! that was some nicely referenced writing. I’ve added it to the reports section of the blog, in case someone needs a quick reference for why beavers matter to the habitat.


I’m bursting with good beaver news this morning, so thought I’d tell you everything all at once. First, Happy Birthday to Worth A Dam’s treasurer and “Man-Friday” Jon Ridler! Another year whirred by under the weight of beaver madness. Jon was the hard working soul who helped our boyscout plant trees, has been watering the trees, kayak cleans the creek, borrowed the tables for the beaver festival from the powerplant where he works, set up the festival, gave tours at the festival and took down the festival– well you get the idea. In his spare time he’s married to me, so Happy Birthday Jon! Never a dull moment!

Secondly, thanks to our new friend Scott at the smart website JournOwl. Our photographer connected with him around his interest in burrowing owls and lured him to the festival, where they met, swapped stories, and she introduced him to our other newish friend Susan Kirks of P.L.A.N. and Badger fame. He wrote a lovely piece about the ecological interconnections, so thanks Scott and thanks, Cheryl!

And to my surprise the Worth A Dam event was indeed a happening place as we wandered from booth to booth, talking with the likes of the National Parks Service and the Mt. Diablo Audubon Society chapter. But, the Twitter connection that put JournOwl.com on Worth A Dam’s radar was suddenly converted to a face to face meeting with Cheryl.  From our conversation I quickly gathered that Cheryl was more than a conservationist and the VP of a non-profit, but a wildlife advocate completely willing to further a cause beyond that of her local Martinez beaver population. The dialogue was a sharing of ideas and thoughts from someone who has been there to someone, myself, who is just beginning the journey; it was a coming together of mutual values for a common goal.

Speaking of friends old and new, do you remember Ian Timothy of Kentucky? He’s the remarkable 13 year old (now a whopping 14) who started the claymation series “Beaver Creek” episode I of which he has already sold to a text book company in Canada! His introductory science lesson on beavers won the AT&T Science Challenge at the Louiseville Science Center. In his spare time Ian is starting High School this year, and yesterday wrote to let me know that Part 3 of beaver creek is available for your viewing pleasure. It features exciting beaver-otter conflict resolution.

[youtube:http://youtube.com/watch?v=JF0fcGLfGPM]

One can only write so many BBQ-beaver/better-kill-them-my-basement’s-flooded posts before one feels ready for some dam good news. Fortunately, the internet(s) provide. How about this story, published yesterday in the Burlington Free Press about the ecological value of beaver dams and their vast superiority to the water-blockers man creates?

It’s not a far stretch to suggest that the earliest North American humans learned how to dam streams by observing Castor canadensis — the common beaver.

Apparently beaver dams are better for the environment because they are made of biodegradable materials and allow seeping water to be filtered and stored.

Twenty-first-century ecologists say our engineers’ efforts continue to fall short of the large rodents’ long-term view of habitat health.

The best part is that these alarming words of praise come from Ron Wentworth of F&G (which apprently in this case does not stand for “factless” and “gullible”!) He says beaver dams are good for trout and water quality.

Upstream fish migration: Allowed by seasonal overtopping and periodic wash-outs.

Water quality: Formation of pollutant-filtering wetlands upstream, and gradual release of sediment, nutrients, and debris downstream create healthy, “porous” habitat.

Biodegradable and recyclable: Beavers abandon their dams when food sources decline. Several years later, as plant diversity rebounds, beavers will return and engineer another stream cycle.

That’s some mighty sweet talk about beavers! Remember this is from Vermont, so we can assume Skip spent hours educating F&G about their particular value in the habitat. Good work all! And let’s hope beavers get to build their special dams in every town soon!

Dam in Progress at the Mendenhall Glacier: Bob Armstrong Photographer

By the way, remember this photograph and our friend Bob Armstrong? Worth A Dam’s Lory Bruno is heading to Juneau soon and will meet up with Bob and tour the beaver habitat. I told her we want an “eyewitness account” for the blog!


This morning’s headline in the Indystar refers to beavers on the barby at the Indiana State Fair this weekend. Apparently the wildside cookoff has been an important feature to the fair for the last 20 years. (Meaning since average people stopped actually going out into the wild.) Now the folk convince themselves of their adventurous status by tasting beaver on a stick.

“Never in my wildest dreams did I expect to be eating this today,” said Kisha Marks, 34, Indianapolis. “But I’m so glad they gave people like me who aren’t outdoorsy an opportunity to try this and see what Indiana has to offer.”

The mind reels. The jaw drops. (The stomach turns.) Does this woman know she has other senses too, besides the gustatory ones? What about those outdoorsy people who actually SEE beavers in their natural habitat doing what they do better than any animal in the world? What about the faint smell of castor in the places they inhabit? What about running your fingers over the fresh shavings of a beaver chew? What about the tiny mewling sound the kits make to each other that you can sometimes barely hear?

We’re a taste-based nation! Apparently 2000 people wait in line to appreciate what the article calls in its WTF manner “A new benefit to hunting and fishing which people may not know about” !!??!! “That food can be taken from the wild, and it can taste good.”

Well color me stunned. You mean all those pesky beavers we kill every year could be on our tables instead of in our creeks? How about the coyotes we poisoned on the hill, or the opossum in the garage we called the exterminator about? I hear they taste like chicken. There’s no other use for these animals right? It’s not like they keep the ecosystem in balance or anything?

I read once that Gary Indianna is the most politically liberal city in the country. (San Francisco was ninth or something). I can only hope that some of those Gary-ites are enviromentally progressive too, and walked by that booth with their mouths dropped in horror.


Matthew 4:19

One of my favorite passages of the new testament is the story about Jesus enlisting disciples. He’s out walking by the lake of Galilee and sees the cryptically named Simon (who is called Peter) and his brother Andrew casting their nets onto the lake.

Come follow me said Jesus “And I will make you fishers of men.”

Say what you like about the new testament, but that is some beautiful language and as fine a choice as I can imagine to start a post on a Sunday morning. Certainly Worth A Dam has been “fishers of men” in the sense that we are always trying to connect with a broader network of support. I sometimes laughingly call it, “preaching the beaver gospel” but honestly that’s much of what we do. Over and over again, we try to tell people who will listen (and some people who won’t listen) that taking care of beavers is good for the watershed and the wildlife. Taking care of beavers is possible and worth doing.

Not just our special Martinez Beavers, but Concord Beavers, Lafayette Beavers, Berkeley beavers, San Mateo Beavers….even Orange County Beavers!

This morning I’m looking at the map of beaver supporters generated by new memberships at this years beaver festival. Last year we were thrilled that we got some Martinez-ites from the elusive “south of highway 4” bracket. This year we have Petaluma, Kensigton, San Bruno, San Francisco, and Chula Vista. The article in the chronicle about the mink helped us cast a “broader net”, and Linda’s appearance on Terra Verde radio Friday strengthened the point. I’m hoping my national interview Saturday will take our message to more and more places, and challenge folks around the country to think about how they can be smarter than a beaver, take care of problematic behaviors, and benefit from the good done by these remarkable animals.

Sadly, there are no beavers in the new testament. (A regional oversight, I am sure.) If there were though, this is where I think they’d be.

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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