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

Month: January 2011


I’ve been a bad beaver advocate. I have been so busy practicing my speech and packing for Oregon that I haven’t had time to sit down with the Pennsylvania beaver plan fully. I made it through the first ten pages and challenged the comment about beavers never stretching. I still want to correct the mistaken expectation of zero beaver mortality and beavers not having trouble with parasites. I want to set the record straight about estimating beaver populations based on the number of dams or lodges.

There just hasn’t been enough time.

Tom Venesky’s article prodded me yesterday, and maybe I’ll bring the 90 page management plan along to the conference and have everyone weigh in on the important points! Tom is a sports reporter for the Times Leader who wrote the excellent article describing how not trapping beavers can allow a wetlands to rebound and make better wildlife to trap down the line. Not exactly the point of view I usually champion, but very smart persuasion. We exchanged friendly emails and I wrote him to make sure to weigh on the new plan in his state.

His recent article highlights that part of the plan is to broaden trapping restrictions to reflect all of the state. Currently there are regions where trapping cannot occur “within 15 feet of a lodge or a dam” and in places where those rules are in place the population of beavers is stable.

The first is a regulation preventing trappers from setting traps within 15 feet of a lodge or dam. The restriction is in place elsewhere in the state, Hardisky said, and it does give some protection to young beavers and adult females because they don’t venture far from the structures.

You see why I need to go through the entire report line by line?  Let’s assume that our kits never go more than 14 feet from the lodge (they do), and only pesky Dad and GQ travel more than 15 feet away from them. And then the adults get killed. Who cares for the young? What if the beavers have built a bank lodge and no one knows it’s there? What if there in a wide body of water with no dams? The statement that female beavers stay close to home is completely bogus (and bordering on wishful sexist thinking). Research tells us that female dispersers actually travel FARTHER than males in their effort to find their own habitat.

As far as maintaining healthy populations, Hardisky pointed to a study in Ontario that found when trappers remove one to two beavers each year from an area, that colony will last 20 to 30 years. If left unchecked, the beavers will exhaust their food supply and eventually move on. As a result, the dam wouldn’t be maintained and will eventually wash away, eliminating the wetlands that was created.

“Not trapping a beaver pond is a mistake because they will eat all their food supply, move on and then you’ll lose that pond,” Hardisky said. “That dam will wash out and the wetlands will drain.”

Apparently he is suggesting that killing one or two a year will prevent over feeding and the development of those pesky meadows that are formed in drying beaver ponds. I have to scratch my head at this, since we can assume four kits are born and 2 yearlings disperse every year. I can’t imagine which one or two they are trapping that keeps things stable? Mom or Dad? clearly not if the colony continues for 30 years. A couple yearlings? Most likeley, but that means there are fewer to disperse and carry beaver benefits to another area. Remember the mortality rate for dispersal is already 50%, so if you start out by killing half your dispersers you’ll be lucky if a single beaver manages to make it.

Hardisky also advised trappers to pull their sets from a location when the catch rate starts to slow down.“That’s when it’s a good idea to move on and not try to get every last one,” he said.

Wow. Apparently the beaver management policy of the great state of Pennsylvania is ‘always leave some orphans‘.

Kit Floating - Photo: Cheryl Reynolds

So we got an anxious phone call in the wee hours last night saying that a downtown observer had seen a dead animal in the annex area of the beaver pond and was worried that it might be one of our beavers. Jon was a good soul and stopped by after night shift this morning to check, discovering a rather bloated cat who had drowned several days ago. It started raining hard and he dashed home for his short sleep before coming back tonight to pick up the dead cat.

Mind you today Cheryl got a wildlife call to help manage beavers at a winery in Sonoma and I’m off to the conference Tuesday. Lory is planning her exciting (and unwilling) blogging debut for Thursday. And Jon would like very much to know why HE gets to be the one to pick up dead, wet cats.

It made me think of Ole Sneelock…

A beaver swam by when he was removing the feline. I assume the kit wanted to thank him. Which we all should do. THANKS JON!


(Make that four hours).

Back in December Worth A Dam hosted a fieldtrip for 60 Las Juntas third graders. Jon and Lory took them on a tour of the dam. I gave a lecture on beavers. And Fro taught them the beaver chant and helped them draw chalk beavers on the sidewalk. They were bright, enthusiastic, and very excited about beavers. We all felt very happy that day.

Then we all went home and took naps.

Yesterday I received this delightful collection of thank yous. Look closely at the dark beaver bodies because some smart teacher came up with the idea of using finger prints! There were 30 of these.

And thirty of these…

Here’s a sample:

I’ve been called a lot of names since I started fussing about our beavers. “Martinez Beaver Protector” is by FAR the nicest. Look closely at the tail in the drawing by Gianna. It’s mom.


Look what’s in this Oklahoma paper this morning!






 

Beavers are a Keystone species whose dams make significant habitat for wildlife and act as natural filters improving water quality. Flooding problems can be controlled using modern flow devices and culvert fences, described here.

Your own Ned Bruha (Skunk Whisperer) has been trained in their use and could help save your city save hundreds of tax-payer dollars in trapping costs which will need to be repeated again every year.

It’s unfortunate that your beavers need to use trash for their restorative work. Wouldn’t it be nice if public works spent time removing the trash instead of removing the dams? It is true that beavers can carry Giardiasis and other diseases. They do not cause them. If your beavers are infected it’s because your water is infected and that should generally be a concern to your city. Contrary to Ms. Haye’s alarm about mosquitoes research has shown that dams actually decrease harmful mosquito larvae

It would be wonderful if the city of Sand Springs, starved for water much of the year, could learn to manage the presence of these remarkable hydrological engineers.

Any city smarter than a beaver can keep a beaver.

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

If you don’t remember the Sand Springs story, click on this week’s “whose killing beavers now” for the full story. Or partial story. I didn’t realize at the time I wrote this that Oklahoma uses USDA to kill thousands of beavers, more than any other state in the vicinity. This means that this state, which is arguably the most noisily against government spending, relies almost exclusively on massive federal funds to kill beavers. In fact, comparing Oklahoma to other states in terms of federal moneys paid versus federal taxes received, they are the 15th in the entire country. (CA is the 43rd – meaning we give more federal taxes and receive far less in return.) Oklahoma not only kills more beavers than we do, they do it almost exlusively on the government dollar.

Ned called it beaver-killing wellfare.





Look what showed up in the comment section for Gary Bogue’s recent article on the Martinez Beavers! A guide to living with beavers from the Born Free Foundation. Click on the thumbnails below to read it or on the logo to download your own copy.

This was a collaboration with Beavers: Wetlands & Wildlife and does a good job introducing concepts about flow devices and beaver benefits. I’m not sure the “frequently asked questions” are the three I would have chosen. (What about smell? Really? I’ve read well over three thousand beaver complaints and honestly the issue of smell has never really comes up.) I would have stayed with with FISH PASSAGE, mosquitoes, flooding, trees and overpopulation.

But that’s just me.

Still its another excellent resource to distribute and I’ll add pile.

I sent the article in the East Bay Express Blog to the Niels Udsen, co-owner of Castoro Cellars and 2010 ‘wine industry person of the year’. He made a generous donation to the Silent Auction last year and I wanted to let him know what we were up to. He wrote back, “Dam, that’s fine reading!”

Oh! Look what just arrived in my email! Wow, Tom that’s really  lovely and impressive looking. No pressure.

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