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

Month: January 2012


Busy beavers: Naturalist Ed Dahl looks at a tree brought down by beavers living along the Shuswap Lake foreshore. James Murray/Observer

SABNES sides with foreshore beavers

Salmon Arm’s Nature Bay Society expressed this sentiment in a Jan. 10 letter to city council, asking that beavers residing along the foreshore trail not be removed.

SABNES notes that the beavers are inhabiting the pond near the first boardwalk off the nature trail, heading east.

“We are also aware that the beavers are ‘pruning’ some trees near the pond and some people have expressed their opinion that something needs to be done to protect the trees,” states the letter.

Salmon Arm is north of Seattle in British Columbia, which is not exactly famed for treating beavers kindly. I spent yesterday trying to track down the Salmon Arm Bay Nature Enhancement Society to give them information about protecting trees and the benefits of beavers, but it turns out they are fairly hard to track down, and all the email addresses I was able to sleuth out were invalid. I wrote the city engineer instead, and in the meantime, we can just appreciate this article for all its beavery goodness.

[Naturalist Ed] Dahl sees potential for a great learning experience, particularly for children.  “It is a nature sanctuary and certainly I don’t think it would be a good idea to remove them from where they are now. In the summer time, hopefully the children of the district will be able to walk down that walkway and have at look at them. I think it will be a good thing – I hope so anyway.”

Nice! I was particularly struck by the final paragraph which is an almost verbatim transcript of Martinez early response to beavers.

In response to the letter, council asked that staff provide them with information on any issues related to the beavers before taking action. Coun. Alan Harrison said he otherwise prefers to leave the animals alone and let nature take its course.

That does it. I’m mailing the entire beaver subcommittee report right now. How many pages is it? A million?

More good beaver news from Hope Valley in the Sierras. This unexpected delight from the American Rivers Website comes on the heels of our finishing up our historic prevalence paper and getting ready to send it out. Author Daniel Nylen is the Sierra Rivers Program Assistant, and even though he may not know it yet, he’s destined to be our good friend!

Can Beavers Help us Rehabilitate our Rangelands?

Here in the Sierra, meadows are our natural reservoirs – they store snow that melts in spring and become havens for fish and wildlife during the parched summer months as they slowly return cool, clean water back to the river. We want to bring this balance back to one of the most cherished and spectacular meadows in the Sierra.

Well, some critters don’t seem to want to wait around for our help. Whether they consciously plan to help the areas where they live, or they charge forward on genetically programmed cruise control, beavers and their impressive engineering feats do more than any other species (besides humans) to alter and shape their surrounding landscape – and often in a beneficial manner.

Beaver dams maintain and create wetlands, provide high quality habitat for fish, amphibians, and other wildlife, improve downstream water quality, and slow and spread snowmelt runoff, thereby reducing local flooding, recharging groundwater, and extending water levels in streams in late summer.

The reintroduction of beavers is even viewed by some as a potential climate change adaptation strategy because of the positive effects they have on streams, meadows and water levels. Their actions often mimic what one would hope to do to rehabilitate an impacted meadow like Hope Valley – raise the stream channel up closer to the meadow surface so that it can more naturally and frequently spill onto its floodplain during the spring snowmelt.

Oh, isn’t that lovely? I think I know right where this is, too. He goes on to say that there’s going to be controversy about reintroducing beavers because some folks don’t think they belong in the Sierras, and he mentions the south america fiasco as if those beavers were planted by mistake for anything other than fur harvest, BUT it’s a great article and if we can just get folks talking everything will be better soon!

One final note from the “leave it to beaver” festival they’re holding in Utah next year. I asked Mary what the “Beaver Story Corps” referred to at the bottom of the poster and she said that she’s going to have a soundbooth rigged to record statements from people about the first time they saw a beaver! How cool is that!

Uh-oh I think I’m having ‘festival envy’.

Late Breaking Beaver Stupid

Check out this photo of a ‘beaver’ from kxan in Maryland. I called the news station and suggested they might want to at least get the right continent. Sheesh.



kxan – Indepth. Investigative. Incorrect.


Check out the new poster for Utah’s Beaver Festival! Mary O’brien came this last year to observe ours first hand and has been hard at work implementing her own. Okay, its slightly bigger than ours. Two days instead of one. A life sized lodge and bigger donors. In a State Park and not a featureless city square that Martinez won’t even honor with a name. BUT it’s our idea that set it off and it will teach folks across Utah about beavers and I couldn’t be happier.

Mary O'brien photographs bridge tiles

Here’s a nice photo of the close attention Mary paid to our efforts last year. She flew out to visit her son in Berkeley and then took the train to the festival. After seeing everything we put together she trotted off to the John Muir House before jogging back and joining us for dinner. If it hasn’t occurred to you already,  Mary is no slacker.

Okay team, beaver festivals in California and Utah! Only 48 more states to go!

Other good news of the day includes this compromise from Estes Park in Colorado where Sherri Tippie worked hard to slow down the whirring wheels of back room deals and save some beavers.

Colorado Division of Wildlife officer Rick Spowart explains the compromise that kept the beaver dam and lodge intact. The roadside trail will be narrower, but the beavers won’t be pushed out.

And this article from Maryland where some beavers have made their presence known in a city park but they aren’t on the hit list yet. Yesterday I wrote the major players and heard back that they will be looking into sand-painting trees as a less obtrusive way to handle the problem.

Beavers are chopping down trees along the shoreline in Salisbury City Park near Picnic Island. / TODD DUDEK/THE DAILY TIMES

SALISBURY — A beaver that has taken up residence in the City Park is there to stay, according to officials.

Public Works Director Teresa Gardner said the city is not considering removing the beaver, as the state Department of Natural Resources has recommended the animal remain in place for now.

Which, from my point of view, is a pretty good news for beavers in three states. Not too shabby!

Oh and we’ve had confirmation from all the biggest fish names in the state that the little morsel being nibbled in Cheryl’s excellent photo is a Sacramento Splittail which happens to be a species of special concern. Another reason to have beaver dams in your creeks I guess!


Some day, when California’s beaver policy is so well crafted and skillfully implemented that even the state of Washington looks at our borders with envy, when our rivers and streams are meandering with desilted channels and lovingly restored from Fresno to Truckee, when our bumper crops rely securely on higher watertables  and  our delta-drainage battles are a distant memory, when even our toxins and mercury from past mistakes are trapped and sequestered in millions of dams across the state – when that day comes, remember this meeting, where it all started – or rather where it all finished starting and actually “began“.


And these are the folk who helped make it happen.

 


Without some small gain…

Green Heron at Third Dam: Cheryl Reynolds

Thanks for sharing the great photo! Both Bruce Herbold and I tentatively think that the fish may be a Sacramento splittail, a native minnow that occurs in north bay brackish marshes. We are not entirely certain because the photo angle/fish is a bit tilted which makes it difficult to clearly see the back and head of the fish. Hope this is helps and keep the photos coming!

______________________

Robert A. Leidy, Ph.D.
Wetlands Regulatory Office (WTR-8)
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
75 Hawthorne Street
San Francisco, CA 94105

And if all that tasty fish-eating made you hungry, here’s some food for thought!

Milwaukee Brewers closer John Axford, has burst on the scene as one of the most dominant closers in all of baseball. What is the secret to his success? Perhaps this, is the answer…Thanks to John’s diligence and love for Twitter, we may have stumbled on to something more amazing than we could have imagined. Below you will find a picture of Mr. Axford enjoying, what appears to be, a beavers tail. In fact, John admits it in the Tweet. Could beaver not only be his secret weapon, but the secret weapon of an entire country? What if all Canadians harness their power from the dam building rodents flat tail? Is this a national conspiracy?

BeaverTails is a company out of Ottawa, Canada. They specialize in BeaverTails. Basically, a BT is a flat donut full of butter and any other type of topping your heart can desire. I would imagine chocolate, caramel, nuts, maybe some fruit. Here’s the thing though, all I can do is speculate. Sadly, I am not Canadian and have only been to Vancouver…which seems an awful lot like Seattle. Therefore, I do not think it counts.porty bit of pastry this morning with your coffee, you might enjoy this column on Beavertail.

Go here for the rest of the article, and here to see if they want to sell at the Beaver Festival!

BEAVER FESTIVAL XVI

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TREE PROTECTION

BAY AREA PODCAST

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The meeting that started it all

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