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

Month: April 2012


I don’t know how it is in the East Coast, but here in the West we’ve done a lot of harm to our streams and waterways. 90% of our wetlands destroyed and we face water crises almost every year. From trying to straighten channels to make room for more crops and polluting waters or pouring concrete – we made decisions about land use that turned into land abuse. If you doubt me go look over the fences at Alhambra Creek in the middle of town, say around Shell Ave. Deeply down cut streams with no  room to meander and no alluvium left. Zero capacity to slow or retain water or allow it to seep into the banks. Just enough room to allow ‘flash’ production where when we are lucky enough to have water fall from the sky: it mostly goes where we tell it to, and then disappears into its salty cousin.

Of course you know that getting rid of all our beavers is a big, big, part of this damage. Imagine how different our streams and creeks and riverbeds would look if we had hundreds and thousands more beavers, storing water, trapping soil, re-channelizing streams, raising our water table, increasing the riparian border, preventing erosion and making deep still pools. The estimates say we are at ten percent of the population we once had.

Often now when beavers show up they are fixing such brutal conditions their dams regularly blow out – like our beavers! Think for a moment  how much easier their job would be if there were 10 colonies of beaver all the way up Alhambra Creek?

All this goes to say that sometimes they benefit from a helping hand. As in this video which you may have seen from the NOAA fisheries project on Bridge Creek in Oregon.


Mike Kossow - installing posts in damaged creek


Sometimes beavers use help that was never intended! Check out these photos from Beaver friend Mike Kossow in Plumas County, who has worked for years on streams and restoration. He was struggling to find a way to place poles in degraded streams so that a little soil could be restored. Here’s his description

The objective of the project was to push the thalweg off of the stream banks so they would reach an angle of repose and vegetate. The first year I built structures (49089 jpg), the second summer I installed bank revetments to catch stream-bank slough. To the anchor posts I pinned young pine from a highway right-of-way clearing project to t he stream-banks in-betweens the structures. I visited the project again last summer, there are some problems with vertical banks but overall the demonstration project was very successful.

Guess what he discovered anchored around his painstakingly installed posts? Beaver dams! And of course, all around the new beaver dams were lots and lots of new trout.

During the two summers of construction we saw very few trout, after construction and the arrival of beaver there were trout everywhere, especially young-of-the-year rainbow trout.

No surprise, when he came back in a year or two the beavers had been mysteriously removed.

When I toured the site last year the beaver were gone, no new cutting and most of the dams were in disrepair. There were still more trout than before construction but not as many as  I observed for several years post construction and the arrival of beaver.

The very same thing happened on Gurnsey Creek, headwaters of Deer Creek, I constructed a project for the USFS in 2000. I will not install hard rock structures in alluvial settings, I stay organic. My motto is if the designed fails there will be no additional damage to the site that the pre-project condition. One of the structures was actually an engineered beaver dam, I still have the design drawings, the other structures were low head multi-log sills, all structures are still in-place but several are now buried. Beaver moved on-site one day after construction and the new colony really took off. I checked the site out two years ago and the beaver are gone. Both sites (Butt Creek & Gurnsey Creek) are near Chester, I do not think the disappearance of two healthy beaver colonies is due to natural causes. I think there is some in the area that does not like beaver or understand the role of beaver as a keystone species.

A little history on the Butt Creek Project, in the early 1960’s there was a large beaver population upstream of the project area. The meadow was irrigated by putting plastic dams in Butt Creek diverting water from Butt Creek onto Fanani Meadows using highline irrigation ditches constructed along the contours of the meadow. Irrigating the meadow reduced the flows in Butt Creek and weaken the riparian vegetation, on top of that livestock grazing was uncontrolled, livestock destroyed what was left of the weaken riparian vegetation. The beaver were considered pests because their ponds flooded the upper meadow and they also interfered with the meadow irrigation practices so they were trapped out. By the late 1980’s the stream channel, meadow, and what was left of the cottonwood, willow, and alder community was so degraded the landowner, Collins Pine became concerned because I called their attention to the condition of the meadow. Collins Pine is a very good forest steward but had not been paying much attention to the meadows on their property. Collins Pine called CDF&G and asked them for advice on how to manage meadows & stream courses. CDF&G recommended fencing, so a split rail fence was constructed to keep livestock out of the stream channel and riparian areas. The fencing project showed Collins Pine how much damaged was caused by uncontrolled grazing and the company began an internal discussion about eliminating livestock grazing from their property altogether.

Just so you’re up to date on the who’s who of beavers, Mike a fisheries biologist and the founder of Meadowbrook Conservation Services. I met him because he is a member of the California Working Beaver Group and worked with Chuck James on finding the beaver dam at Red Clover Creek which was carbon tested at 1100 years old and formed the foundation for our historic prevalence paper!

Collins Pine land has not been grazed by livestock since 2002. The stream channel has incised into the meadow and the meadow has dried out. My hope is beaver will be left alone to rebuild and raise the stream channel so it can again be connected the floodplain. It is very important to understand the role beaver play in our watersheds, I cannot say it enough; beaver are a keystone species, our meadow and riparian ecosystems will never be healthy without them. I do fear beaver management because of egos and politics, we cannot get along with each other!

Indeed Mike, we can’t seem to get along with each other OR with OUT each other!


Feisty runaway beaver ‘is no Britney Spears’, says bemused owner

I’m not even going to speculate why this is a headline in a respectable newspaper.


Derek Gow is glad to be reunited with runaway beaver Igor, but claims his furry friend is not as recognisable as Britney Spears (Picture: SWNS) Read more: http://www.metro.co.uk/weird/897083-feisty-runaway-beaver-is-no-britney-spears-says-bemused-owner#ixzz1syU1q87j


England has been abuzz since Sunday with the news of a ‘rescued’ beaver from the Devon area who was supposedly found in a slurry pitt on a farm. Since England doesn’t HAVE beavers it is assumed that it is one of three who escaped from an estate when the electric fence failed.

If the name of the fella in the picture looks familiar, it should. Derek Gow is the author of the lovely article ten days ago about the value of beavers in the ecosystem. If you’re like me you will be interested to learn that a ‘slurry pit’ is a circular pitt where farmers dump animal waste and unusable bits to compost and turn into fertilizer eventually.

Apparently beavers aren’t happy about being fertilizer.

‘He’s about the size of a medium dog and he has been growling at us,’ said the park’s operations manager George Hyde.

All the accounts have been boasting about the VERY BRAVE female RSPCA officer who rescued him with a dog crate. Good for her, and good for the beaver! But I would venture to say that it wasn’t so much that she is remarkably courageous (although she may well be) as it is that the men on the case are big ol’ sissies.

(Unless they all have wooden legs I believe Sigmund Freud might have something to say about a grown man terrified of a growling beaver.)

Igor’s owner, Derek Gow of Lifton, Devon, said it would be impossible to confirm the beaver was his. ‘Beavers are a brown amorphous mess. They’re not Britney Spears,’ he said.

You know, another courageous female, Hope Ryden, recognized her individual beavers in Lily Pond. And we could recognize Mom, Dad, GQ and Reed. “Amorphous Mess?” Really? It’s possible that even though you wrote a very nice beaver article,  you suffer from a rare condition known as Prosopoagnosia Castorium.

Just saying.

Here’s some more messiness from a wildlife center in Kentucky that was posted by our friends at the River Otter Ecology Project yesterday.


Ever since Baylor baseball players began feeding a beaver that wandered into their parking lot, the Bears haven't lost. (Courtesy, Baylor SID David Kaye)

Ever since Baylor baseball players began feeding a beaver that wandered into their parking lot, the Bears haven’t lost. The win streak was extended to 23 games after Saturday night’s 1-0 win over Texas A&M.

“We showed up to the field a couple of weeks ago and there was a beaver rolling around the parking lot, ” relief pitcher Crayton Bare told Waco television station KWTX. “A couple of guys would feed him a few acorns from the trees. He walks a long way over from the Brazos but I think the acorns keep him there.”

The Brazos river (the spanish explorers called it the “River of the Arms of God”) is the longest river in Texas. It flows from its headwaters in New Mexico to the gulf and recently sent one of its residents wandering into Baylor ball park which is in Waco. This story is almost inexplicable, but it did make me smile. I’m not wild about the fate of this dusty beaver sticking around to get fed for the winning streak, and not confident about his fate when things turn sour, but remember, this is Texas so the odds are this may very well be the HAPPIEST beaver in the state.

And winning keeps the Bears feeding the beaver. In fact, “Feed the Beaver” has become the new catchphrase around Baylor Ballpark, which sits on the banks of the Brazos.

“(Max) Muncy hit a home run and Josh Michalec from the dugout was like, ‘Feed that beaver!'” Bare said. “We were like, oh, hold on. That’s kind of catchy.”

Now there are “Feed the Beaver” T-shirts being sold and the players have developed their own “Beaver shake” hand signal, similar to the Texas Rangers’ claw and antlers.

Well, I can’t find the t-shirt or find the secret beaver handshake on youtube, but if you want to follow the twitterfeed, the hashtag is #feedthebeaver .

In the mean time, let’s hope junior takes advantage of his good fortune to hi-tail it back to the river, and that for a moment rabid bear fans will apply their unlikely reverence to every beaver they meet in the next few months because it MIGHT be the special lucky one.


There will be no podcast today, just the remaining buzz of good feeling as we try to recover from our massively successful earth day event. We brought 200 tails and they were all gone by noon. We spent the day describing the Martinez Beaver story and the good that beavers do and the impact this little colony had had on the ecosystem (and really around the world). I think I described that “beavers build a neighborhood” 500 times – at least.

On reason our tails were so successful is that every single adult, teen or child who beheld them wanted one of these:

Which, who can blame them? Thank you SO MUCH to our donor!  And  I’m hoping we can manage them again for the festival. If you’re feeling altruistic  you can write Woodluck and tell them they really should donate to the Beaver group that has shown off their product to 5000 people so far. I tried, but have not been successful YET.

The other remarkable thing about yesterday, besides all the old friends, new friends, beaver supporter Igor Skaredoff as a perfect John Muir, memories of beavers, grandson of Muir supporting a beaver tail, and the 86 year old woman who said she saw beavers with her father in Martinez when she was 7 (c 1933) there was this…..

Now if  you’ve had quite enough Beaver-Rama and you want some serious ecological news, check out this lovely article from the Massachusetts Eagle Tribune!

A brighter view for herons

Birds thriving in North Andover due to protection of beavers

Beaver ponds cause trees to drown, but the dead trees attract the great blue heron, which often return year after year. Over time, a beaver pond can attract more than 50 nests in a colony, called a rookery.

Chris Leahy, an expert with the Massachusetts Audubon Society who wrote a major report last year on Bay State fowl called “State of the Birds,” said that the resurgence of the area’s beaver population has led to a subsequent revival and expansion of the great blue heron population.

Once they saw the plot of land, they saw a lot of ecological value in the beaver pond, which even then had dozens of active heron nests and a lot of activity.

“It’s a very large wetland, which supports a lot of wildlife, everything from terrestrial animals like beavers and muskrats to all kinds of amphibians and reptiles, turtles and frogs and those species,” Rimmer said. “At that time, there were old nests there we could see. That’s pretty impressive, and we were interested in protecting it.”

Go read the entire breath-of-fresh-air article. It’s the best beaver reporting I’ve seen out of Massachusetts since – well – let’s just say a long, long time!


And if you can’t get there in person, get there in spirit by reading this:

Partnering With Beavers To Restore Degraded Streams Aiding Recovery Of Wild Steelhead

On Bridge Creek, a tributary to the John Day River in eastern Oregon, scientists with NOAA Fisheries’ National Marine Fisheries Service are installing a series of structures as part of a unique, low-cost approach to stream restoration.

The simple structures provide footholds in the degraded stream channel where beaver can build stable dams and establish colonies. By partnering with the beaver, the scientists hope to accelerate stream recovery and improve production of the creek’s wild steelhead population, which is part of a larger steelhead population listed as threatened under the Endangered Species Act. The simple, cost-effective treatment being applied on Bridge Creek could have far-reaching applications in the Columbia River Basin.

“Bridge Creek is typical of many degraded streams in the western United States,” says Michael Pollock, biologist with NMFS’s Northwest Fisheries Science Center. The creek has been confined to a narrow, incised trench, and high flows rarely reach its former floodplain. One of the main ways to improve habitat conditions in this situation is to reconnect the stream with its former floodplain. This helps restore basic geomorphic, hydrologic and ecological functions, and, in turn, create better habitat for steelhead.”

Make sure you go read the whole thing! Be kind to the earth today, and for the second anniversary of the gulf oil spill, and the soul crushing burden of how depressing it is that we now have shrimp born without eyes, let’s watch this again. When I couldn’t sleep last night I was trying to imagine how columns of this elixir under the ocean could help pick up all that missing oil two years later.

BEAVER FESTIVAL XVI

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