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

Month: July 2012


Restoration project seeks to outwit beavers; volunteers fence trees near Strawberry Creek to deter rodents

Jessica Cejnar/The Times-Standard

”About three months ago, they [beavers] took down a couple hundred to 300 trees in two nights,” said Bob Pagliuco, a habitat restoration specialist with the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s National Marine Fisheries Service. “So we banded together to come up with a solution.”

Some people wanted to remove or relocate the beavers, Pagliuco said. Others wanted to kill them. But beavers are important to the ecosystem and to coho salmon, Pagliuco said, so they came up with another solution.

About 30 volunteers descended upon Strawberry Creek on Saturday for the AmeriCorps’ volunteer day to help fence off the trees, which include willows, alders, spruce and redwoods. The volunteers come from the California Department of Fish and Game, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, the AmeriCorps Watershed Stewards Project, the California Conservation Corps and the non-profit group Pacific Coast Fish, Wildlife and Wetlands Restoration Association.

We first heard about this tree wrapping project from our beaver friend Eli Asarian at Riverbend Sciences in Eureka. He said that there was originally a request for a depredation (kill) permit and that it was denied. DENIED! The California Department of Fish and Game (North Coast) said “NO” you can’t kill the beavers until you tried another way to solve the problem. Wow! The mind reels! The jaw drops!

At that time the plan was to wrap the trees with chicken wire because they couldn’t afford much fencing wire. I contacted the project and explained that chicken wire would only work reliably on those beavers that were the same size as chickens! And thought that if they were going to undertake such a huge project and use all those volunteers it needed to be successful or otherwise folks will say its a wasted effort! I talked about the benefits of sand painting, which they could consider for the larger trees.

The volunteers will also apply a latex-sand paint to the trees to try to dissuade the beavers from eating them, said Todd Carlin, a member.

Well, okay then! Seems like folks at Strawberry Creek have all the right idea. Apparently they get this whole beaver benefit – keystone species – thing – and the Coho salmon message has hit home hard!

”We’re trying to keep mindful of the importance of beaver in the ecosystem, especially with coho salmon,” Carlin said. “We jumped on (the project) to serve as an example that you don’t need a depredation permit; you don’t need to relocate the beaver — they can cohabitate here. We’re just trying to see if this will be successful, and then we can apply it to other projects.”

”These dams they build back up water and create a pond environment,” he said. “What we’ve been finding in the winter and in summer, these pond environments are extremely productive. There’s lots of fish growing in beaver ponds, and they’re found to grow significantly faster than the fish growing higher up in the tributaries.”

In the withered desert of public opinion where minds are made up and nothing new grows, the hardened soil surrounding attitudes towards beavers has been hard packed for 50 years – but in the northern reaches of state the salmon message at least is starting to SINK IN. Good job all! Now trickle down here to the bay area, will ya?

And since you did such a good job here’s a ‘strawberry’ present for you!

Yearling eating Strawberries - Photo Cheryl Reynolds

Great news with LOVELY (ahem) photos from Anne Mazer of the Milford Daily News in MA. Seems like she spent some time learning about Mike and Beavers and ended up writing a glowing article on coexistence. (Mike suggested she contact us for photos and she gave credit and a lovely link at the end of the article). (Go see for yourself.)

North America’s largest rodent. Nuisance. Pest. There is a widespread under appreciation for the North American Beaver, Castor canadensis.  Beavers are most often mentioned when a property is flooded as a result of a beaver dam. Yes, they are busy and can transform a landscape. What most people do not realize is that they are extremely beneficial to humans and wildlife, and we can coexist under most circumstances.

The typical solution to a “beaver problem” is to trap and kill beavers or blow up their lodges, often unnecessary and cruel actions. Mike Callahan, of Beaver Solutions based out of Southampton, Mass., has worked on approximately 800 sites where beavers were causing flooding, mostly in Massachusetts, but also as far away as Alaska and Canada.

What an excellent beginning to a Saturday read! Don’t you want to rush out and read the entire thing? You really should. Remember this is MASSACHUSETTS where their favorite pastime is whining about voters and not being able to kill beavers with the equivalent of staple guns and garbage compactors so its a VERY BIG DEAL.

Beavers are a keystone species, supporting hundreds of other species of wildlife. Their meticulously built dams create biologically productive wetlands, opening up wooded areas to sunlight, creating nutrient-rich waters, providing a resource for mink, otters, wood ducks, trout, and plants like cattails, winterberries and more.

Beavers provide a priceless service to humans by protecting and cleaning drinking water. The dams help to filter toxins such as pesticides and fertilizers. The dams maintain water flow to prevent erosion and flooding downstream. The wetlands recharge the aquifers and help maintain stream flow during droughts.

Well go read it for yourself, and if you can figure out how to post a comment argue with the whiners who say that the only solution is the final solution and flow devices never work. I’m off to Wild Birds Unlimited to talk about beavers to the last three people in Pleasant Hill who haven’t already heard the good news. Wish me luck! Oh and speaking of ‘Keystone Species’ check out the back of our new festival brochure that went to the printers. Artist Amelia Hunter really outdid herself this year!


Well there’s been a nice flurry of attention on the new kit. When I got to work yesterday there was a message from KGO and a call from KPIX who has sent a reporter out to the dams and wanted someone to meet him. I could just barely shuffle patients about for the phone interview, but couldn’t possibly make the dams, so I called Lory to see if she’d be willing. She was making potato salad and not at all happy about the assignment, but she gamely took up the gauntlet, wore a wire for the interview, and met with the reporter. On the phone I told him where to find footage of the new kit so he could run it with the story — martinezbeavers,org — he repeated back “Spontaneousbeavers.org?” which made me laugh very hard indeed.

I needn’t have told him where to look for footage because obviously they reviewed the entire website like it was a grocery store after Katrina and just looted their way among the shelves, picking whatever they wanted.  (Lory assures me when it aired there was a tag on the screen saying it was from us). I counted  10 swipes of my very best beaver footage spanning 5 years. That’s some hefty pick-pocketing!  Well, its all for a good cause right? If you haven’t seen the whole thing, scroll down for the report. Here’s the thing. John Ramos asks at the end why the beaver stay here, and Lory seems to wonder too. I can tell you the answer easily.

WE DON”T KILL THEM.

Pretty much every other city creek or drainage pond in the East Bay or heck, the entire state, beavers that settle get very quickly dispatched. But here in Martinez they are safe. And that is obviously worth putting up with cameras and garbage trucks and wrapped trees and homeless drunks for.

That being said here is some more precious dimly lit footage to swipe…

 

Dad & Kit - Photo Cheryl Reynolds

Look at dad’s lumpy head and you can clearly see our father is a father again. Amazing!  Now if only the country would stop celebrating its birth and stay quiet we might get some of these photos in decent lighting!

Kit & Parent - Cheryl Reynolds

BEAVER FESTIVAL XVI

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