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

Month: October 2018


It’s funny how beaver news cycles come in waves, and suddenly everyone wakes up and starts talking about the same thing. Ooh beavers are good for salmon! Oooh beaver dams can reduce flooding! Oooh beaver dams remove nitrogen! And then one day the obvious occurs to them.

OOH BEAVER DAMS CAN HELP PREVENT FIRE!!!

Beavers, Water, and Fire—A New Formula for Success

Low-tech stream restoration works wonders for people and wildlife

And, importantly, these “emerald refuges” provide valuable wildlife habitat during wildfires, which are burning more frequently and more intensely across western landscapes.

How they work for people and wildlife

Streams need a steady “diet” of water, dirt, rocks and wood. These natural elements wash down during floods and slow a stream’s flow, spreading water across the landscape where it can be stored longer between flood events. Each stream’s diet is unique, based on its location, size, and the surrounding climate.

Unfortunately, most of the streams in the western U.S. have been structurally starved of wood (largely from a lack of beaver activity) for the last two centuries. Many of our waterways now flow fast and straight rather than storing water in the valley bottoms and floodplains that create riparian habitat.

By slowing and spreading water, low-tech structures boost soil moisture retention and raise water tables. This, in turn, provides protein-rich forbs and insects for birds, ungulates, and other wildlife. Reconnecting floodplains improves both surface and groundwater availability, and also lessens the erosive energy of floods. Boosting soil moisture and vegetation production keeps restored areas cooler when temperatures soar.

For these reasons, the National Wildlife Federation is exploring opportunities to expand low-tech restoration techniques onto the grasslands of eastern Montana, where late-summer water is in scarce supply for the greater sage-grouse and other species.

I can hear the beaver at his dam right now saying incredulously “You call this low tech?! You think all these branches just gnaw themselves?” But it’s wonderful to see the National Wildlife Federation praising the good work done by beavers. And hey it’s not just wildlife that needs beavers to help save them from fire. Turns out we’re pretty flammable too.

Water doesn’t burn

Ranchers have plenty of anecdotal stories of wildlife and livestock flocking to wet, green places when wildfires sweep across the West.

Recent wildfires in the West proved that wet habitat is invaluable as a refuge, and possibly as a firebreak, too: the only remaining green areas amidst miles of scorched rangeland were active beaver ponds that kept the flames at bay.

“Beavers and beaver dam analogs make a lot of sense for mitigating impacts during a fire,” says Wheaton.

Or avoiding one entirely.

 

It also makes sense to incorporate low-tech stream restoration into post-fire recovery efforts as a tool to protect and improve existing wet habitat. For instance, the Bureau of Land Management is planning to build low-tech structures to accelerate riparian recovery and mitigate mudslides during runoff after the Goose Creek Fire in Utah.

In northeast Nevada where the South Sugarloaf Fire scorched 230,000 acres this summer, the U.S. Forest Service is planning to use low-tech restoration to protect critical habitats that didn’t burn from potential damage during post-fire runoff and debris flows.

Similarly, the Idaho Department of Fish and Game is using low-tech estoration not just to protect critical habitats post-fire, but also to aid in ecosystem recovery on the recent Sharps Fire near Hailey.

In all these examples, the agencies hope to also study the effectiveness of low-tech restoration and to document the vegetation response at restored sites versus unrestored control sites. “If we’re making a difference at a scale that matters, then we should be able to see the positive impacts of low-tech stream restoration from space,” says Maestas.

Especially, he adds, as restored wet places stay greener longer.

So beaver benefits are so important and do so much good they’re visible from space? I totally believe. Certainly they’re obvious underwater. Or underground as the water table changes. Come to think of it, probably the only place where beaver benefits can’t be easily seen is here, on earth.

Sheesh.

In the 2018 anyway, at least.  Ben Goldfarb was sent a really interesting paper this week about indigenous people using fire to manage the growth of forests and plants before we came and guess they also used it for?

The Role of Indigenous Burning in Land Management

Robin Wall Kimmerer and Frank Kanawha Lake

A 10- to 12-year fire interval was typically observed around beaver
ponds to maximize regeneration of aspen and willows to feed beaver
(Lewis 1982; Williams 2000a).

Yes that’s right. Beavers were recognized as so important on the landscape that it was customary to manage the aspen in such a way as to make sure they had enough to eat.


Here I am, scratching my head and wondering just what to start typing after listening to this podcast. It’s a beaver-friendly discussion from KFGO in North Dakota with northern naturalist Stan Takeila who says beavers are just about his favorite animal to watch.

 Beaver Talk with Stan Tekeila

In This Podcast:  Noted naturalist, author, photographer, public speaker, and keeper of  www.naturesmart.com .   Today’s Topic:  Beavers.

There are so many things I share about his appreciation. I just love that he admires them. And as an avid reporter of National beaver news I know that the Dakotas in general are a strangely wonderful pocket of beaver wisdom,. He doesn’t perpetuate many of the erroneous beliefs beavers cause, He knows they eat bark and don’t pat mud with their tails, but why no discussion of their ecosystem services? And there are some serious holes in his knowledge. No mention of flow devices, a very dim understanding of tree protection, and, most seriously, the belief that kits only stay with their parents the first year before they are ‘kicked out’ to make way for the new children.

So in Stan’s world there are no yearlings? And he couldn’t ever explain this vision of brotherly beaver love because his idea of families never includes siblings.

Yearling gives back ride to kit: Cheryl Reynolds

Well, it’s a big world and we are definitely grading on a curve. If you want to see the column written by Stan here’s the way it starts.

Walking on gravel in the dark, I was doing my best to not make any noise. I could kind-of-see where I was going but when you are carrying heavy and expensive camera gear and tripod, you always want to be extra careful. Approaching the edge of the clear-water pond, I sat down and started to organize all of the camera gear.

Beavers are one of my favorite critters. The North American Beaver, usually just called Beaver, is only one of two beaver species in the world. It’s native to North America but has been introduced to South America and also parts of Europe. It is the official symbol of Canada and the official mammal of the state of Oregon.

I love his description of how to photograph beavers because it reminds me of going down to the beaver dam in the pre-dawn light and being as still as possible.  Great images are his reward, and some wonderful moments of watching. I’ll do what I can to fill up his information bucket about yearlings and mention about beavers and saltwater.

You can’t complain about a few little inaccuracies when a man is talking to another man on the radio about liking beavers in North Dakota. Right?


We’ve all noticed fire season getting longer and fires themselves getting hotter. Last summer after the publication of Ben’s book I was contacted by a smart observer who wanted to incorporate beavers into brush management for fire protection.  I thought this was very, very interesting and was even more pleased to see the website that person has launched.

I would gladly credit the source and introduce you but I’ve been asked not to, so I’ll just show you the considerable feat they managed to do.

Are You Ready for California’s Runaway Fires to Stop?

Just a few generations ago, beavers managed abundant waterways and Indigenous Peoples managed abundant plants, keeping this land wetter, greener and clearer of flammable underbrush. Sudden violence put an end to thousands of years of intelligent management, but every day is a day to choose differently. Drought and megafires are telling California…

The smart website summarizes beaver ecology, cleverly outlines the major myths associated with them, and walks through the native practice of using controlled burns to manage brush, which we settlers obviously forgot. Go spend some time browsing because there’s lots of information to glean.
The website also does a great job explaining the misunderstanding about beaver nativity that is unique to california. Excellent graphics are provided to make the information easy to understand. Here’s one outlining our research on beaver nativity.

a href=”https://www.martinezbeavers.org/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2018/10/beavertimeline.jpg”>

The website also includes links to visual materials, including the PBS film, and Greg Kerekes Gold Beaver documentary.  It also folks to our story pretty nicely. About this website it says:

Worth a DamWorth a Dam blog

a blog by Heidi Perryman

There is no more active publication on the web than this blog authored by beaver researcher and advocate Heidi Perryman who was so instrumental in protecting the beaver family who arrived more than ten years ago in Martinez, California. Ms. Perryman continuously publishes every tidbit she can find about beavers and related ecological topics. Wonderful photos of the Martinez beavers, and memorable, ongoing news.

Well, that’s plenty humbling. Thanks for the shout out! Although it is true I would like to think that this website is much more than a blog about beavers and I always get a cramp when I’m called Ms, Perryman  but I’m very demanding. I am very appreciative that the message is getting shared so effectively and there’s a new beaver resource on the block.

 

I especially like the last page that talks about “What you can do to help” and encourages readers to politely demand changes to California policy. Who knows if people are less scared of beavers than they are of fires, but it’s surely with a shot. I’m sure we can all enjoy this:

The Vision of Abundance

Just a few human generations ago, California was a much wetter place and it teemed with life of all kinds. Today, you know of the California Quail – the state bird – and have, perhaps, seen a covey of a dozen of these beautiful fowls. Not long ago, a single covey could contain a thousand members. You may never have seen a Pronghorn Antelope, but, until quite recently, their great herds covered the Central Valley, in the company of countless Black-Tailed Deer and Tule Elk. Try to imagine your hearing filled with birdsong, from the call of the nuthatch to the chortle of the turkey. Likely you’ve noticed the recent fad for eating chia seeds; now imagine millions of acres of colorful flowers being pollinated by numberless native bees and filled with delicious seeds for human harvesting. This is how it was.

Envision a beaver family in every stream, the rivers filled shore-to-shore with salmon, the marshes filled with ducks and geese. See forests with cleared sight lines from end to end and oak lands filling baskets to overflowing with acorn flour. There is plenty of water for drinking, bathing, gardening. There is water everywhere, breaking up the paths of fire and sustaining all life. There are people at work across the land, tending fire, harvesting food, drinking water, eating together. It can be this way again.

It’s said that people must share a vision to bring about social change for the better. As you devote time to the healing of California, drawing from the vision of the recent past of just how abundant life was here may help you keep going, even in times of discouragement. Carrying that vision of a beautiful, safe home with you in all of your work may give you the food you need for the journey

Welcome to the neighborhood, I’ll add your great website  to the resource links today!


Yes its time to bring back only good news sunday, and good lord do we need it. Here is the very best political article I’ve ever read, for your coffee-sipping enjoyment. You’re welcome.

How beavers became a campaign issue in a Bangor-area Maine Senate race

If you live in Bangor, you may have received a mailer yesterday blaring that the Democratic state senator there is “GUILTY!” of partially unspecified criminal and ethical lapses — including a 2001 episode in which he unlawfully removed two beaver traps.

The mailer from Republican Jim LaBrecque, a Bangor refrigeration technician who has been a formal and informal energy adviser and ally to Gov. Paul LePage, shook up a sleepy race against Sen. Geoff Gratwick, D-Bangor, that party groups are barely contesting money-wise in 2018.

The Gratwick episodes that LaBrecque highlights in the broadside are minor — as far as crimes and Maine Ethics Commission fines go. LaBrecque’s mailer, which he said was sent to nearly 19,000 people, accuses Democrats and the Bangor Daily News of suppressing information about Gratwick. The chief incident cited on the mailer is a well-publicized incident from 2001, in which he was convicted of a misdemeanor crime and fined $238 for tampering with beaver traps in his neighborhood — of all things.

The short version? Beavers took over a small pond in a residential neighborhood. Neighbors liked it. Gratwick led an effort to post the land the beavers were on. But it turned out it wasn’t legal to post. Gratwick ended up removing two traps set by a Bangor man, which is a Class E misdemeanor in Maine. In the end, the trapper got his three beavers.

Now that’s my kind of politician. I never ever say this when reading political ads, but please tell me more?

Messing with beaver traps turns into campaign mud in state Senate race

Gratwick, a 75-year-old retired rheumatologist, said he removed the two traps from a pond near his home on outer Kenduskeag Avenue because his children at the time were “horrified” as trappers began to harvest the animals from a spring-fed pond that was adjacent to a public road and open to trapping.

He said he didn’t know he was breaking the law when he took the traps, but willingly paid the fine after he was cited for “disturbing traps” by the Maine Warden Service. He said the wardens returned the traps to their owner.

“I must admit, we enjoyed these beavers, we had even given them names,” Gratwick said in an interview Wednesday.

Honestly, I don’t live in your district or even your state, but I would vote for you right away. It’s amusing how his opponent thinks he’s “GOT HIM!” by releasing this information. Does he really understand his constituents so little that he can’t imagine removing beaver traps might be a good thing? Or that an attachment to the animals might appeal to his voters?

Here are just a few of the reasons why beavers should not be trapped, and a graphic that I’ve been working on. The artwork as usual isn’t mine.


   “Everybody talks about the weather, but nobody does anything about it.”

Not Mark Twain (Charles Dudly Warner)

In Germany they have had so much drought this year that the shipping freight can barely make it down stream. I can imagine if beavers talked that would be a subject they repeated again and again at beaver cocktail parties.

Cry me a river: Low water levels causing chaos in Germany

BERLIN (AP) — A new island in Lake Constance. A river in Berlin flowing backward. Dead fish on the banks of lakes and ponds. Barges barely loaded so they don’t run aground.

A hot, dry summer has left German rivers and lakes at record low water levels, causing chaos for the inland shipping industry, environmental damage and billions of euros (dollars) in losses — a scenario that experts warn could portend the future as global temperatures rise.

The drought-like conditions have hit nearly 90 percent of the country this year.

Wow, that’s one lost looking ship. Germany must be suffering. Much of their industry depends on shipping and with fewer rivers still passable it must be chaos. I wonder how the beavers are doing?

A family of beavers living in the German capital’s central Tiergarten park has attracted a lot of attention for taking matters into their own paws. They built a new dam about six weeks ago to keep the area wet — but that just dried other areas up.

“They wanted their old water level back,” Ehlert said.

Other wildlife has been less able than the beavers to cope. Hundreds of tons of fish and countless freshwater mussels have been dying as waters have receded, said Magnus Wessel, head of nature conservation policy for the environmental group BUND.

Causes for the die-offs include greater concentrations of pesticides and other toxins due to the lower volume of water, boat traffic riding closer to the riverbeds, the increased number of boats on the rivers and less oxygen in the water, Wessel said.

I wish them rain, rain and rain. The summer I spent in Germany (where I met the Jon, lo these many years ago), had the most wonderful rainstorms. Only at night when you were home safely in bed the sky would burst open and drench the earth. I wish them those.

Meanwhile our friends in Port Moody B.C. are facing a different kind of calamity. Even though the election swung the right way the decisions have not and the DFO fishery folks have been charging ahead with ripping out the beaver dams to nurture what they worry are lazy, handicapped chum. Judy was so upset when she posted this, and I don’t blame her, It’s hard to watch. I told her to bring wilow branches. Beavers are hardy, they will figure out a way to stay around when there is food. Just like ours did when the sheetpile split their home in two.

Ouch. That kit is so little for the end of October. I imagine they’re going to stick around just for him. I remember watching our beavers ‘walk upstream’ after a dam washout. It’s a horrible, suspenseful feeling.

Been there. Done that.

I have to believe beavers are uniquely equipped to figure out how to cope with  the watery problems in their own lives. I’m sure they are less upset by this than we are.

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