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

Month: October 2018


Orillia is just north of Toronto in Canada so of course there a plenty of beaver observations to make as the season changes. I liked this column by David Hawke, although its on par for us with a story headlined “The sun came up and then went down again!”

Beavers busy preparing for another ‘dam’ winter

Autumn is not so much a time to pause and reflect on summer, as it is a time to prepare for winter.

Food for wildlife is plentiful, the weather is acceptable for foraging, and the young of the year are either gone or at least old enough not to be a constant concern. It is a time to be busy, “busy as a beaver” as some would say.

Why pick on the beaver? Why not “busy as a red squirrel” or “busy as a white-tailed deer?” One reason is the alliteration, the words just roll off the tongue in a pleasing manner; another reason, perhaps, is that when beavers get working you will notice them: trees are removed, water is dammed… things are obviously happening!

The more one studies beavers, the more one realizes how complex is their relationship with water, terrain, and trees.

As one who has spent a decade studying beavers, I completely agree!

The dam is a constant concern as it has to hold enough water to keep a pond flooded yet allow some leakage to ensure the dam isn’t completely over-run each night. Ideally, there will be a restricted flow, with just enough resistance to keep the pond as a pond.

In areas of deep soil a dam can last many years as the base structure of large sticks is held fast into the soft soil. Looking at beaver dams built across the streams that flow on the Canadian Shield, the longevity of a dam is sometime only from one storm to the next, as the drainage force of a sudden downburst of rain can actually push the poorly anchored dam right out of the way.

When a dam breaks and the water level drops, beavers are in big trouble. Not only are they vulnerable as they waddle about the mud flats, their entrance holes to the lodge are now exposed. The high water level ensures that the normally underwater entrance tunnel is sealed from the wind, thus creating an insulated interior.

Assuming that the dam is intact, the beaver’s next worry is to stockpile enough food to get through the winter months. Not only do they need enough food daily in October to sustain themselves and add a bit of a fat layer, but they must also forage for and store extra food for several months to come. Hence the “busy-ness” of a beaver.

What was that old saying? “A beavers work is never done”.

This stockpile of branches is kept underwater, deep enough to be accessible under the winter ice. Poplar, alder and maple are the preferred tree species, as the bark is soft and fairly moist with sap. Keep in mind that the beaver does not eat the wood, only the inner bark has nutrients.

After a snack the remaining wood is like the centre of an after-dinner corn cob (in human-folk parlance) and is either discarded or used as building material.

If all goes well, by the time the temperatures drop enough to freeze up the shallow waters, the beavers will have patched the dam, strengthened the lodge walls, stored a huge pile of succulent branches, and gained a few pounds of insulating body fat.

Inside the lodge will be tired Dad beaver, pregnant Mom beaver, and one or two restless one-year old beavers. Gets kind of crowded but the combined body heat keeps the place feeling homey.

If the underwater food supply is exhausted prior to spring, or the dam leaks too much or even breaks, the situation can get pretty bad for the beavers.

There have been winters when I’ve discovered beaver tracks in the snow, usually accompanied by drag marks where a small tree has been nipped off and hauled back to the water.

This is a no-win situation, as the cold weather and awkward travel through the deep snow sucks up a huge amount of energy, and the little tree has almost no sap left up in the trunk so even if gnawed clean the energy replacement is less than the expenditure.

Along the tops of the steep banks of the nearby Black River can sometimes be found beaver stumps almost one metre high, evidence that the hungry beavers have had to climb up several meters of almost vertical river bank, waddle through very deep snow, find a poplar tree that was missed from last fall’s gathering, gnaw it down, and slide the whole thing back into the river. The will and ability to survive is strong in a beaver.

Today I will spend my energy raking fallen leaves off the lawn and then drive to the grocery store where frozen pizzas are on sale (always good to stock up for the winter).

Admittedly, that kind of pales by comparison to the activities that will be undertaken today by the busy beavers of the real world.

Agreed! We are all lazyier than beavers. But beavers celebrate plenty of slack time in their purposeful lives. I actually don’t think there’s any distinction made in a beaver mind usually between “work” and “rest”. They’re both classified under the same column of “occupations I enjoy”, and beavers will do either interchangeably.

In normal conditions I have seen beavers eat and build and build and eat and even take a moment to chew the stick they’re using to build. As if life was a huge fluid medley of purpose and pastime.

Things are different only when there is a crisis, such as the fateful night in Martinez when Skip lowered their dam by three feet to install the flow device. Every family member worked their hardest for much longer than anyone was willing to watch them, even the kits, who swam back and forth actually taking wood off the lodge to rebuild the dam with. Dad worked so hard he was noisily ripping tules out of the bank to plug the leaks, and to this day they have not regrown in the area.

Unfortunately,  because of Skip’s pipe placement, they were never able to stop the leak, and the lodge entrances remained exposed forever. Remember?

Dad beaver watching from old lodge: Cheryl Reynolds

Pensacola beach after hurricane Michael.

There are about a million reasons why wetlands matter. Here’s just one.

Protecting Wetlands Helps Communities Reduce Damage From Hurricanes And Storms

You know what is really good at making wetlands? Yeah, I’m sure you do. If only we would stop killing them long enough to let them do their jobs maybe they would have a chance to help us.

Beavers work hard. Our New Hampshire friend Art Wolinsky posted this yesterday showing the beavers at his condo are hard at work trying to expand theirs. Remember that silly young beaver who was trying to dam a tree last time?

Let’s just say he’s found his niche.

That little snickerdoodle! I love this beaver with a fiery passion. Doesn’t it remind you of those childhood stories where some little hero is too short to reach the water fountain, or play rugby with his brothers but because he is so small it turns out he’s the only one who can crawl for help when the mine collapses or whatever?

He or she turns out to be the unexpected hero of the day!
I’m sure Art will do what needs to be done to manage things safely. There should be more stories like that. Speaking of which, here’s a fine story-time from the Louiseville Public Library.

I hate to break it to you but it’s monday and we always know how that turns out. You are going to need this just to get by. I know it’s not about beavers, but believe me, don’t try and sip your coffee while you watch it. I know you’ll thank me for it.


Time for another chapter of our popular serial “This week in Urban beavers”. When we last tuned in beavers that showed up in cities were routinely exterminated, except those crazy lucky beavers in that Bay Area town. Mar-something I think its called.

Too bad there’s not a research paper or something talking about how valuable they can be.

Reintegrating the North American beaver (Castor canadensis) in
the urban landscape

David R. Bailey | Benjamin J. Dittbrenner | Ken P. Yocom

In recent decades, ecological restoration and landscape architecture have focused on reintegrating ecological processes in the urban environment to support greater habitat complexity and increase biodiversity. As these values are more broadly recognized, new approaches are being investigated to increase ecosystem services and ecological benefits in urban areas. Ecosystem engineers, such as the North American beaver (Castor canadensis), can create complex habitat and influence ecological processes in natural environments. Through dam building and wetland formation, beaver can create fish habitat, diversify vegetation in riparian zones, and aggrade sediment to increase stream productivity. As beaver populations have increased in urban areas across North America, their presence presents challenges and opportunities. Beaver can be integrated into the design of new and established urban green spaces to improve ecosystem functions. If managed properly, the conflicts that beaver sometimes create can be minimized. In this paper, we examine how landscape architects and restoration ecologists are anticipating the geomorphic and hydrological implications of beaver reintroduction in the design of wetlands and urban natural areas at regional and site levels. We present an urban beaver map and three case studies in Seattle, WA, USA, to identify various approaches, successes, and management strategies for integrating the actions of beaver into project designs. We make recommendations for how designers can capitalize on the benefits of beaver by identifying sites with increased likelihood of colonization, leveraging ecosystem engineers in design conception, designing site features to reduce constraints for the reintroduction and establishment of beaver, and anticipating and managing impacts.

My goodness. Will you look at that abstract, It’s almost like research proving that beaver can be valuable in urban settings. Who would say something crazy like that? I mean sure they can trap the false leg or two before it finds its way to sea, but how can beaver dams really help any city?


Whoa. You know what’s really funny? Is that I know this crazy woman who has been flogging these same points for 11 years! But she knows nothing about beavers. She’s a child psychologist so no one listens to her. Funny coincidence. When she was published professionally it was in a Wiley Journal too, go figure. But that’s neither here nor there.

It’s not like that beaver study has any graphs or anything that prove in some settings beavers make things better.

Wow. You know what’s really interesting? I remember reading something like this in the urban beaver chapter in Pollock’s restoration guidebook 2.0. I think it was written by Ellen Wohl, Greg LeWallen and Perry-something. I wonder if he mentions that version in the references?

Dam. Well he if Mr. Bailey never even read that part he missed out. Because it was extremely tight writing by one of the top hydro-geological professors in the country.

“dams in urban settings can provide benefits similar to those in rural areas including: storing surface and groundwater , regulating flow, improving stream complexity, Modifying nutrient cycling, storing sediment, and increasing biodiversity while also restoring stream resilience”

Okay, its true, every major work builds on the work of those gone before, and we’re all standing on each other’s shoulders, but don’t you think one should mention those shoulders? At least in passing?

Ahem.

Well urban beaver benefits are published officially now. And that’s a great thing for folks on the ground trying to find ways to prove they shouldn’t be killed.

You’re welcome!


“Dorothy Richards, the Beaver Woman who founded Beaversprite Sanctuary, with Nicky, her last in-house beaver”

Beaversprite Nature Center is the magical educational retreat created by Dorothy Richards in a small town in Upstate New York. Dorothy is the heroine of the Beaversprite book that worked so tirelessly to better understand and explain our favorite animal, The dynamic learning space (complete with a ‘crawl-through’ beaver lodge) she left as her legacy suffered from mismanagement and needs your help getting back on its feet.

From Sharon Brown at Beavers: Wetlands and Wildlife.

Sign a Petition to Reopen the Sanctuary/Save Beaversprite Sanctuary and Dorothy Richards’ Dream

More signatures on the Sanctuary Petitionare vital now as we’re seeking a PA pro bono enviro atty.  to help our NY atty. with her appeal to a PA Right-to Know law denial — for the PA AG’s Sanctuary file — that documents the ErdmanTrustee’s plans to sell Beaversprite (Reineman) Sanctuary. This, despite wildlife having been protected at the Sanctuary and the public was educated there, according to the wills of the sanctuary’s donors, Dorothy & Florence Edman for over 70 years!! 

Your support will help them keep this dream alive. The petition has a stirring collection of remarks from supporters like this one:

 Mrs. Susan Pedrick – Second Grade Teacher, Oppenheim-Ephratah-St. Johnsville CSD says: I teach 2nd grade at Oppenheim Ephratah St. Johnsville school.  I visited the Sanctuary for many years.  I have lots of pictures of the group’s visits.  It was a very educational and child friendly setting.  Children loved the trip and learned a great deal.  I probably went there 7 or 8 years as our field trip.  I did not know it had closed.  How sad.  It had Saturday night shows all summer free to the public with wonderful live animal programs.

Sign the Petition

 
Did you sign it? I did. If you sign it I’ll give you reward. Go sign, share it with three friends, and then watch this and think of the woman who was smart enough to live with beavers. Because awwwww…

 


My beaver reporting gig has changed in the past 6 months. It seems like there is so much good news because of Ben Goldfarb’s book I am too impatient to be bothered with the usual whining from Scottish farmers or duck hunters in Mississippi who think they need to blow up the beaver dam so there’s more room to shoot. I just want to talk about good news!

Like this for instance.

Working together with beavers is the answer

I’m thrilled to know that Torrey Ritter will be helping FWP to integrate beavers into the agency’s goals for watershed health and native fish recovery. Since much beaver habitat is currently unoccupied in our region, I commend FWP’s commitment to explore all options for restoration, including active reintroduction of beavers in the right place at the right time. Successful beaver relocations around the West are increasingly accompanied by “beaver dam analogues” or other structures that mimic and initiate the beaver’s likelihood of success. Transplanting mated pairs or family units has been shown to be effective, and I fully trust that FWP will take advantage of these and all other measures of the best available science for relocation outcomes that benefit people, beavers and habitat.

While we are lucky enough to have beavers existing on – or naturally returning to – our landscapes, there are several non-lethal solutions to traditional conflicts. Some, like wrapping special trees in wire fencing, are simple and cheap.

What a nice positive column from Montana of all places! Watching the story of beavers catch on is one of my favorite, favorite things.

“Flow devices” are another solution, and while they require some planning, a 310 permit and modest funds, they are durable, versatile investments that pay back in ecosystem services for years to come. Using a system of pipes and fencing to deter culvert blockage and excessive flooding, flow devices can be calibrated to avoid property damage while keeping the beavers in place. Far more than a compromise, studies have shown that for every dollar spent on flow devices, managers saved $8.37 in annual infrastructure repairs.

We have the tools and skills to work with these water-storing, fire-buffering, habitat-diversifying creatures. For more stories about how beavers are benefiting ranchers, urbanites, fish biologists and so many others, I suggest Ben Goldfarb’s excellent new book, “Eager: The Surprising, Secret Life of Beavers and Why They Matter.” Our watersheds have many problems but it is good to know that by working together – with beavers – we can be the answer.

Did you ever play the game of telephone as a child? Take a moment and  remember the eager feeling of waiting for the secret to come your way as you watch the ring of giggling classmate faces whisper into each other’s ears – the message that you know is coming to you eventually. That’s honestly how this feels. Except we know the secret already. And it’s not a secret. As the game unfolds this message is staying remarkably in tact.

I’d like to thank the Pathfinder and Biologist Scott Eggeman for last week’s excellent column exploring the history, ecology and growing importance of beavers. As we increasingly face the unpredictable stresses of fires, droughts and floods, I appreciate Eggeman’s nod to the rodent’s keystone role in a resilient ecosystem.

Which reminds me to also thanks to beaver friend Lisa Robertson of Wyoming Untrapped who recently sent me this snippet from an older film by Jeff Hogan.

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