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

Month: November 2018


Okay. I’m proud of this, so you have to go look. I thought the academy of science article by Ben had such remarkable graphics I had to try my hand and see what I could concoct. I like it a great deal but I had to cannibalize the other new page I did to manage it. It was worth it. I’ll figure out eventually how to get the other one back. Go look at the page, wait a few seconds for it to load and please don’t forget to come back, because I have a fun article from WIRED to talk to you about.


How immersive is that! Actually a little more than I wanted, because I was trying to make just a strip of video across the top, but that will do for now. Moses Silva shot this video of our current habitat behind the Junior High School. It’s so lovely. Now we just have to figure it how to get a web cam down there.

Well, Beavers do rule the world. This article by Virginia Hefferna of Wired magazine said so, so it must be true.

 

Tundra-Trailblazing Beavers Shaped How We Coexist

Having gnawed their way across the Bering Land Bridge with their iron-glazed teeth, beavers by the tens of millions straight-up built North America. They worked like rodent Romans, subjugating the deciduous forests with formidable infrastructure: canals, lodges, dams that can last centuries, and deep still-water pools used to float building materials. By clear-cutting trees and blocking streams, the nocturnal, semiaquatic creatures also damaged the environment in some of the same ways humans do. Much later, beavers unexpectedly became the toast of a rarefied academic circle at the University of Toronto, where they inspired, of all things, media theory.

Oh darn, Virginia. If it wasn’t for that ONE FALSE WORD this might have been a contender in the top five opening paragraphs for 2018. Too bad you had to fall for that old fish-tale about beavers “ruining” the environment. What beavers do is transform the environment, in a way that makes it better for many many species for decades to come.

That’s nothing like what humans do.

It’s axiomatic: Humans follow beavers. When humans showed up in the pre-Columbian Americas, various tribes built their cultures around beaver dams, where they harvested meat, fur, and glands, including the musky secretion of the castor anal sac, which is still used in perfume.

Hundreds of years passed. Europeans of the 17th century became almost erotically fixated on a certain kind of supple men’s high hat made of beaver, and they skinned their continent’s supply to near-extinction. So the English established, in 1670, “the Governor and Company of Adventurers of England trading into Hudson’s Bay” and sent the stouthearted human subspecies known as trappers to chase the rodents up the Canadian waterways.

You’re right. Humans DO follow beavers because humans follow water and fertile soil which beavers make available. It’s kinda like Robins following gardeners. Except humans kill the beavers and complain about drought. We are so funny that way.

North of the Saint Lawrence River—and especially in the sublime Precambrian shield, the exposed section of billion-year-old metamorphic crust that runs from Michigan to Greenland—the beavers, with their lush pelts that fetched the highest prices from European milliners, turned haute ­couture. Because the indigenous groups had the advantage of experience, trappers from Hudson’s Bay Company (today the oldest company in North America) aimed to weaken tribal bonds. Europeans learned all they could from the better trappers, then encouraged them to depend on imported goods, including brandy. This eventually broke up the native communities and gave the colonizers what’s known in communications theory as an “information monopoly.”

Because the parties to the fur trade mimicked, and pushed, one another forward—beavers imitated the damming styles of humans, humans dressed as beavers, animal and human cultures fought and fused—their ways of communicating evolved rapidly.

Hmm. That’s an interesting thought. Did beavers make us stronger? Absolutely. Do humans make beavers stronger? Not in the least. They don’t need anything from us, but we need everything from them.

Humans may soon follow the beavers and push north again, seeking not pelts but asylum from extreme heat and drought, floods, and poverty. As if hurricanes in the US and Revelation-­caliber fires as far north as the Arctic last year weren’t signals enough, the UN’s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change warned in October that, absent rigorous intervention, Earth in 22 years will be almost 2.7 degrees Fahrenheit hotter than it was in preindustrial days.

In a hot, parched, salty, and melting world, Canada can look like a life raft. But climate refugees should be warned: In the coming decades, even southern Canada might not be entirely habitable. To get safely out of the heat, you might even have to get all the way to the tundra of the far, far north.

And you would hardly be trailblazing. Beavers, ever adaptable and enterprising, got to the tundra first—and their now flourishing Arctic empire can be seen from space. As so many times before, they pushed past the northern edge of their traditional habitat, out of their comfort zone, exacerbating and repairing and fleeing climate change all at once, past Alaska’s boreal forest into the Arctic, ambling ever upward, their luxurious pelts thickening and thickening.

So climate change is going to drive humans to the edges of the possible, but it’s okay because beavers will have already lead the way. It’s nice to read an article about beavers in the Tundra that isn’t complaining for a change.

And if beavers are already there, I won’t mind following one bit.


Some readers spring remember that this spring we entered a very dark period where the website went away involuntarily. I was scrambling day and night to win it back but all of the images had suddenly ‘disappeared’ when a clever tech offered to make things easier. (Word to the wise. Clever techs don’t always make things better,)

In my scramble I met a vaguely reasonable voice at bluehost who was slightly less erratic than his co-workers. He warned me against trusting techs with good ideas and said, without a hint of irony, “Some of these guys haven’t even been here a year!” He cautioned, and leaned in proudly “I’ve been here 13 months!

I must have burst out laughing at that point because he was very surprised at the noise and I was equally surprised to find he wasn’t being ironic. It eventually took a smart girl and her supervisor all day to fix the problem, but I never forgot that line because no matter who you tell, maytag repair man, electrician, comcast installer, it always makes people laugh.

Well, this morning Ben’s book gets reviewed by a similarly qualified science blogger. I’ll just post the title and leave it at that.

Get that? Since 2017? Who would put that on a website as a tag line? Ye olde science blogger.  Here’s Ben’s review:

Book review – Eager: The Surprising, Secret Life of Beavers and Why They Matter

I cannot deny that the first thing that came to my mind upon seeing this book was Leslie Nielsen’s slightly smutty beaver joke in Naked Gun.


Wow. That’s his open? Hilarious and soo original. He must have had many, many dates in college.

Shame on me, as environmental journalist Ben Goldfarb presents a serious, incisive book that shows just how important beavers and their dams are for biodiversity, ecosystem health, and hydrology. If humans are now said to be a geological force to be reckoned with, birthing the term Anthropocene, our persecution of beavers led to the loss of another geological force.

You can tell both that he didn’t much care for the subject or Ben’s brilliant language-laden prose. But he cared more than he expected to and wrote about it here.

We meet Mike Callahan, a former physician-assistant at a methadone clinic who invented flow devices: low-tech beaver-proof structures of pipes and fences that partially drain a beaver pond to prevent catastrophic flooding of nearby roads and properties, now highly in demand throughout the US. There is Nick Weber, a scientist who has been imitating beavers by constructing artificial dams that have beneficial effects on the hydrology of landscapes and are not infrequently colonised be returning beavers, giving them a leg-up when re-establishing themselves. Or Heidi Perryman, whose non-profit Worth a Dam has been ceaselessly campaigning for the benefit of beaver-dom, dispelling many myths and misconceptions in the process.

Ohhh we get a mention! Be still my heart – oh wait. It is.

Though I have always had a superficial mental image of beavers as those dam-building rodents, I found Eager to be a revelatory and very interesting book. The regular castorid puns and rich alliteration might not be to everyone’s taste, admittedly, but overall my feeling was that the prose flowed off the pages into my eyeballs. Eager is clearly far more than a dry, scholarly treatise on the subject. In my opinion, Goldfarb here successfully advocates the beaver’s cause while also writing a beautiful book.

So you liked it? I think I’m going to call this the ‘mighty white of you’ book review. Yes Ben did write a FASCINATING and earth changing book, and beavers are literal earth changes and worth so much more than a Lesie Neilsen pun. Although maybe you’re right when you think of it.

Calling vagina’s beavers makes since because, after all, vaginas made the world as we know it and so did beavers. Ahem.


Our friends to the north Jim and Judy Atkinson of Port Moody B.C. were excited to install a flow device yesterday.  Hurray! And Brrrrr! I guess this means that DOF will stop cutting out the dam every five minutes. Adrien of Fur-bearer Defenders did the deed with Jim’s able assistance. Kudos to both of them.

Installing a flow device in Port Moody

How was your thankful day? Ours was excellent and in the middle Ben Goldfarb dropped a hard hitting new beaver article on the world, which had such amazing web graphics I was green with envy for a while. I’m almost over it, so let’s enjoy without resentment. The designs of biographic and the academy of sciences are so new and complicated I can’t even share them on this site, so DEFINITELY click on the link this time and go see for your self.

They Will Build It

 
Story by Ben Goldfarb
Photographs and video by Morgan Heim

Although not Indigenous themselves, Alves and Bailey relocate beavers under the auspices of the Tulalip Tribes, a sovereign nation with nearly 5,000 members. This week they’ve set their traps in the Puget Sound suburb of Marysville—half an hour north of Seattle if you leave before daybreak, an eternity at rush hour. Across the street from the Marysville Public Library waits their Silverado pickup, its right two wheels perched on the curb. Alves and Bailey, foreheads damp with sweat, set the beaver down and lower the tailgate. Morning traffic roars past, drivers craning their necks.

“Good?” he laughs. “What good do they do? They’re always clogging up culverts and being a pain in the ass. You’re lucky you got to him before I did.” Before I can craft a response, he snaps up a crushed water bottle and strolls off.

The sentiment that Castor canadensis is little more than a tree-felling, water-stealing, property-flooding pest is a common one. In 2017, trappers in Washington State killed 1,700 “nuisance” beavers, nearly 20 times more than were relocated alive. In neighboring Oregon, the herbivorous rodents are classified as predators, logic and biology notwithstanding. California considers them a “detrimental species.” Last year alone, the U.S. Department of Agriculture eliminated more than 23,000 conflict-causing beavers nationwide.

Running countercurrent to this carnage is another trend: the rise of the Beaver Believer. Across North America, many scientists and land managers are discovering that, far from being forces of destruction, beavers can serve as agents of water conservation, habitat creation, and stream restoration. In Maryland, ecologists are promoting beaver-built wetlands to filter out agricultural pollutants and improve water quality in Chesapeake Bay. In North Carolina, biologists are building beaver-like dams to enhance wet meadows for endangered butterflies. In England, conservationists have reintroduced the Eurasian beaver (Castor fiber) in hopes that their pond complexes will attenuate destructive floods. And in Washington, where a century of habitat loss has devastated salmon, the Tulalip Tribes are strategically dispatching beavers to support the fish so integral to their history and culture.

Back at the truck, I recount my exchange with the beaver-abhorring walker. Alves laughs. She has heard such slander before, and has a rebuttal at the ready.

“I would have asked him if he likes fresh water and salmon.”

You can see right away you’re going to like this article. It’s a great day-after read so I’d gather a second cup of coffee and settle in. Ben is taking us on an journey and you know that’s always somewhere you want to go.

That beavers benefit salmon is, in some quarters, a provocative claim. Many biologists historically regarded beaver dams as stream-choking barriers to fish passage. In the 1970s, Washington, Oregon, and California even passed laws mandating the removal of in-stream wood, beaver dams included. More recently, a 2009 proposal funded by the Atlantic Salmon Conservation Foundation suggested eradicating beavers from 10 river systems on Prince Edward Island and employing trappers to enforce “beaver free zones” in others.

The notion of purging beaver dams to allow salmon to pass, however, doesn’t stand up to scientific scrutiny. One 2016 study documented individual salmonids traversing more than 200 beaver dams on their way to spawn in Oregon streams, suggesting that fish have little trouble negotiating the obstacles. Far from harming salmon, in fact, beavers create indispensable fish nurseries. By filling up ponds and digging canals, beavers engineer the deep pools, lazy side channels, and sluggish backwaters that baby salmon need to conserve energy and evade predators like great blue herons. Today, the National Marine Fisheries Service considers “encouraging formation of beaver dams” vital for recovering Oregon’s endangered coho populations.

“Beavers create complex habitat and enhance local biological diversity in a way that’s really unique,” says Michael Pollock, an ecosystems analyst at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration who’s among the beaver movement’s grandfathers. “They do a much better job of managing these systems than we do.”

Yes they do. Because we get distracted. Beavers don’t. They work like their very lives depend upon these ponds. Which, as it happens, they do. They aren’t working for a paycheck. They’re working to survive.

The white colonists who overran Puget Sound did not share that respect. On January 22, 1855, Isaac Stevens, governor of the new Washington Territory, and dozens of tribal chiefs signed the Treaty of Point Elliott, an agreement that forced many of the Sound’s Native people onto the 22,000-acre Tulalip Reservation. While a judge later called the treaties “unfair, unjust, ungenerous, and illegal,” they did have a redeeming feature, permanently preserving tribal members’ rights to fish at their “usual and accustomed” places. Although the provision was seldom honored—Native fishermen were arrested and harassed, sometimes violently, by their white counterparts—a federal court finally intervened on the tribes’ behalf in 1974, granting Native people half the annual harvest.

Yet the victory was, in some ways, a hollow one. The Puget Sound’s salmon were in freefall, the victims of dams, overfishing, and the Seattle area’s explosive growth. Thousands of acres of marsh had been paved over, hundreds of embayments wiped out. Beaches had been bulwarked, lowland forests demolished. What use was having your right to fish confirmed by the courts if there were no fish to catch? “We’d lost so much natural water storage,” says Terry Williams, the Tulalip’s treaty rights commissioner. “We needed to come up with plans for longer-term watershed recovery, to have natural approaches that allow ecosystems to restore themselves.”

This is a nice way to tell a long story. And if you’re like me you’ll be interested in the human angle of this. The woman to the left of salmon guru Dr. Michael Pollock is his long term girlfriend attorney tribal lawyer enjoying homemade enchiladas at our rental in Santa Barbara during the salmonid conference. Around the table clockwise are Sherry Guzzi, Mike Callahan and Mary Obrien. Because I know these little human details matter to us groundlings.

While expanded ponds are beavers’ most visible hydrologic impact, their ability to recharge groundwater might be an even greater contribution. At the Tulalip’s relocation sites, Ben Dittbrenner has found that for every cubic meter (264 gallons) of surface water beavers impound, another 2.5 cubic meters (660 gallons) sinks into the earth. As that water trickles through the soil, it cools off, eventually reemerging to mingle with streamflows downriver. Elsewhere, such hyporheic exchange between surface- and groundwater keeps streams hydrated later into the dry season, turning seasonal creeks perennial. Dittbrenner’s research suggests that beaver-facilitated cooling and mixing also reduces water temperatures by more than 2 degrees Celsius (about 3.5 degrees Fahrenheit), a huge boon for heat-sensitive salmon and trout.

Although beavers won’t singlehandedly save us from climate change, such findings suggest they might be able to help our stressed water supplies adapt to a warmer future. “By 2100, we’re expecting to see snowpack, which is basically our water storage reservoir, disappear throughout a lot of the Cascades,” Dittbrenner says. “I’m curious whether beavers could make up an appreciable storage component of that lost snowpack.”

The trick to making beavers make a difference is to let them stay around, or encourage them to stay around. Folks do that by planting willow, by not killing them, and by installing BDAs.

So how do you get beavers to cooperate? One option: Give them a leg up. After touring Mahoney, we jounce up yet another endless string of dirt roads to yet another remote tributary, this one shielded from the road by a verdant screen of maple and Devil’s club. The Tulalip had installed beavers here a year ago, with disheartening results. “They just kind of waddled off, never to be seen again,” Bailey says.

To entice the next colony to stay, Bailey and Alves have decided to attempt a new tactic—human-built walls of wooden posts and sticks known as “beaver dam analogues.” The idea behind beaver dam analogues, or BDAs, is simple: In situations where suboptimal habitat discourages beavers from settling down, a human-assisted starter kit can persuade them to stay put and build dams of their own. In one Oregon stream where scientists built more than 120 beaver dam analogues, beaver activity increased eightfold—and juvenile steelhead trout survival spiked by more than 50 percent. Little wonder that BDAs are now among the American West’s hottest stream restoration techniques, deployed to enhance wet meadows for greater sage-grouse in Wyoming, remediate mining waste in Montana, and improve fish habitat in Northern California.

Thanks in large measure to the Tulalip’s example, tribal-led beaver restoration in Washington will soon take another leap forward. Among the volunteers at the beaver dam analogue installation is Erik White, wildlife manager with the Cowlitz Tribe. The Cowlitz’s southwest Washington territory encompasses the Lewis River, which in turn is home to bull trout, a cold-loving fish imperiled by climate change.

“A lot of projections show that 80 percent of bull trout habitat in the Lewis River basin is going to disappear in the next 25 years because of increasing water temperatures,” White says during a break in our post-pounding. Inspired by the Tulalip, he and the Cowlitz Tribe have launched a beaver relocation project of their own, and plan to begin moving the animals to the Gifford Pinchot National Forest in the spring of 2019. “We’ve got less and less snowpack every year,” White adds. “Beavers could be a way to spread flows out into a more natural hydrograph.”

Yes they could. And you know what works even better than moving beavers to a new location and carrying them in cages into remote spaces where you have to drive stakes into the soil just to talk them into to sticking around?

Letting them stay where they choose and dealing responsibly with whatever challenges they cause so you can benefit from them for years to come.

Just sayin’.


There is much to be thankful for this year in the beaver world. It has been one of the best years to support flat-tails we have ever known. Let me just give a shortlist of reminders before start the day with friends and family.

I’m thankful that this may our story and beavers appeared in the National Wildlife Federation’s “Ranger Rick Magazine” where they could be seen by children all over the country and beyond.  We were so lucky for Suzi Eszterhas photos with our beavers. Happy Thanksgiving, Suzi!

The very next month Ben’s book was published and the beaver world has never been the same since.I’m so grateful that we got to be part of that story and part of the brilliant torch that got passed forward on this journey. Happy Thanksgiving, Ben.

Our beaver festival was held in a new park for the first time, and graced with the amazingly generous artwork of Amy G. Hall who gave two days of intensive labor to create this. Happy Thanksgiving, Amy.


What a year. And thanks to you all for making it happen.

A final somber wish for the day goes to the peace and recovery of our friends and neighbors in Paradise. Remember them today in your warm homes with all your loved one gathered because they are reminding us all what it means to be thankful for what you have left even after unthinkable tragedy when we keep listening for the still, small voice.

And after the earthquake a fire; but the lord was not in the fire: and after the fire a still small voice.

1 Kings 19:12


Brace yourselves. I’m about to show you something really, really adorable. Something that even if I hadn’t devoted the last 11 years of my life to beavers might make me stop dead in my tracks and say “My god, I love this animal! How can I help?” I realize that just because you visit this website doesn’t mean you read every word or watch every video. We all have important things to do every day. BUT WATCH THIS. This is the best, most engaging beaver video I have ever seen and its only 20 seconds long. Watch it with the sound turned up, watch it again to make sure you saw it, and then when you’re done laughing we’ll talk about it later.

First of all, if your sound was turned up you know that that kit fell into water, so he wasn’t hurt and it’s okay for us to talk about this cheerfully. This was posted on November 7 by the Pacific Southwest Fish and Wildlife Facebook page. So thanks for this.

Struck so profoundly by the fall, it took me a while to notice that  in the beginning of the film he’s climbing his way to the chewed space in the tree carrying mud and sticks to lay on the notch. Like that little kit Art filmed this year he clearly thinks he’s helping build the ‘dam”. Then he climbs into the notch (dam) and reaches around to the side with his foot to feel his way.

But because it’s not actually a dam there’s a huge drop off which he won’t go down. He reaches around a little to find his way, and by using his foot to reach he loses that anchor for balance (claws are holding on the tree supporting him) and thus falls off sideways.

Here it is again for the play by play. You can actually slow it down if you click on the cog and set the speed to .5.

What we know is that this kit watched the parent work here for hours, and was irresistibly drawn to the site to help. He just wasn’t sure how. Think about your own children, they watch you do the same tasks for them every day over and over (pouring cereal, packing lunches, squeezing toothpaste on the brush, washing their hair in the bath) that when they decide to help they sometimes get mixed up in the details.

Pouring cheerios in their lunchbox or squeezing toothpaste on their hair. It happens.

If you aren’t sure whether you believe me, let’s rewatch the video from Art Wolinsky earlier this year. This kind of mistaken help must happen all the time in the beaver kingdom. We just never realized it before.

For beavers, work is irresistible. They just can’t wait to help. There are lots of things to learn and lots of wires. Sometimes they get crossed. Which makes beavers the very coolest animal. Ever.

Also, just in case this went without saying, beavers fall exactly like muppets.

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