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

Month: July 2019


We have entered a golden age of beaver reporting, where suddenly the list I keep of articles to write about is getting longer and longer even after I go through and ‘weed out’ all the depressing ones! I don’t know what could possibly account for this spate of good news unless it’s our festival, blowing beaver-goodwill pollen all across the nation and making people briefly smarter.

I can’t decide whether to talk about Alaska or Nevada this morning, so were doing both. Buckle up!

Nature Notes: Bringing a desert stream back to life

Surrounded by sagebrush covered hills, seeing flowing water is always good. When the small stream is surrounded by sedges and willows, and the air carries the sound of water tumbling over a beaver dam, it looks even better.

We are standing on a dirt road where Dixie Creek passes through a culvert beneath us. Carol Evans first saw this stream in 1988, when it carried no water, had no vegetation and no real streambed. She shows me the left photo above to emphasize what it looked like then.

You remember Carol Evans right? She’s the fisheries biologist advocating for beavers in Nevada that Ben Goldfarb’s book described as having the “Gentle voice of a painting instructor”.

(I believed he described me as “Not having the gentle voice of a painting instructor.” Fair enough.)

Earlier downcutting had dropped the stream between high banks. In a 1980 stream inventory, Dixie Creek was listed as an intermittent stream. But as willows and sedges returned to its banks, water flowed farther downstream and for longer periods. The water table along the stream rose and drowned out sagebrush, replacing it with more water-loving plants.

Today, the stream flows most of the year and even if it runs dry, water is still stored in the soil, among the dense, tall stands of willows. The high retaining walls of that old down cut remain, but between them is a healthy riparian area.

The biggest change came about with the return of beaver. As they dammed the stream, the impounded water collected sediment flowing downstream, sediment that raised the streambed and created deep pools. The water table rose even more, along with the streambed. Carol told me “it just takes backing off, giving it a chance, and it will grow.”

Ahh Carol, you patient wise woman, working over decades with ranchers and cattlemen in the desert to bring back healthy streams for your beloved cuttthroat trout, We salute you!

Beavers brought back other wildlife. During our visit, we saw a merganser adult swimming in front of a line of ducklings, a great blue heron and a chattering kingfisher. We listened to the call of a willow flycatcher perched in the willows. Dozens of bird species have been recorded here, species that would not be found on sagebrush flats. One survey recorded less than seven bird species in 1991, which grew to over 37 bird species in 2010. Several sensitive species have been seen here, including bats, sage-grouse, pygmy rabbits and California floaters (a species of freshwater mussel).

Whatever happens in the future, Carol will continue to come here, to walk the banks, check on beaver families, watch wildlife, and enjoy this healthy riparian area with its flowing water.

The reporter of this story, Larry Hyslop, has written about Carol’s amazing work for more than a decade. You can tell how much affection he feels for his subject matter knowing her stalwart spirit for so long. When you read an article like this it all seems peaceful, gentle and storybook-like.

Be assured that the battle to keep beaver on the landscape long enough to make a difference was a actual BATTLE and Carol just fought tooth and nail day in and day out armed with persuasion and the “the gentle voice of a painting instructor,”

Now lets go to Alaska where the similarly indomitable spirit of Mary Willson has been making a difference in Juneau since 2008.

The Beaver Patrol of Juneau helps maintain balance with wildlife and humans

They call themselves the Beaver Patrol, and they’re on a mission to ensure that beavers coexist in balance with people and salmon. Beavers, of course, intentionally dam streams to create their ponds. But when they block culverts in the wrong place it can cause problems, like flooding trails.

That’s what can happen in the Dredge Lake area near Mendenhall Glacier in Juneau — a network of trails and ponds connected by culverts.

One way to fix the problem is relocating or killing the offending beavers. That option was on the table well over a decade ago if other methods of managing them failed. (No one seems to remember it ever actually happening). But years ago, a group of volunteers stepped up with a plan to keep beaver dams from interfering with trails or salmon — without trapping any beavers.

Mary Willson is a long-time member of the Beaver Patrol. She said the group came together around the idea of balancing all the competing interests.

“We said, ‘Wait a minute, no — we can manage this, and we can try to find a compromise,’” she said. “We can keep the beavers, keep the habitat they make for the fish, allow the spawners to come up, decrease the trail flooding — let’s try to do it all. It’ll never be perfect, but it’ll be a whole lot better.

The trick is to let beavers keep building their dams, but make sure enough water is flowing to keep the trails from flooding and the salmon swimming through. In a natural environment, it’s easier for salmon to make their way through beaver dams — but when beavers jam sticks and logs into a narrow culvert, it can become impassable.r.”

 

You might remember Mary as the author of the awesome ‘Beavers of the Mendenhall Glacier book‘. She is a retired university professor of ecology that also does a trails column for the juneau paper. The book has amazing photographs by our friend Bob Armstrong – and one of these is STILL my wallpaper on the computer after more than a decade! When I share it you will understand why. I love it because of the color and the amount of hope it communicates – both in the glacial sunrise and in the sturdy nights effort by the beavers who must know FULL well that dam is going to be ‘beaver-patrolled’ by morning.

Armed with saws and gardening tools, the Beaver Patrol trudges along the trails in the Dredge Lake area, checking the dams. Here and there, they dig out parts of dams that are at risk of raising the water level too high. It’s an ongoing task — the beavers are constantly building, so they come out twice a week during the summer to keep things under control.

“We have proved ourselves to be at least as stubborn as the beavers,” Willson said with a laugh.

That’s what it takes to save beavers in this world. Patience. Good humor. And an appreciation of the stubborn.

Repeat as necessary.


You know how it is. You work all year throwing a beaver festival and a week later its all gone. Like the faded shadow of a dream of a dream. Who remembers what they were doing last Saturday morning before the sun came up? Not me. 

Never me.

It’s okay though because through our steady effort we moved the needles on public opinion to make this headline possible. Prepare to be shocked. Nobody but us would expect a headline like this. And yes I think the festival had a spiritual, zeitgeist-y, atmospheric role in its subject matter, Why do you ask?

Beavers engineer their ecosystems in a way that helps moose and otters

A whole host of different mammals appear to benefit from having beavers in the area. In forests where beavers have been introduced in Finland, their presence is linked to increased activity of several species, including moose, otters, and weasels.

Beavers are described as “ecosystem engineers” because their dam-building work has such a huge effect on habitats. Both the Eurasian beaver and the American beaver were almost driven extinct by hunting in the early 20th century, but they have since recovered in North America.

Beavers and weasels! Who knew? The glowing article has the very FINEST beaver photo I have ever seen. And I consider myself somewhat of a connoisseur of these things. I bet you’ll agree with me that this photo, from Troy Harrison at the Getty is OUTSTANDING. Teeth, tail, whole package!

More recently, beavers have begun to re-establish themselves in Europe, thanks in part to at least 157 reintroduction projects that have taken place in 24 European countries. The touted benefits they bring to the environment include drought prevention, carbon sequestration, flood management and keeping streams cool.

They are also thought to boost biodiversity. To learn more about their impact on other mammals, Petri Nummi at the University of Helsinki, Finland, and colleagues set up camera traps and surveyed snow tracks at forest sites in southern Finland where the American beaver was introduced in the 1950s.

Moose, red foxes and raccoon dogs visited beaver ponds more than control ponds where beavers were not present. Snow tracks showed that moose, otters, weasels and pine martens were more active in beaver patches than other sites.

Well of course there were. Sheesh. Have you folks just started paying attention? Invertebrates=fish=things that eat fish=things that hunt things that eat fish. And nutrients for the moose! All this means more footprints,

Otter with crayfish – Rusty Cohn

“The otter is a species of some concern in Europe, so this may be important from that point of view,” says Nummi.

Beavers change the environments they occupy in several ways. Their dams flood large areas, creating shallow ponds that harbour lots of invertebrates. The trees they fell create open spaces in the forest where young saplings can grow. When beavers leave a pond and their dams break, the previously flooded area is rich in nutrients and can become a meadow.

Felled trees, saplings and aquatic plants can all provide food for moose. Weasels and pine martens feed on smaller mammals, which may benefit from dead trees they can shelter under. Red foxes and raccoon dogs eat frogs, which are plentiful in beaver ponds. Besides feasting on frogs and fish in the ponds, otters make use of abandoned beaver lodges and ice holes during the winter.

Previous studies in the same area have found that beavers are associated with a greater abundance of bats, frogs and waterbirds.

Nummi’s article has been accepted for publication in New Scientist and we look forward to reading the entire thing some time in the very near future. I’ve included the abstract below. It’s fun reading this as if it was “News”. The Daily Mail picked up the story this morning and is having a party with it. Good. Keep on touting beaver benefits in Europe. 

The beaver facilitates species richness and abundance of terrestrial and semi-aquatic mammals

PetriNummiaWenfeiLiaobOphélieHuetceErminiaScarpulladeJanneSundelle

Abstract

Beavers are ecosystem engineers which are capable to facilitate many groups of organisms. However, their facilitation of mammals has been little studied. We applied two methods, camera trapping and snow track survey to investigate the facilitation of a mammalian community by the ecosystem engineering of the American beaver (Castor canadensis) in a boreal setting. We found that both mammalian species richness (83% increase) and occurrence (12% increase) were significantly higher in beaver patches than in the controls. Of individual species, the moose (Alces alces) used beaver patches more during both the ice-free season and winter. The Eurasian otter (Lutra lutra), the pine marten (Martes martes) and the least weasel (Mustela nivalis) made more use of beaver sites during the winter. Our study highlights the role of ecosystem engineers in promoting species richness and abundance, especially in areas of relatively low productivity. Wetlands and their species have been in drastic decline during the past century, and promoting facilitative ecosystem engineering by beaver is feasible in habitat conservation or restoration. Beaver engineering may be especially valuable in landscapes artificially deficient in wetlands.

Great work. Maybe the American biologists will eventually catch on?


A million years ago when I was employed I had a very popular bird feeder on my deck. It was visited by chickadees, nuthatches, woodpeckers and all manner of finches. When I describe it as ‘popular’ I mean by the birds of course. Not the humans. Not the aged curmudgeon did taxes in the office directly below me. He complained about the bird noises and droppings and leftover seed shells.

I wanted to keep him happy, and keep him from complaining to the landlord so for a period of time I was able to get Jon to clean his porch every week. Swept the seed away and rubbed off any droppings. It was a horrible job. The curmudgeon would fold his arms and watch angrily while Jon worked growling if he missed a spot.

One time the grumpy Gus pointed to a pile of pollen on the side of his porch and said. “Get that! All that green stuff, It was never here before!” Which of course it had been. Every May for as long as he rented that office and even before. Because it was from the pine trees who coned off pollen in the windy spring days and made everyone sneeze. He had never seen it before because he never looked at his porch until he started looking for the problems the birds were causing.

It was then that I realized he was looking with different eyes. The exact same kind of eyes people glare thru when beavers are being watched suspiciously on their property. Which is what I thought of when I read this article.

Bay Lake and Beavers: Coming to Terms with Wildlife

Living in a rural location inevitably means having a relationship with Mother Nature. And sometimes that relationship gets complicated. Bay Lake residents have been immersed, literally, in just how complicated it can be to live side by side with beavers.

Beavers have lived in the area for many years. Bud Ulsh, who was born in 1933 and has lived nearby his whole life, remembers hiking around Bay Lake and seeing evidence of beavers at least 20 years ago. Bruce Wagner, a division manager with Pierce County Planning and Public Works Maintenance and Operations, said that beavers began to cause significant problems at Bay Lake in 2011. That year the county placed a device known as a beaver deceiver to prevent beavers from blocking the culvert under Delano Road that allows outflow to Mayo Cove to prevent the road from flooding.

Resident Teresa Ives, who has lived on the lake for 15 years, said the device just seemed to encourage the beavers to build dams around it. The north end of the lake was once a narrow 20 feet across and now is close to 200 feet.

Oooh this is starting to get good. Settling in for a game of “Beaver Telephone”

A number of residents reported that the lake level has risen at least two and a half feet in the last few years. Docks that were above water are now submerged. Ives estimated that she has lost about an acre of her 7-acre property to rising water levels, and access to her floating dock was under water in mid-May.

Richard Miller has lived on Bay Lake since 2007. When he planned his dock, he kayaked around the lake to see what others had done. He built a floating structure with a stationary dock for access that was higher than any others on the lake. That dock, already replaced once, was under water in May.

Miller said there used to be some variation in the water level from summer to winter, with about 10 feet of beach in the summer. “I built stairs to get to the beach,” he said, “but now the beach is gone and the water meets the stairs.” He calculated the size of the lake at about 128 acres. Every foot of additional depth adds 400,000 gallons of water to the volume of the lake. “That’s at least one and a half million gallons more water now than a few years ago.”

Three complaining old biddies that blame beavers for EVERYTHING!!! Is tha all? Can’t you find anymore out there?

Reactions to the effects of the beavers have varied. Lee, whose house was most at risk, said, “Beaver need to be classified as nuisance animals. If they can hire a helicopter to shoot a wolf for killing cattle, they should help us get rid of the beavers. I am on the verge of losing my home.”

Yeah that’s what I’m talking about. A really outrageous request to be able to shoot them like wolves from helicopter! Why just shoot them? Why not hang them?

Ahh ain’t humanity great.

Stay tuned for our next installment when the creek dries up and they complain about all that stinking mud in their front yards!

The good part is that this complaining lake is in Washington state so if anyplace on god’s green earth is equipped to deal with these castor complaints from the peanut gallery, they are.


You probably thought that now that Emily Fairfax is a university professor she was too mature and worried about tenyear to attempt to ride in a beaver mobile at the festival. Well, you’d be wrong. Here she hunched over to try out Bob Rust’s child-sized beaver mobile on the sidewalk.

Emily in the beaver mobile from Heidi Perryman on Vimeo.

Further proof that beaver festivals make magic that lasts and lasts. And that Emily has nerves of steel. I’m so glad I got to meet her and briefly show her how our festival works. Just wait until next year. I hear that the phrase “Ecosystem Engineer” might just take on a whole new meaning.

In other news I have been waiting FOR EVER to show you what I truly believe is the first – but not the last – official beaver billboard. Yes, you read that right, Suzanne Fouty has been working with a team on this for half a year and it was officially unveiled last month in Oregon. I had to wait until the website was finalized to share but now you can follow the links and learn about beavers and wolves. 

A practiced eye might recognize that beaver portrait as one of our VERY OWN in Martinez and taken by the talented Cheryl Reynolds in 2009.

here’s how it looks from the street. Don’t you wish there were a series on EVERY corner?

Now just in case, like me, you’re feeling like celebrating the fourth should mean celebrating beavers, I thought you would appreciate these reminders of patriotism in the beaver nation. Apparently Benjamin Franklin thought highly enough of the animal to put it on the 6 dollar bill.

Happy No Mad King Day!


Now now now.

Beaver benefits are often ignored or underplayed. They are the very definition of the phase “hiding their light under a bushel”. It isn’t very often that they’re OVERplayed – at least not outside of this website.

But if such a thing is even possible this fine new video narrated by re-wildling’s own George Moonbiot must come close. I love parts of this very much. Beavers come off as loveable family members who work to make the world a better place. The beginning about beavers liking big streams more I think is anthropomorphic  bunk and there are plenty of head scratching moments but it SURE resonates.

Enjoy. And share!


Pretty sweet huh? It’s not every day that you listen to the vibrating tones of Moonbiot preaching why beavers matter. And he even includes the topics of drought and fire! I’m thinking that’s Ben’s book resonating there.

The historical trapping moments are kind of fictional. Of course when this all started they didn’t even HAVE metal traps. And  when they were finally invented they couldn’t figure out how to bait them and tried unsuccessful things like leaves and muskrats and fish to lure the beaver close, It was a total accident that they hit on castoreum eventually. That was actually my favorite part of our grisly trapping research.

I’m not sure about American castor sacs being less valuable because of our beavers eat cottonwood. (?) And I’ve never heard a parent coo to a kit to sooth it although I’ve heard lots of kit whining to parents.. For now I’d file it in the “Moonbiot facts bag” and treat it like rarely preserved medical tools from the middle ages. Intriguing but not that reliable today.

But okay sure. If you say so.

I LOVE the impact of trapping part: the dried ponds and fires laid out as clear consequences of all those missing beavers. I love thinking about the world that might have been if we hadn’t stolen their pelts. I doubt this will get the circulation of “How Wolves changed Rivers” but you have to start somewhere. And this is a fine place,

Oh and the moment at 5:25 when the beaver is coming over the dam and sliding into crystal clear water so you can watch him swim away underwater is the best video I have ever seen. I mean it. I want that footage.

I would say the UK is clearly outdoing itself with selling the beaver story at the moment. Here’s their newest conference advertisement.

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