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

Month: October 2019


When you undertake a gigantic change that has never come close to being done before, you begin very simply. Baby steps forward. Eyes on the prize. Never stop moving obliquely towards the light.

Except no one ever told Eric Robinson change happens slowly. He’s just beavering in. All-in.

The California Department of Fish and Wildlife has, for nearly a century, adhered to a strict policy saying that forbid beaver relocation. Beavers were problems. And you don’t move problems to somebody else’s property. Unlike Washington and Utah and Idaho a beaver causing trouble in one place can NOT be live trapped with his family and relocated to another place where his dam building might do some good. Never mind beaver contribution to watershed, drought, fire prevention, biodiversity. The only solution is the final solution.

“BETTER DEAD THAN WATERSHED”

Until the revolution that is.

This week will be the first ever meeting on beaver relocation in California. It is the vision of Eric Robinson of Southern California and involves his dream to bring back beaver from the crushing traps of San Diego and restore them to the empty dryish creekbeds of the Tule Tribe with the help of some well-placed friends. Like all revolutionaries, he has a vision of a better world and no time for the obstacles to his success.

The famed Molly Alves from the Tulalip tribe will be there teaching beaver relocation and housing, wildlife rehab staff will get first hand training from the expert, joined by our own Cheryl Reynolds and Brock, Kate and Kevin of the OAEC. It will be, for all intents and purposes the first meeting of the beaver revolution to rattle California and you can bet there is already serious push-back against it happening.

But it is happening.

If you feel the earth move suddenly this week you’ll know why. There are ideas that are so radical even talking about them is heresy of a kind. Get ready for life beyond the barricades, because its coming.

This revolution will not be televised. But you can read about it, here.


What a relief to know that the folks in St Johns NL aren’t getting any smarter than our cynicism would expect. Remember this city is on the very edge of the very edge of Canada almost in the Atlantic Ocean, and just North East of PEI which we know is notorious for beaver retardation. This is pretty much what you’d expect from a town that never read a book or looked at the internet.

N.L. town calls in trapper to deal with pesky beavers clearcutting trees

ST. JOHN’S, N.L. — A Newfoundland town has called in a trapper to deal with a group of pesky beavers that have been felling trees on private property — in some cases onto power lines.

But in recent years, the rodents have developed an affinity for trees in residential areas, clearcutting as many as 14 on one property in a single night.

Keith Park, a municipal enforcement officer with the town, said the beavers have become more brazen because new developments have been built closer to their homes.

“You’ll see them sometimes, swimming along the river bank — I guess they’re kind of scoping out where their next venture is,” Park said.

There are a number of beaver dams along the Humber River, but one large dwelling in particular — estimated at about three metres wide — is believed to be the source of the intrusive group because of its proximity to a residential street.

Get that? There are a number of dams on the river but they’ve spotted ONE in particular that has the bad beavers living in it. Because there’s no difference between a lodge and a dam and you can tell the morality of a beaver just by its address.

The provincial Department of Fisheries and Land Resources arranged for a trapper “to address complaints regarding nuisance beavers causing residential property damage,” according to a statement.

Park said the town will avoid disturbing beavers living in other parts of the river that haven’t been approaching private properties. As of Tuesday, the trapper reported six beavers have been caught and the issue appears to have abated for now, Park said.

Park said most residents in the hardest-hit area seem happy to see the beavers gone, but there has been some resistance to additional trapping.

The trapper reported he will remove traps from an area just outside town because someone has been intentionally setting them off, Park said.

The town is keeping an eye on the other beaver dwellings and Park said people are prepared for more visits in years to come, as more animals may move into the same dwelling.

“This (beaver) house has been there probably 10 or 15 years now,” Park said. “This will reoccur.”

“We killed the offending family, and I guess your trees are safe enough for now”. Never mind that new beavers will come soon and everyone knows this isn’t the end of anything. Too bad my urban booklet isn’t finished yet or I might send them one.

But it is coming along fairly nicely. Flip through the pages and take a peak why don’t you? There’s one and a half still blank in the center, but go through to the end. You can zoom in or share,

One last treat for the dedicated. I found this video by accident the other day. Doesn’t it look like this beaver is thinking about building a lodge from ice?


I guess if you live to be old enough everything seems new eventually. Yesterday I was hunting around for a pithy urban beaver quote and stumbled onto this article. I can’t even tell if I wrote about it before because neither the author or the headline comes up on a search. Lets pretend we know I didn’t and be shocked that a jewel like this ever slipped by.

OHH I found it. 3 days before my last day of work closing down 25 years of office record so no wonder I forgot!

Leaving it to beavers: Communities make room for natural engineers

Once valued as little more than pelts, beavers are back in vogue and rebuilding their reputation as habitat engineers.

It helps their cause that the dams they build as homes also create water quality-boosting wetlands and habitat for other species. In the process, the structures slow the flow of water and filter out sediment that would otherwise be on its way to the Chesapeake Bay.

And a new study out of the Northeast suggests the dams, which can alter the course of entire river systems, can also substantially reduce the amount of nitrogen in them.

Arthur Gold, chair of the natural resources science department at the University of Rhode Island, along with graduate student Julia Lazar, was interested in the role of certain landscapes in cleaning up waters before they reach key estuaries. With a focus on natural resources, the team looked for important landscape features that have “pollution-cleansing capacity.”

Beaver dams “had all the ingredients,” Gold said.

The researchers knew beaver dams deployed wet, organic soils to trap nitrates, but could they also transform it into a gas that would float away from the water altogether?

The answer, it turns out, is yes.

Now I know we have talked a lot about Gold’s research on nitrogen removal. But I just don’t remember an article specifically saying this was especially good news for urban beavers. Do you?

The larger beaver ponds they studied removed up to 45 percent of the nitrogen from the water that moved through them, while smaller ponds removed closer to 5 percent. Gold said some of the lower removal rates were in ponds that had little nitrogen work to do in the first place because they filtered forested landscapes.

They’ve come back to a landscape with much more nitrogen in it,” he said, “So, because of the conditions that beaver ponds create, we now have a new removal ecosystem that we didn’t have.”

Where have you been all my life, you precious perfect article!

Residents can use tree guards to protect their expensive ornamentals from beavers’ teeth. Rather than destroying dams or trapping beavers, they can mitigate the impact of rising water tables with devices like the “beaver deceiver,” which uses pipes to channel water through the dam while giving the beaver the feeling of damming the stream.

Beavers and their dams also bring new habitats to urban and suburban environments, creating the wetlands known to be key to several species’ survival. Griffin said more people are warming to the idea that a beaver can bring benefits to the neighborhood.

“On a larger scale, there is the realization that we have shrinking wetlands. Harnessing these creatures to [create wetlands] in places where it’s possible is a great way to control runoff and create new systems,” he said.

In more rural environments, beavers not only have room to roam but their dams can help remove excess nitrogen associated with septic systems and animal farms. That impact can be even more powerful if we make room for dams — or simply conserve patchworks of the landscape — between urban and rural areas throughout the watershed.

“By conserving the area and creating places for the beaver, you may not have to go in later on and install stormwater management,” Kaushal said. “You could have a [nitrogen-absorbing] sink that’s there by just conserving some of the land.”

Newly flooded forest ponds attract herons to form new rookeries and eagles to find new feeding grounds. Amphibians flourish in the shallow ponds and juvenile fish find room to grow.

In the West, natural resource departments have deployed beavers to help restore watersheds, where the ponds they create become rich with invertebrate life.

But beaver dams are also the foundation for “a riot of plant life,” Gold said. The plants contribute to the ponds’ ability to remove nitrogen from the water.

Honestly. I still can’t get over the fact that I’m not sure if I ever saw this before. The Bay Journal is based in Pennsylvania. How does such wisdom slip right past Washington and California and end up there?

When that plant material dies in the fall, Gold explained, the microbial community has a feast similar to what takes place in a compost pile. They need oxygen to fuel this decomposition, but there’s only so much to be had in a beaver pond.

The researchers found that those microbes are then able to use an alternate source of oxygen by stripping one of the oxygen molecules from the nitrate molecule, made up of one nitrogen atom and three oxygen atoms. Subsequent steps carried out by anaerobic bacteria in the wet soil strip the remaining oxygen atoms and may ultimately free the nitrogen atoms, a gas, and allow it to leave the watershed.

The chemical process is the same as what happens in a streamside wetland as it filters runoff from adjacent land. But, unlike a riparian filter, beaver ponds might be filtering — and removing nitrogen from — water that’s flowed off an entire watershed, perhaps 2,000 acres.

Gold thinks this research makes the case for beaver dams interspersed throughout a stream system and, as often as possible, downstream from major sources of nitrogen pollution.

Urban parks can be a great place for beavers to redefine the landscape, as they have at Bladensburg Waterfront Park along the District of Columbia’s stretch of the Anacostia River. Jorge Bogantes Montero, stewardship program specialist in natural resources for the Anacostia Watershed Society, said three beaver dams constructed in one stretch of the park demonstrate their ability to attract wildlife and clean the water even in the middle of the city.

There, he said, you can see firsthand “how beaver engineering inspired these new systems that bioengineers use for stream stabilization.”

Kaushal agrees that there’s room for them in these urban landscapes, especially as we learn more about their pollution-removal capacity.

“We need to, I don’t want to say embrace the beaver, but it’s a bigger symbol of some bigger things,” h

Oh man I need a cigarette after that article. This predates Ben’s book AND my retirement. And it deserves entry into the beaver hall of fame. Great work Whitney Pipkin pulling together some very complicated threads and tying it with a bow. You are my new hero from 4 years ago.


Ooh this is a fun Friday news day, First a secretly-beaver article from our friends at Phys,org, and then some spooky good news to get us ready for Halloween. Where should I start?

Nature-based solutions should be first line of defense against weather- and climate-related natural hazards

Solutions found in nature should be our first line of defence against the increasing number of climate change-related natural disasters, say experts from the University of Surrey.

Natural hazards—such as floods, landslides, heatwaves and droughts—have increased globally in the last 30 years, with more than 18,000 disasters taking place during the period of 1980 to 2018, resulting in €4.8 trillion of damage. In the same period, Europe experienced nearly 3,000 disasters which caused €631 Billion of losses. Particularly, heatwaves and floods have caused significant loss of life and economic damage across Europe and other parts of the world.

The team at GCARE critically analysed nearly 300 where Nature Based Solutions (NBS) were used to combat the effects of natural hazards. They found that floods were the most frequent type of hazard in Europe, while droughts were the most complicated in terms of triggering risks of other disasters. They also found that earthquakes and storms were the most destructive globally in terms of damage such as deaths and economic losses.

Oh flooding and droughts are the worst climate change problems in Europe. Gosh that sounds a lot like America. I sure wish there was some NBS that would help with those things.

The team identified that 56 percent of NBS in Europe were used to combat flooding. While the most used methods were ‘hybrid’ solutions such as and rain gardens, the most effective flood management solutions were in fact ‘blue’ constructions such as small ponds for river floods. Similarly, the deadliest heatwaves were mostly managed by green approaches, such as urban parks, trees and grasses.

Small ponds. Small ponds. What do we know of that makes small ponds again? Wait, wait, don’t tell me.  It’s on the tip of my tongue. They make microclimates that can help with heat waves too. Gosh. I almost have it.

Well, well, well. Who knew NBS could stand for Natural Beaver Solutions? Eh? Well I mean who knew besides us.

Now ’tis the season for dressing up like beavers. Apparently it could be very lucrative.

Bucky’s Boo Bash

Cumming, GA – The Halloween Season will be in full swing on Saturday, October 26th, when Beaver Toyota, in cooperation with Forsyth Friends, Inc., hosts “Bucky’s Boo Bash” between the hours of 3:00pm and 5:00pm at dealership’s Cumming location situated at 1875 Buford Highway, Cumming, GA 30041.

The activities occurring during this family friendly celebration will include a wide variety of games presented by eight (8) locally based community non-profit service organizations. There will also be three (3) individual costume contests with cash prizes for each designated costume theme.

The individual costume contests include:
Each costume classification will have First Place ($100 prize), Second Place ($50 prize) and Third Place ($25 prize) winners.

Best Bucky Beaver Costume (dressed like a friendly woodland beaver)

Oh man. I think I’ll win hands down. Don’t you?

 

 


Photo posted by Betsy Stapleton

How much do you love this photo and want to be this eager child unfolding the mysteries of a beaver pond for the first time or the twelfth time. Every morning I went down to see our beavers I felt just like this kid, Howard Carter at the edge of Tutankhamun’s tomb, on the verge of discovery. Thank you Betsy for sharing this image on the beaver management forum.

I’ve finally gotten to the part of my urban handout where I’m talking about various experiences of discovery. Judy Taylor-Atkinson of Port Moody wrote a beautiful piece for it that I thought I’d share. Remember to click on the image twice if the text is to small.

Isn’t that beautiful? The very definition of “Urban Wildlife bringing Social Cohesion”. Completely unlike this Utah city which is missing the forest AND the trees.

Park City Municipal Will Euthanize Trapped Beaver: Flooding And Damage From Dams On Poison Creek

Park City public works has hired a trapping service to capture and euthanize a couple of beaver that have built dams on the stream along the Rail Trail. Residents have complained to the city that the back up of water from a couple beaver dams is causing flooding and property damage.

Lots of beavers on NPR this week. I particularly liked this quote. He sounds almost sad.

On McCleod Creek, we have 13 pond levelers and these pond levelers are constructed to where the beavers will build a dam and we put a pond leveler in, and they quit building, so they don’t make it bigger and bigger. And the beaver does well, and we’ve been successful at those.” They use devices called pond levelers on McCloud Creek to encourage beaver habitat and dam building but Dayley says the ponds close to town on Poison Creek along the Rail Trail are too shallow.

Remember the City Manager of Martinez told a resident that the KNEW about pond levelers but felt they wouldn’t work in Martinez. And uh, 11 years of safe beaver habitat says they were wrong.

Just saying.

Beaver friend Ulrich Messlinger sent me a copy of the new beaver book they are publishing in German “Entdecke die Biber”  and wondered if I thought a translated version would be appreciated by American youth. I had fun reading it and told him yes of course. but couldn’t help sharing this one swiped image from it about beaver rehab. I have no permission to share this but couldn’t resist because I believe it is the sweetest beaver picture in the known world.

Entdecke die Biber

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