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

Month: February 2020


Folks are starting to wake up to the unexpected effects of climate change. Like a the effect a 1.5 celsius rise could have on evapotranspiration all across the United States. Not just in the west where we’re used to it.

As groundwater depletes, arid American West is moving east

“We asked what would the response look like if we included the entire complexity of subsurface water movement in a large-scale simulation, and we think this is the first time this has been done,” said Condon, lead author of the paper and assistant professor of hydrology and atmospheric sciences at the University of Arizona.

The results, published today in Nature Communications, show that as temperatures shift the balance between water supply and demand, shallow storage can buffer plant —but only where shallow groundwater connections are present, and not indefinitely. As warming persists, that storage can be depleted—at the expense of vital connections between surface water, such as rivers, streams and underground.

Excessive pumping from groundwater that feeds rivers, like the Ganges River (shown), is harming river ecosystems around the world.

The calculations revealed a direct response of shallow groundwater storage to warming that demonstrates the strong and early effect that even low to moderate warming may have on groundwater storage and evapotranspiration.

“Even with a 1.5 degrees Celsius warming case, we’re likely to lose a lot of groundwater,” said Reed Maxwell, professor of hydrology at the Colorado School of Mines, who co-authored the paper with Laura Condon of the University of Arizona and Adam Atchley of Los Alamos National Laboratory. “The East Coast could start looking like the West Coast from a water standpoint. That’s going to be a real challenge.”

Gosh if ONLY there were some kind of animal that was driven day and night to make and maintain little dams that would recharge the water table everywhere across the United States. But what are the odds of that happening? I ask you.

Well just because you have a graphic for it doesn’t mean its true. I’m sure there’s a whole division of the EPA devoted to making graphics to promote fake ideas. Like Climate change.

In the western U.S., changes in groundwater storage may remain masked for a long time, the study revealed, because the groundwater there is already deep, and dropping levels would not have as great an effect on surface waters. Additionally, the region’s vegetation is already largely water limited and adapted to being disconnected from deep groundwater sources.

However, the eastern U.S. will be much more sensitive to a lowering of the water table. Groundwater and are more closely linked, and depleting the groundwater will be more disruptive to vegetation, streams and rivers. Many of the systems that have been put in place in the western U.S. for handling and managing water shortage are lacking in the eastern part of the country, as well.

The study revealed that regions in the eastern U.S. may reach a tipping point sooner rather than later, when vegetation starts to lose access to shallow groundwater as storage is depleted with warming.

“We are facing a crisis in global groundwater storage,” Condon said. “Huge groundwater reservoirs are drying up at an alarming rate, and that’s a problem because they nourish major growing regions around the world.”

You can’t just wake up every day and keep saying over and over the problems we are facing could be helped by letting more beavers do the jobs they want to do. It just can’t be that simple. You sound like a crackpot. No one is going to believe you.

 


What are the odds that a big beaver dam would suddenly wash away RIGHT before a field trip planned with news cameras! It’s almost like the fates aligned to let the children see the inside of a beaver lodge.

I’m sure it wasn’t any other reason.

Middleton Stream Team: Seeing the usually hidden world of beavers

The dam on Emerson Brook, creating Prichard’s Pond, was recently breached in one area, causing a dramatic drop in water levels. The hikers on this overcast, but mild winter day, were amazed. It is very rare to see the many tunnels, runways, and entrances to lodges that beavers use to stay hidden from all and safe from predators.

It seems most of the beavers may have moved up the brook to a large impoundment northwest of the pond. On the pond, we found several lodges with the entrance hole totally exposed due to the very low water; This would be a dangerous home for a beaver. But not all of them have given up and moved. We discovered several large trees recently chewed. These large rodents usually only eat the cambium layer of nutrient-rich pulp just under the bark, although they will also sample small branches. They prepare for winter by dragging many branches and stacking them in the pond just outside their lodge. They can stay inside and just eat from their “pantry” right outside their door. With all the work areas of the beavers in full sight on this hike, it was easy to see how they live.

Gosh that’s an amazing coincidence! I’m so old that I remember when Skip was paid to take the beaver dam down by three feet so that the city council could keep their largest donor happy. That was a very long time ago.

Dad watching from the old lodge – Cheryl Reynolds

The final stretch of the hike was exciting in a different way. The pre-hike planners, led by Pike Messenger, had run a hand rope through some large secure trees so the hikers could safely walk across the top of the dam. We got a close-up look at the beautiful ice formations over the rushing water. We also got to see the old sluice way control, rusted and frozen shut, but the wheel and mechanisms still clearly visible from where we stood on top the dam.

We had started the hike by heading up Boston Brook for a bit of history of the 17th-century, water-powered mill that had once been there. The old man-made dam has crumbled but the beavers have impounded the area above where the dam and water-powered wheel would have been.

Wow what a coincidence! The dam washed out and you got to walk by the old mill. Good thing the beavers didn’t rebuild their dam really fast before you got to take that field trip! This really couldn’t have worked out any better for you.

It’s almost like the whole thing was planned.


I admit it. This was me yesterday. The loving and generous artist who has done our festival ad for years our of the incredible goodness of her heart wrote that she had nothing for me and was going to Mexico for a week. Which would be fine if it weren’t for the fact that Bay Nature needs their artwork for the Spring ad February 24th. Which would still be fine if it we hadn’t already paid for it, many hundreds of dollars for an empty quarter page ad,

The only way to face panic is with planning. So I wheedled for an extension and thought about our options. The chalk artist Amy Hall said the image she created for last year is ours to use. So maybe that could work?  It’s just a matter of meeting those exacting specifications.3 9/16 by 4 15/16. Who uses fractions anymore? But I found a mixed numbers calculator and was able to cobble this together. This will do in a pinch. And Amelia says she’ll try when she gets back, so this will have to do for now. Breathe,

Adding to my panic is that this weekend saw the start of begging for the silent auction and in three days I didn’t get one yes. I’m used to asking for ten things for every one I am given, but zero seemed very bad news. Yesterday I got six very kind and lovely responses to the requests I sent Sunday. And the first was from the company I arguably wanted to hear from most of all.

Cate & Levi is a company in Ontario that makes stuffed toys and kids things from entirely recycled products. Their idea is that kids should be allowed to use creativity to play, and the beaver puppets on the left made my heart sing. It’s the sweaters. Look at the SWEATERS!

Anway the owner wrote back with a generous promise of 2 puppets, and I was off to the races. Other things started to fall into place. So I could temporarily stop inhaling and lay the bag down. Not throw it away, mind you, I might need it again. But this is good for now.


 How did I miss this? A fantastic interview with Jakob Shockey and Sarah Koenigsberg gearing up for the recent film festival in preparation for the Siskiyou Film festival last weekend. They both do an excellent job and deserve your listening time.

What Beavers Can Do For The Landscape

Wasn’t that excellent? Jakob has gotten to be such an wonderful speaker that I can only dream how awesome his presentation will be at BeaverCon in a few weeks.

Coming soon to the deep-benched Nehalem Watershed is this fine presentation:

Lower Nehalem Watershed Council Speaker Series: “Beaver Dam Analogues” w/Steve Trask Feb. 13

On February 13th, 2020 at 7 pm the Lower Nehalem Watershed Council will host Steve Trask for a presentation about Beaver Dam Analogues. In this talk, Steve will talk about the importance of Beavers as ecosystem engineers and keystone species, the watershed impacts of not having enough beavers, and finally what beaver dam analogues are and how they can help! This is an exciting opportunity to learn about an unusual technique for habitat restoration.

Don’t you wish you could be there? I certainly do. Steve is a new name to us but one I bet we’re going to hear again.

Steve Trask is the Senior Fish Biologist for Biosurveys Inc. He has over 25 years of experience surveying river and stream habitat on the Oregon Coast. In collaboration with the Mid Coast Watershed Association and ODFW, he created the Rapid Bioassessment process that is currently being used to map juvenile salmon distribution in the Nehalem Watershed. He also is currently working with the Upper Nehalem Watershed Council to install beaver dam analogues.

I think we talked about Biosurvey’s once with some footage that showed beavers swimming with the salmon. I’m sure we’ll hear more fro this Senior Fish Biologist that thinks beavers are good news.

I came across this yesterday and thought how many historic ways there are to draw beavers wrongly. Let’s call this the beaver-mountainlion.

 


Speaking of trees, Judy Atkinson of Port Moody wrote yesterday about an idea she was trying to finalize for how to talk to people about the trees beavers felled. She noted the people seemed to get anxious about beavers ‘killing’ everything and was working to replace the concept with language emphasizing transformation instead.

The trees aren’t being hauled off by a contractor or the municipality, they are still there in the wetland, but either laying at an angle, laying on the ground or sitting in the water.  Each one of those places is important for the wetland and the wildlife.   

If a beaver felled tree falls in the pond it adds nutrient to the water, raising the complexity.  These trees make shaded, safe spots for fish to hide.  If the tree falls at an angle and becomes a snag, mother ducks and their ducklings roost on the trunk at night for safety.  Trees are vital to wildlife even when they are dead or dying.   If tree that doesn’t like wet feet drowns, it becomes a nature tree for cavity dwellers.

I could see what she was getting and why it was important. I reminded her to educate the city workers too and make sure they LEFT the fallen trees in the first place. I suggested she might want to introduce some kind of interpretive sign to help observers understand what they were seeing. Something like

Pardon our disarray while we rebuild the ecosystem”

She like the idea very much and we were both surprised to find that with no input from us, the Rugged Individualist dropped a third post, dedicated to that very topic.

The Paradox of A Rotting Forest

Dead trees are essential in more ways than this brief article can cover. They are in many regards the lifeblood of the forest, just as important as their living brethren. They are a natural part of a dynamic environment in which all trees age and eventually die….We need to reconsider these integral and indispensable parts of the forest for what they are.

Let us start with dead trees as the irreplaceable substrate for woodpeckers to perform their role as an integral keystone species. Woodpeckers, like beavers, perform functions that have a disproportionate effect on the ecosystem they live within and the species that reside there. When a dead or dying tree is left to the forces of natural processes, it attracts bug life that utilizes the weakened internal structure. This is the impetus for woodpeckers to hammer into the tree, seeking out the cloistered invertebrates. What is left over after the woodpecker’s persistent chiseling are cavities that serve as homes, both permanent and temporary, for an astonishing array of wildlife. Small mammals, like squirrels, raccoons, opossums, martens, fishers, and bats, take advantage of the woodpecker’s hard work. This hard work is just as cherished by the 40 or so (probably more) different bird species in North America that cannot excavate their own cavities and rely exclusively on woodpecker borings for suitable homes. These birds range in variety from songbirds to wood ducks to raptors.

I’m sure you get the idea, and AJB describes it very well. Too often people look at beaver activity as destruction, when what it really is is TRANSFORMATION. Remember, that which a caterpillar calls the end of the world, the creator calls a butterfly.

It’s hard in today’s supremely flammable world to convince people to leave dead wood anyway on a property. My parents home in the sierras was told they would lose their insurance carrier if they did not removal all wood, trees and leaves within 500 feet of the dwelling. I can imagine well that one of the unintended effects of climate change is that as people get more afraid of fire their is less dead or decaying wood left around which induces a trickle down of negative effects for insects, cavity nesters and hungry wildlife.

Dead trees don’t just need the expert craft of a woodpecker to provide refuge, though. Depending on the size, trees produce large, natural cavities capable of supporting creatures from rodents to bears. Not only are they directly beneficial to certain species as shelter, many of these species are prey creatures that support predators. Unfortunately, there are a very limited number of trees remaining that are of a size to produce large cavities caused from internal decay. In fact, this is so drastically true that according to a study by Frontiers in Ecology and The Environment, 99% of the cavities in North America used by birds and small mammals are created by woodpeckers.

And what about the trees beaver fell?

Downed trees lying prostrate on the ground provide plenty of moist, decomposing detritus. This is where severely imperiled amphibians like salamanders, frogs, etc. can find protection and sanctuary. The stumps that may remain if a dead tree snaps usually retain an intact root system that provide lodging/hibernacula for many species. Downed trees in and around water sources serve as crucial basking sites for turtles, snakes, and more. Dead trees, standing or fallen, are a treasure to our herpetofauna that can be the difference between preservation or total collapse of populations.

So the next time you start complaining about all that ‘destruction’ beavers are doing on your land, try thinking about it as transformation. Beavers change things. It’s what they do.

Photo by Rusty Cohn

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