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

Month: August 2020


It’s been yet another crazy beaver news day. Beavers conclude their trial in the River Otter and get to stay. Research on Castoides suggest that beaver cut down trees first to build dams and then got the idea about eating bark. And there’s an awesome new study out of Suny NY suggesting that not only do beavers create habitats and biodiversity – they also shape entire forests.

Transforming Adirondack Forests By Nature’s ‘Ecosystem Engineer’

To date, ecological studies on beavers’ impacts have mostly focused on their ponds and dams, and the effects these have on forest streams, nutrient cycling, and aquatic biodiversity. But in a new study, ESF researchers have found that beaver are just as effective in modifying the forest around their ponds, and in creating diverse habitat that benefits other wildlife in addition to themselves. Conducted by Mike Mahoney as an ESF undergraduate honors project working with Dr. John Stella, the findings are published this month in the journal Forest Ecology and Management.

So he as an intern he went around studying forests in the Adirondack for the Department of conservation and he found that the surviving forest are pretty homogenous. All about the same age. Same species. Same density. They survived on mass because the grew up without beaver during the decimation of the fur trade. When beaver are around they take out some trees and open up some spaces of light in the forest which become spaces for new growth, smaller growth to occur.

In other regions, disturbances such as fire, storms and forestry activities keep the forest ecologically diverse by making room for fast-growing, shade-averse trees like aspen and willow to persist. Due to a lack of disturbances – events needed to regenerate younger stands -Adirondack forests are “kind of in middle-age right now,” said Stella. “But also, they have not yet gotten to the old-growth stage, which means there aren’t many canopy gaps where trees die and fall, and new forest patches can regenerate.”

In other regions, disturbances such as fire, storms and forestry activities keep the forest ecologically diverse by making room for fast-growing, shade-averse trees like aspen and willow to persist. Due to a lack of disturbances – events needed to regenerate younger stands -Adirondack forests are “kind of in middle-age right now,” said Stella. “But also, they have not yet gotten to the old-growth stage, which means there aren’t many canopy gaps where trees die and fall, and new forest patches can regenerate.”

This leaves few patches of young trees and forage for wildlife that depends on them, such as moose, migratory birds, and bats. It also concerns the DEC, which has prioritized creating a more diverse forest structure through its Young Forest Initiative, a statewide management strategy to maintain 10 percent of the public forest lands under 10 years old.

To do well forests (and people) need diversity. And beavers bring diversity when they cut down some trees and make homes for others. And they have a favorite size of tree to harvest, the little saplings which means more little saplings get to grow after their cousins are utelized. I thought this was really interesting:

Why are beaver so important to the health of the forest? Many researchers, including previous students in Stella’s lab at ESF, have found that these young forests support a diverse variety of plants, mammals, birds, and amphibians not found in older, more homogenous forests, which have typically larger trees but little groundcover or leafy forage within reach.If you’re a turkey or a moose, big trees are useless to you; you can’t get up there and there’s nowhere to hide,” said Stella. Areas disturbed by beaver, on the other hand, have a lot of underbrush and herbaceous plants, more canopy layers, and more light and water – all desirable qualities for supporting a diversity of other species.

I never thought of the importance of hiding places and cover. No wonder beavers are so important. Just imagine how dangerous it would be if every human was born on exactly the same day. We would all get old at the same time,and all start dying at the same time too. Beavers stagger the forests by giving other trees a chance to live it up.

This study is part of a larger program with Stella’s lab exploring the benefits of beavers in the Northeast. “You see this a lot when beavers create these massive wetland areas, which are all of a sudden, extremely productive – you’ve got a ton of amphibians,” said Stella, whose lab also documented that over 50 percent more bird species use disturbed beaver pond areas compared to intact forest nearby. “They also give some water purification benefits and create dynamic wetland areas. And then when they move on and the dams eventually blow out, the wetlands evolve into rich beaver meadows with positive benefits that remain for a very long time,” Stella said. Scientists and land managers in western states have exploited these processes to partner with beaver in restoring degraded stream for better fish habitat. “And now we’ve documented here in the east that they change the structure of the forest adjacent to their ponds and that has ongoing benefits for biodiversity in this region.”

Let the beaver do the work. You really don’t need a PhD to know why its logical. Of course the article ends with a bitter little reminder that beavers in urban areas are also a nuisance, but we’re enjoying this so much lets just leave it here shall we?

 


Wow, it’s beaver season out there with a huge dump of news this morning which includes the New York Times. But lets start locally as we always have and talk about the new issue of Open Road with Doug McConnell that dropped this weekend. It’s about the importance of meadows and somehow they crossed path with Brock Dolman who got them thinking about our favorite subject and introduced them to a friend of ours.

The beaver profile starts around 10:30, but it’s all good. Let’s play a little game and see if you recognize any photos, okay?

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That’s right! Beavers are awesome. And their photographers rock. That was the handywork of our own Rusty Cohn who earned himself a neat little byline.

Of course it’s a half hour program so there wasn’t time to talk about how the forest service wanted to use beavers in the sierra and were told they couldn’t because they weren’t native, which prompted archeologist Chuck James research which prompted our papers which lead to the California Department of Fish and Wildlife saying, umm okay…you win….they’re native.

Ahhh memories!


You’ll be happy to know that all the volunteers at the Lindsey museum are now fully educated about our work in Martinez and why beavers matter. Fun group with a good focus on animals of course, I nominated beaver as the most important member of the wildlife club to save. Now my work is officially done and I just need to finish the Enos Mills film.

If I’m not too busy playing this, that is.

New smartphone game lets you solve real-world ecological puzzles

EcoBuilder, which is downloadable now on smartphones and tablets, teaches players how ecosystems work and aims to crowdsource solutions to unsolved ecological puzzles.

Ecosystem research looks at how animals and plants interact with each other and their environment. Climate change and other human interventions pose ongoing threats to how ecosystems function, resulting in changes to carbon flows and even extinctions of certain species.

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Gosh that looks like fun. I know just what I’ll be building. It starts like this: *click on any picture to review it),


A while back, maybe even before  Covid became our new best friend, I was contacted by Catherine Arnold, a writer working on a beaver story for the National Wildlife Federation. She wanted to talk about the good things beavers do and the good things that happened in Martinez lo these many years ago. Of course I talked sweetly about both. The way publication dates work this article has been waiting in the wings for a while. Which makes its August first publication all the sweeter.

Click on the image to go to that page in the issue where you can read it full screen.

Here’s the blurb in case you can’t see it:

Residents of Martinez, Califor-nia, saw this firsthand after a beaver pair settled in local Alhambra Creek in 2007. A few years earlier, those waters had been a mere “trickle,” says Heidi Perryman, founder of Worth a Dam, a Martinez group that sup-ports beaver restoration. After the beavers’ arrival, the wetlands they created attracted at least 20 wildlife species that were new or uncommon mals like moose, otters and muskrats. They truly are a keystone species.”Residents of Martinez, Califor-nia, saw this firsthand after a beaver pair settled in local Alhambra Creek in 2007. A few years earlier, those waters had been a mere “trickle,” says Heidi Perryman, founder of Worth a Dam, a Martinez group that sup-ports beaver restoration. After the beavers’ arrival, the wetlands they created attracted at least 20 wildlife species that were new or uncommon in the area, including steelhead trout, mink and river otters.

Give me just a moment to say a few things. First, that is Suzi’s photo of OUR BEAVERS at the start of the article. And I had nearly forgotten about that that huge wood burl that floated down stream in August of 2015. It kept crashing into things and getting stuck but eventually found its way over the secondary dam. It’s so nice to see it again and be reminded.

Second, this I realize that in the vast scheme of things the Martinez beavers are just a blip of a paragraph of a story. But now we are a paragraph in the NATIONAL magazine of NWF which means the Martinez beaver story is a NATIONAL story. As in something that all 50 states will find interesting.

And third something happened yesterday that is EVEN BETTER THAN THIS and I can’t tell you yet, but I will soon. I promise.

Oh and I found this awesome photo at a sight Rusty of Napa pointed me towards. All in all, it was a helluva day for beavers.

Hiroya Minakuchi: Cascading Beaver dams

It’s a great day to give a talk to the Lindsay Museum about beavers. Now if I can just wipe that smug smile off my face.


I could not resist the groovy narration of the trail podcast. I feared that no one else was crazy enough to sift through it looking for the beaver parts but it needed to be heard. I decided to use  my spare time and meager skills to make a little film. I just love listening to their enthusiasm, even though I a good editor might have been a better friend!

From the Groundshot podcast: Episode #42 features a conversation between Kelly Moody (podcast host) and Gabe Crawford, previous podcast guest.

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