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

Month: October 2020


Just in time for the graphic I was working on yesterday, I didn’t know our buddy Ben Dittbrenner was working at NorthEastern. Good for him, and good for the lucky environmental students in his class. For now appreciate an awesome article from News@Northeastern by Khalida Sarwari

They’re cute. They’re furry. And they’re the unsung heroes of wildfire protection efforts.

From California to Washington, the West Coast is experiencing a fire season unlike any other on record. Since August, climate change-fueled wildfires have scorched more than five million acres across the three states, taking dozens of lives, destroying thousands of buildings, and making the air unbearable for millions of people.

Benjamin Dittbrenner, an associate teaching professor in the Marine and Environmental Sciences department at Northeastern, says wetlands and beavers are an important part of the fire protection puzzle. Beaver ponds and wetlands have been shown to filter out water pollution, sequester carbon, and attenuate floods. 

But perhaps a lesser-known fact about the tiny rodents is that they play a key role in creating fireproof shelters for plants and animals. And by building dams, forming ponds, and digging canals, these architects of the natural world irrigate stream corridors that help slow the spread of wildfire.

Ben! My goodness, looking all professor-y, Does that mean we have good beaver researchers on both coasts now? Gosh, I’m so old I can remember when he was working for public works and squeezed in with us at the lunch table so he could hear everything Mike Callahan had to say about flow devices at the beaver conference.

He’s come a long way baby.

One of Dittbrenner’s techniques involved relocating beavers to streams from areas where they were at risk for entrapment. As the critters went to work building dams in their new habitats, Dittbrenner evaluated the transformation of the streams into a wetland complex—multiple wetlands that share adjacent streamside land.

“Wetlands are definitely an endangered or threatened land type,” Dittbrenner says. “There are a ton of existing wetland regulations, but human encroachment is really the biggest threat to that.” 

Dittbrenner traces the degradation of streams and the disappearance of natural dams to the fur trade in the 1600s, which at the time centered on the beaver. Prior to the arrival of the European settlers in North America, he says, beavers existed in nearly every stream system, and dams could be found in abundance. As the beaver population was nearly extirpated because of heavy trapping, the dams disappeared, too.

“As those beaver dams degraded and disappeared, those [wetland] systems became much simpler,” Dittbrenner says. “A lot of the wetlands that were there were gone. A lot of the sediment that was there that was doing things like pollution attenuation was gone. And the flood storage capacity was gone.”

Nicely done Ben. Now we are getting fire skills preached from both sides of the country! Let’s hope it catches on and becomes part of our conversation about how to cope with this going forward.

The resulting decrease in water availability for surrounding plants leads to forest stress, says Dittbrenner.

“[The trees] become more prone to insect infestation,” says Dittbrenner, explaining that forest pests contribute to the fires prevalent on the West Coast. The dams also enable water to back up, producing pockets of both deep and shallow waters as well as rocky, sandy, and muddy habitats for birds, fish, mammals, amphibians, and reptiles, Dittbrenner says. As such, he says, the number of interactions between these species is higher. 

“Beavers are modifying the environment to create their preferred habitat—we call them ecosystem engineers,” he says. “In doing so, they provide all of this traditional habitat for other species, and all of these additional potential ecosystem services for people as well.”

An excellent point. Althought I’m thinking you maybe should at least mention Emily’s work. Maybe you did and the reporter just didn’t write it down, but this issue would hardly be in the limelight without her right?

“As we have these big fires, much of the vegetation in the forest (such as trees) is basically gone,” he says. “And it creates ash and underlying soil easily migrates when there’s precipitation. When there’s a big storm, all that ash and soil will wash—sometimes quickly—down in streams and fill up some of those streams.”

The ash and sediment cover salmon egg nests, he says, causing the eggs to suffocate because they can’t get enough oxygen. The absence of trees—which help slow down river and overland flow—leads to an uncontrolled surge of water following rainfall and increasing stream flows, which puts added stress on man-made infrastructure, such as bridges and wastewater treatment plants, Dittbrenner says.

You know looking at the great photo by Joe Wheaton I don’t think that beaver dams burned. Which means they stuck around and helped catch all that erosion and soil runoff. Just another service amount their many provided.

And not just aquatic species, he says, but trees lose water as well. The stress makes them more prone to disease and insect infestation. This systemic stress creates what Dittbrenner calls a “positive feedback mechanism” that often results in environmental disasters.

“If there’s a fire, those trees might already be dried out; some might be dead,” he says. “And that standing fuel load allows for increased forest fire prevalence.”

Research shows that healthy streams promote aquatic life and nurture surrounding lands. Dittbrenner’s work provides clues to how beaver ecosystems and wetlands fit into that equation—and contribute to wildfire protection and recovery.

Well, those are good clues to have. It’s great to see this discussed more broadly, and I hope Ben gets lots of interested undergrads to help him carry on the work. In the mean time here’s the graphic I worked on yesterday. Feel free to share.

 


This was such a quirky article that I left it on the shelf a while before revisiting it this morning. It remains a mystery to me WHY we need a dog to do this or when we would have the need to track down a specific beaver, but it’s pretty darn fascinating to think about the complex information beavers have at the disposal of their sniffing any given day.

Conservation dogs have been trained to locate animals both dead and alive. Given that dogs’ sense of smell is approximately 10,000 to 100,000 stronger than ours, they are excellent partners for tracking animals in the wild.

With the help of three “scent detection dogs” named Tapas, Chilli, and Shib, researchers have shown that with persistent training, this olfactory advantage could dramatically improve conservation canine handlers’ work. How? By improving upon their ability to identify animals by tracking their individual butts.

Well obviously any dog owner knows how important that sniff is to greeting a new dog. But it’s easy to overlook how much valuable information is coded in castoreum for a beaver.

Since these beavers communicate primarily through scents, they’ve invested quite a bit of evolutionary development into their anal glands. In fact, the anal glands are not the only butt-local organ that beavers use to make themselves known to their neighbors. They use two, each of which is located between the base of the tail and the pelvis: castor sacs, which produce a brown mucous called “castoreum,” and anal glads, the “true” glands which produce AGS. AGS is a “thick gray paste” in female butts and a “yellowish oily fluid” in males. AGS contains a great deal of information about an individual beaver, including species and subspecies, sex, identity, kinship/family role, age, and social status.

Read that list again, species and subspecies, age, sex, kindship or family role AND social status. I’m not even sure what that means but I guess if you’re the matriarch of a colony you smell different than just some daughter selected at random. Years ago when our mom beaver died and the kits were orphaned, dad left for a while and came back with a two year old from our family that had already launched: the one we always called GQ because we thought “he” was such a handsome beaver. The two year old stuck around, and helped raise the kits. And I always wondered how Dad found him.

Now we know.

They use two, each of which is located between the base of the tail and the pelvis: castor sacs, which produce a brown mucous called “castoreum,” and anal glads, the “true” glands which produce AGS.

After the 9-month training period was complete, the dogs’ sniffers – and the identifying potential of AGS – were put to the test: Six vials in total were lined up, including four AGS samples, one distraction scent, and one blank. Tapas, Chilli, and Shib were each subjected to ten trials. The results were stunning. Each dog showed themselves to be beyond capable of finding the precise beaver by their anal excretions alone.

Not only are these findings a clear demonstration of scent detection dogs’ ability to extract highly specific information from AGS, but it also points to the incredible reliability of the Eurasian beaver’s hind-centric olfactory communication system.

Okay good job dogs. But Better Job Beavers. For evolving this amazing classification system and making it work. Just think of the time and awkward conversations it saves. Beavers never have to ask, “Are you knew here?” They never are surprised to find out they hit on a married woman, OR discover their new love interest is their second cousin. They already knew.

23 and me has NOTHING on them.

By the way, I don’t think we guessed wrong about GQ’s gender. Because he did not stick around and dad eventually brought back a new wife that no one recognized. Apparently he agreed to help out for a while to get the kids settled and then took off in pursuit of his own future.

I’ve always wondered what it was.

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Nature Scot has launched the largest beaver survey asking folks at the national level to report beaver sightings. Mind you they released permits to kill 20 percent of the known population last year. But they’d now like to know, was it enough? Should we kills more?

20 percent isn’t what it used to be.

Biggest ever Scottish beaver survey begins

NatureScot has begun the most comprehensive survey of beaver numbers and their range ever conducted in Scotland.

Work was expected to start on October 1 to gather detailed and up-to-date information on the locations of active beaver territories, as well as assessing the health and spread of the overall population, which will help inform future beaver work.

It is thought that since a first assessment in 2012 beavers, other than those introduced to Mid Argyll in 2009, have spread from where they originally established on the Tay, as far as the Forth and the Clyde.

 

The nature agency is asking the public to help by reporting their beaver sightings.

Mind you this is a “Survey” like a field survey, not a “Man on the street how do you feel about beavers” survey. Odds are they are going to do something very stupid like count the number of dams, multiply it times 5 and come up with a hugely inflated number which means more killing next year.

But what do I know?

Captive European Beaver (Castor fiber) Highland Wildlife Park, East Highland Area.
©Lorne Gill
For information on reproduction rights contact the Scottish Natural Heritage Image Library on Tel. 01738 444177 or www.snh.org.uk

The survey will cover Tayside and the surrounding river catchments, including the Forth and river systems in the Loch Lomond and Trossachs National Park. NatureScot will be working with experts at the University of Essex to conduct the survey this autumn and winter.

This is the first survey conducted since beavers gained protected status as European Protected Species in Scotland.

Roo Campbell, NatureScot project lead, said: “From sightings so far this year, it looks like beavers are spreading even further in and around Tayside – there’s even been a beaver spotted in the west of Glasgow. This is wonderful news, as beavers play a vital role in creating habitats such as ponds and wetlands where other species thrive, alleviating flooding and improving water quality.

“But sometimes beavers can cause problems particularly on prime agricultural land, which is principally found on low lying farmland particularly in the east of the country.’

And when they do we’ll be ready for them. We shall fight them on the beaches. We shall fight them in the fields. Never give up. Never surrender. Always say die.

Er somethings like that,

 


Sorry about my silence yesterday. But one of the things I liked especially about Mike Digout’s tailslap video was that we have almost the exact same footage. Since I’ve become more of an expert I realize beaver tailslaps in the wild are MUCH MUCH FASTER and more intense. And I was always worried. Are our beavers delayed? Sick?

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Seeing Mike’s video made me understand that our beavers are relaxed. That’s a tailslap from a beaver whose not so much alarmed as irked or making a point to friends. Isn’t that wonderful?

Meanwhile there’s some nice news from Calgary.

Residents upset about beavers being trapped in southeast community wetland

CALGARY — Jen Corbett discovered a dead beaver in a trap behind her home in the southeast Calgary community of Riverstone a few days ago, something she says has been ongoing since her family moved there last fall.

“For the past three years they’ve been trapping and killing them,” said Corbett.

“As opposed to finding other solutions that aren’t lethal, that would include maybe grates on the culverts or water levellers or other implementations that would allow us to co-exist with them.”

Hurray for Jen! And hurray for neighbors who care about wetlands! Apparently our good friend Adrien Nelson of FBD just installed a flow device not too far away so maybe the word is catching on. Stay tuned because this story could get even better!

Oh and I finally found peace after my disruption yesterday.

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