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

Month: November 2020


Yesterday was very productive! I lined up two beaver friends to help with the website and logo for the beaver summit and our domain name was renewed for another year. So I’m feeling like the world is pretty much my oyster now. You will have to listen to me even longer.

Join our friends at Watershed Guardians in Idaho at the Beaver Dam Jam tomorrow on zoom. Mike Settell says we’re all invited!

Topic: BeaverDamJam-Idaho-Home Edition

Time: Nov 21, 2020 03:50 PM Mountain Time (US and Canada)

Join Zoom Meeting

https://zoom.us/j/92703691020
Meeting ID: 927 0369 1020

More good news stories like this from KCOY,

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CSUCI study shows beavers can help prevent wildfires

ATASCADERO, Calif.– What if beavers could help fight wildfires? A recent study from a Cal State Channel Islands professor indicates they can.

With much of California dry and brown, many experts say a year-round fire season is the new norm. But firefighters could get some help from an unlikely ally — beavers.

“These beaver ponds, they stay wet, they stay green and they are not burning anywhere as much as the places that don’t have beavers,” said Emily Fairfax, a Professor of Environment Science at CSUCI.

Fairfax just finished a four-year study which found beavers help rejuvenate dry land, creating patches of wilderness that are essentially fire-proof.
We followed her to some beaver ponds in Atascadero to see first-hand.

Oh how lovely to see Emily on the TV talking about beavers! Thank you for making this issue so easy for people to understand and think about differently!

Fairfax observed beaver dams before, during, and after wildfires, and her study found these wet patches don’t burn.

“The more places that we have that are wet the less place we have to burn,” said Fairfax. “If every creek all over California looked like this, fires wouldn’t be able to spread as far as they do.”

Beavers aren’t considered endangered, but their population numbers are low in North America. In California, it’s against the law to relocate them.

Nice. Keep the pressure on CDFW’s outdated policy and force them to explain why they haven’t learned at the same pace as their pacific cousins! Here’s my favorite part:

So the next time you come across a beaver dam, leave it be. These animals are on the clock, hard at work fighting fires.

Excellent work Emily! We are so proud that of all the colleges you could have come to you settled in California! If I remember correctly your husband’s mother lives in Alameda county so maybe that helped tip the scale. Whatever the reason. We need you and are grateful!

The beavers without borders film is available online now. Please Enjoy and share far and wide!

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The story of the California beaver summit is changing. Day by day, conversation by conversation, email by email, it’s shifting from a retelling of the little red hen to an amazing pantomime production of stone soup.

You know the story right? A poor peddler comes into town begging for food and gets nothing from the impoverished villagers, then cleverly says he could actually make a delicious soup from a single stone if he only had a pot to do it.

Feeling curious and a little bit sorry for him the old woman gives him a pot in which he heats water, tosses his stone to the bottom and eagerly rubs his hands in anticipation. He tells her it’s going to be delicious and she is welcome to some. Then comments on how much better it would be if he only had an onion.

So the old woman gives him an onion and he cuts it up and tosses it in.

People gather around to see what he’s doing and he proudly exclaims he’s making the most delicious soup in the world from a single stone and everyone comments that its impossible but starting to smell delicious. He says he learned how to do it from a magician in the East and says the only thing that could possibly make it better is a potato.

So a farmer gives him a potato. And he cuts it up and tosses it into the bubbling pot and it smells even better.

He assures the gathering crowd that it’s going to be delicious and tells everyone to bring their bowls because they will all want to try it and maybe they should all sit together under the trees and celebrate. And promises that there is nothing like it in the world and the only thing that could possibly make it any better is a carrot.

So the merchant gives him a carrot.

You know this story. The peddler goes about getting ingredient donations from the village that told him they had nothing to donate and eventually winds up with a fine soup that has nothing at all to do with the stone. It has been said that the story is about what is best about community building and that the peddler is like the best quality in a politician, who organizes the efforts of everyone into an achievable goal that benefits the entire community equally.

Life has taught us there are plenty of peddlers who walk away with the delicious soup themselves and never share a drop or give back anything.

But when it actually works it’s pretty wonderful.

And that is how I feel about the beaver summit now. The origin of which – if truth be told – might have been a stone in a pot that the village comes too curiously see if it can really happen. I had nothing to offer but the idea and have no magical powers to make it happen. But some really important people with a everything to offer are climbing aboard. And each little bit of support is making the soup better and giving me courage to ask for more. This is the line up for our first steering committee meeting next week, all of whom who have expressed interest in presenting.

Initial planning meeting California Beaver Summit

  • Emily Fairfax – Cal State Channel Islands/Environmental studies
  • Karen Pope – USFS Pacific Southwest Station Research Aquatic Ecologist
  • Joe Wheaton – Watershed Sciences Utah State
  • Damion Ciotti – FWS Tribal program coordinator
  • Jeff Baldwin – Sonoma State/Geography Environment & Planning
  • Elizabeth Johnson – Biodiversity First & San Luis Obispo beaver brigade
  • Brock Dolman – OAEC Water Institute
  • Kate Lundquist -OAEC Bring back beaver campaign
  • Jackie Van Der Hout – California Urban Streams Partnership/Outreach & Education
  • Zane Eddy – Humboldt State Humans & Ecology Interaction MS candidate.
  • Rick Lanman – Historical Ecology Center
  • Jennifer Rippert – California Department Fish Wildlife – Habitat Conservation Scientist
  • Heidi Perryman – Worth A Dam

Wow. I honestly can’t believe it. Get ready for some delicious soup!

@beaverbabyfurrylove

Sometimes cute and playful. I enjoy while it lasts. He mostly just wants the nurturing feeling he would get from his family. #FamilyImpression #fyp

♬ original sound – Beave


This has been sitting on the shelf a few days waiting for JUST the right time to share it with you. I think the right time is now, and I’m so happy to be the bearer of good news.

Palouse landowner welcomes beavers, and their ecological wizardry, back to her land

Linda Jovanovich is no farmer. She had run a landscaping business for years in Pullman and then worked as an elementary school librarian. In a college geology course she’s become enamored with the natural world.

So, she started planting aspens, willows and other vegetation along the little no-name creek.

Two-and-a-half decades later that work has paid off. Her property is a wildlife oasis among rolling fields of wheat. Piles of tree limbs dot her land, providing shelter for rodents and birds, coyotes and raccoons.

So, when beavers showed up eight years ago, she had mixed emotions.

On one hand, she was thrilled. She knew streams slowed by beaver dams and lodges create better habitat for animals and insects, collect silt and store and cool water, among other things.

On the other, their ponds flooded her little creek and threatened to drown her beloved trees.

So of course Linda called the Lands Council which is something you can do if you live in Spokane, and they live trapped and relocated the beavers. Okay that works once or twice. But the when she called them back a few years later they had different ideas.

This time around, the Lands Council tried a different approach.

“The first question is always, can we keep the beaver here,” Bachman said. “Because usually when you find a place where you have beaver you have beaver there because it’s good beaver habitat.”

So, on Nov. 5, Bachman drove to Jovanovich’s home and started breaking small holes in the beavers’ dam. These breaches, over the course of an hour, dropped the water level about a foot. Then he built a cage out of chicken wire with the help of Ben Goldfarb, a journalist, Lands Council board member and the author of “Eager: The Surprising, Secret Life of Beavers and Why They Matter.”

Now THAT I’d pay to see. Ben in waders! I sure hope they didn’t build that cage out of chicken wire though, because it will never survive being in the water for any amount of time.

From the chicken wire cage, Bachman ran two 4-inch pipes, placed two cinder blocks at the bottom of the cage, dropped the entire thing into the pond and put the pipes through the beaver dam.

Voila, water rushed from the pipes.

In theory, the pipes will siphon enough water through the dam to keep the pond-level manageable. At the same time, the pond won’t drain completely, keeping the entrances to the beaver lodge submerged and the beavers defended from predators.

Well yes, that’s how it works. And if you do it right and DON’T USE CHICKENWIRE it can last for a decade like it did in Martinez. Hurray! Now just watch the wildlife that moves in, Linda!

Although the Lands Council has been working with beavers for a decade, using these types of tools, which are broadly known as flow-mitigation devices, is a new trick and reflects a shifting attitude toward coexistence in Washington.

Although Washington has a history of beaver tolerance, coexistence has relied mostly on keeping beavers and humans apart.

That’s partly because since 2019, the Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife has run a pilot beaver relocation project. Under the pilot, WDFW issues beaver relocation permits. The agency urges landowners to “take measures to tolerate or mitigate beaver activity whenever possible” before they move the creatures.

Well it’s Washington, so good ideas about beavers are nothing new. I’m glad they are getting down to the brass tacks of coexistence though. Because its the right way for things to be going better for everyone involved.

Jovanovich’s little slice of creek cuts its way through the Palouse’s rich and deep topsoil, the deposited effluent of the unimaginable Missoula Floods. While some of the most fertile soil in the world, it’s prone to erosion. In an intact ecosystem, trees and other plants grow alongside these streams, helping anchor the soil.

Beavers offer another complementary solution.

Sediment from their dams will, over time, fill in incised creeks, not to mention trap water. This in turn raises the water table, promotes growth along the stream banks and increases fish habitat, said Bachman.

While small, Jovanovich’s 7-acre experiment shows a possible future for stream restoration throughout Eastern Washington and North Idaho.

And, if nothing else, it provides her yet another chance to commune with the natural world.

“I’ve always wanted to attract birds and wildlife,” she said, adding “We just should find a better way to live with them.”

The reporter was clearly a little bit Ben-fatuated because he goes on to write about Lars beaver experiments and delights when Ben steps in the water to deep for his waders. But excellent. We need all kind of reasons to live with beavers. And there certainly are many to add to the list.

 


I had two very fun conversations yesterday about the california beaver summit idea. Both Dr. Fouty and Dr. Wheaton think it’s a very very very good idea and gave me all kinds of advice on how it should happen and what it should look like. Then our friends in New Mexico uploaded their presentations from their own summit so everyone could see them. I’m going to share them today so if you didn’t attend you can have your very own beaver summit right now from home.

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My favorite was Jeff Ogburn the North East habitat biologist from the NM Department of Game an Fish, oh and Mary Obrien talking about what a hard slog it was to get Utah to do anything in the beginning, but you’re welcome to find your own!


Can you believe the election was two weeks ago? Me either. But lucky us, we got to see the new Beavers-without-borders film yesterday which was very well made but shorter than I expected, and we can still enjoy the failed efforts by Wildlife Defenders to stop Oregon from being stupid, which they decided to do anyway.

What Beavers Can Do for the Beaver State

“Beavers are one of nature’s super engineers, a species that many others depend on, including people,” said Kamal. “They’re one of the least celebrated keystone species but are largely responsible for creating and maintaining healthy aquatic habitat in Oregon and across the country.”

Known for building massive dams and altering or increasing stream flow, these large rodents are the species most credited with changing landscapes in North America, after humans. “Beavers are an important part of healthy wetland and forest ecosystems,” said Aaron Hall, Ph.D., an aquatic ecologist with Defenders of Wildlife who has managed beaver relocation projects and riparian habitat restoration projects throughout the Rocky Mountain region. “We consistently see incredible benefits that come from the presence of beavers, including an increase in available water quantity and quality, more carbon capture zones, wildfire breaks and dynamic wetland complexes.”   

Yes that’s true. But you voted to sell permits to kill them on federal lands, which is the kind of thoughtless, stubborn decision making we’ve come to expect from our state officials. Good job Oregon.

Many species depend on wetland habitats like those created and maintained by beavers. Freshwater fish find a more plentiful and diverse array of food in beaver ponds, and can use their deep water for shelter during winter. Migratory birds stop by beaver ponds for food and rest along their journey to and from summer breeding grounds. Reptiles and amphibians can spend much of their lives in beaver created wetlands and ponds. 

“In Oregon, at-risk species like coho salmon and red-legged frogs would benefit from more beavers on the landscape” said Hall. “Beavers that are protected are able to dramatically alter their environment and enhance habitat for many endangered and imperiled species.”

Well sure. But what fun would that be for those few trappers that like to go camping and teach their son to kill beavers in the great outdoors? Sorry Sristi, but ODFW is committed to its ignorance and can’t be dissuaded by science. 

Hey how about the fact that if you protect beavers you will have more fish and more ducks and can sell MORE hunting licenses? Self interest is our only truly renewable resource.

Well it’s truly dispiriting when people don’t know on which side their own bread is buttered. This short film documents some ecologists who are thrilled to have beavers back on their land in Cheshire. It’s refreshing to watch someone be happy about beavers for a change. Enjoy.

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