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

Month: December 2020


Yesterday was a great day to be a beaver blogger, and there are precious little of those. But today isn’t bad. Why not curl up tonight by the fire to hear another beaver tale? This one hosted by The Lands Council.

Holiday Story Hour

Join us for a cozy, fire-side Holiday Story Hour to talk about the co-existence of keystone species like wolves and beavers with local authors Ben Goldfarb and Eli Francovich. Ben, author of Eager: The Surprising, Secret Life of Beavers and Why They Matter, and Eli will welcome us into their fireside reading nooks to read from their books and tell us the story of how it came to be. The readings and stories will be followed by a candid conversation between the two authors on coexistence with this keystone species and an audience Q&A.

We appreciate the warmth and support of YOU and your families this holiday season.

Please RSVP below to receive the Zoom link for this event.

I usually watch the news then, But beaver news has GOT to be better.

Tomorrow morning is the second planning meeting for the California Beaver Summit which is almost certainly going to happen and going to be a dam revelation. Wish us luck.


Let’s face it. 2020 has been the poop-flavored popsicle of a year. It’s been the annus horriblis that gave us Covid, no beaver festival an the zombie election that wouldn’t die. But there are some bright spots. And this tuesday’s article from Farm and Ranch  might just be the brightest spot we’ve ever seen.

Preston rancher restoring beaver to creek

Preston Rancher Jay Wilde had a dream – to restore beavers to Birch Creek.His goal was to make Birch Creek a perennial stream. And provide water – for his cattle and horses.But each time he released beavers – on his own nickel – they vanished.

“They didn’t stay. They didn’t survive or the predators got them, we don’t know,” Wilde says. “It got pretty obvious to me that I didn’t know what I was doing. As far as restoring beaver.”

Then, Jay met Joe Wheaton from Utah State University. A professor of Watershed Sciences, Wheaton specializes in using beavers and low-tech woody structures to restore streams.“They have a model called BRAT, beaver restoration assessment tool, and that identified good beaver habitat. How many dams would be supported by the habitat that’s here,” Wilde says. “I thought, finally, I’ve knocked on the right door.”

Wheaton came up to visit Jay right away to do a BRAT analysis of Birch Creek with colleague, Nick Bouwes, a professor of watershed sciences at Utah State.

“The core of it, is a capacity model,” Wheaton says. “It looks at the vegetation that’s present, and asks the question about its suitability as a dam-building material, and hydrology. Simple way to put it, beavers need water and wood.”

The BRAT analysis predicted that beavers might build 25-60 dams per mile.

Can’t you just tell this is going to be the VERY BEST ARTICLE!  They should make the whole thing into a hallmark channel movie and show it every christmas. I friggin’ LOVE this story.

“Largely that’s because there’s a ton of aspen, cottonwood, other species present that they like to use for building dams,” Wheaton says.

Turns out the beavers loved Birch Creek canyon! Following the release of 9 beavers in the first two years of the project, there are over 175 beaver dams in Birch Creek five years later.

This is a story where dreams can come true. Jay Wilde showed a great deal of grit and tenacity in bringing beavers back to Birch Creek. A big silver lining is that his grand-daughter, Emily, participated in the whole project from the beginning, dating back to her high school years.

“We used to come up here every summer when I was a kid,” Emily Wilde says. “First thing, me and my sister would come up and play in the creek for hours on end, find all the bugs, and all the plants that we could. When I was 14, I understood that this is what I wanted to do, spend my life playing in the creek.”

So what could be better than restoring a creek with beaver?

“I thought it was an interesting opportunity to learn something new, expand my knowledge and find out what I wanted to do when I grew up,” she says.

Emily, right, and her sister loved to play in Birch Creek when they were young girls. Emily is a junior at Utah State University now, majoring in natural resources.

I love this.  I JUST LOVE it.  I can’t even find parts of the article to excerpt that I love the most because I love every single paragraph! Pinch me someone. I’m dreaming.

Jay invited key Forest Service people to meet with Wheaton to understand the potential. Wheaton suggested that they build several beaver dam analogs in Birch Creek to test out the concept. Nick Bouwes agreed.

But first they would need approval from the Forest Service – as the BDAs would be located on Caribou-Targhee National Forest land – and stream-alteration permits from the Idaho Department of Water Resources and Army Corps of Engineers.

Brett Roper, National Aquatic Monitoring Program Leader for the Forest Service, and a watershed scientist who teaches at Utah State, helped with the Forest Service environmental approval process.

“Brett got involved, and he said he’d put his neck on the line, and got them to sign off on a categorical exemption through NEPA,” Wheaton says.

And Brad Higginson, a Caribou-Targhee hydrologist, helped push the IDWR and Corps permits through in record time.

They built four BDA’s that fall, using a $3,000 grant from the Forest Service for building materials. Jay and Emily pitched in, along with Casey Wilde, Emily’s Dad and Jay’s son, and Nick Bouwes.

In 2016, they built 15 more BDA’s on Birch Creek, while Jeremy Maestas from the Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS) held a stream-restoration educational workshop on site. The workshop, sponsored by USDA-NRCS Working Lands for Wildlife, brought together about 40 agency biologists and engineers from around the West to learn about low-tech restoration, Maestas said.

The BDAs created inviting habitat for the beavers, Wheaton says. “They were built as a comfortable release site for the beavers, so they weren’t freaked out. And we expected them to behave like teen-agers so we wanted to have choices for them upstream and downstream. Maybe they’ll use one of those, and indeed, they did.”

Honestly I am lapping this up like a cat. And you should be too. Where can we make more Jays and dot them around the countryside like vaccines. Two in every state. Five in California and Texas.

“It’s been so fun to watch all the changes. So many positive things have happened – things I never dreamed of,” Jay Wilde says.

Forest Service officials are excited about the positive changes, too.

“So these beaver dams, they do a lot for streamflow, and they do great deal for fish habitat,” says Brad Higginson, a hydrologist for the Caribou-Targhee National Forest. “As you can see, Birch Creek before was maybe 2 feet wide and a couple of inches deep. Now you can see how deep it is, and the amount of fish that would be these ponds.”

“Another thing these beaver dams do, is they elevate the water table,” Higginson continues. “So you see a lot of storage in the channel. What you don’t see is the storage that’s underneath the land. Now, you have all of that storage that occurs during spring runoff, where there’s excess water available, and in the later summer and early fall, that water continues to feed the stream, which helps the stream flow all year long.”

So far, Birch Creek is flowing for 40-plus days longer than it did pre-beaver.

Moose are among the many species of wildlife that like the extensive wet meadow habitat created on Birch Creek. (Courtesy Emily Wilde)

Wet meadow habitat around the beaver dams diversifies the habitat for insects and birds around the stream.

Fish life has rebounded in a big way, too.

“They’re Bonneville cutthroat trout, a really pure strain,” Emily Wilde says. “So it was really important to make sure they’re doing well. I did a fish count with the Forest Service, and we caught 132 fish in this pond.”

“You get pretty excited to see something this big, it’s just shallow scrappy habitat, they’re just scraping by. And we’ve gone from a fish density of 5 fish 100 meters to somewhere around 70,” Wheaton says.

Adds Lee Mabey, a fisheries biologist for the Caribou-Targhee National Forest, “It’s like a 10- to 20-fold increase in fish out there. Fish need water but they also need habitat. The beaver ponds, they provide a lot of habitat complexity that the stream alone itself doesn’t provide — over-wintering areas, holding areas, deep-water areas, they increase the productivity of insects which means more food for the fish, all the little edge-water habitat, little beaver channels, provide a lot of nursery-type habitat for young fish.”

Color me Happy. Color me tickled pink. Honestly it really shouldn’t be better when a rancher says “beavers are good” than when some tree hugger from California like me does but it is. You know it is.

Jay Wilde’s excellent land stewardship and grazing management also made the beaver project a success, officials said.

“I can’t underscore enough how important it was that good grazing management was a pre-curser to this story,” Wheaton says. “There’s a lot of places where we go to work, and you look at the riparian, and you’ve got to fix the grazing management first. Here, that had been done, and done so well, it makes it really easy to look good.”

Jay Wilde pays close attention to how he manages his cattle. He follows the Allan Savory technique of intensive grazing with excellent results.

Jay follows the Allan Savory system of grazing management, using intensive cattle grazing on small pastures for a short period of time, and then moving on to the next pasture. He shows us an example.

“I grazed this earlier this spring, and we grazed it down really close,” he says. “And this is the recovery we’ve got.”

The vibrant grass growth on Jay’s private land stands in contrast to a different property owner to the north, and Forest Service land to the east.

“We’ve been able to make it look like this without doing any seeding, chemical treatments, it’s all been done by the way we manage the range.”

Jay uses temporary solar fence to create small pastures, and he rotates the cattle to new pastures frequently throughout the grazing season.

I hope Santa is being extra extra nice to Jay this Christmas. And Joe Wheaton. And Emily Wilde. And all the merry men and women at the forest service who made this possible. And the author of this article too who deserves special attention. Steve Stuebner we are loving you too.

Jay closely monitors the range. A series of photo-monitoring pictures shows how Birch Creek has recovered from 2001-2010. At last count, there are more than 165 beaver dams in the Birch Creek watershed.

“It’s been a dream come true for me,” Wilde says.

Jay and Joe Wheaton have held numerous show-me educational tours in the area.

Beavers aren’t perfect; they need to be managed, Wilde points out, but they have a role to play as a keystone species.

“I grew up here hating beaver, always getting in irrigation ditches, one thing or the other, creating problems. That was the mentality back then,” Wilde says.

“We have to think of beavers as our friend instead of our foe,” he continues. “It’s what you have to call a paradigm shift. There’s a lot of people who changed their mind. They decided for these watersheds to be healthy, you need beaver.”

Now Wheaton takes Jay on the road for educational workshops about restoring streams. There’s a big need for more stream-restoration projects, and it’s a powerful thing for landowners to lead the way.

“I would love to replicate Jay’s story thousands of times over,” Wheaton says. “Jay has turned into a dear friend. He and I have done workshops in Montana, Wyoming, Colorado, Nevada, and Idaho. Jay, telling the story, to his neighbors, to other ranchers, this is what it means to him and his operation, it’s been huge, it’s inspired a lot of people.”

“I think there’s a chance that this will start growing really quickly,” adds Emily Wilde. “It’s incredible easy to implement. It can be pretty widespread if you want it to be.”

Ohh be still my heart. I love this. I love every single sentence and and quote. I love the punctuaton. Who ever you’re friends with that can NOT understand for the life of them why you’re so crazy about beavers, send them this.


Our bookish friends with a beaver literary bent had some news recently I wanted to share. The first is that Frances Backhouse (They once were hats) recently sent her finished book to the printers and is expecting copies to hit the shelves in May. Here’s what she posted on FB:

My new beaver book for kids is almost ready to head to the printer and I’m getting ever more excited about launching it next spring. The designer at Orca Book Publishers did a fantastic job on the whole book, including this wonderful cover.

Of course Martinez kids and beavers are in it somewhere and I can’t wait to see it in person!

Beavers: Radical Rodents and Ecosystem Engineers will be published in May 2021.

Written for kids ages 9 to 13, this new book looks at the beaver’s biology and behavior and illuminates its vital role as a keystone species. It’s packed with facts and photos, as well as personal stories about conservationists, scientists and youth who are working to build a better future for our furry friends.

You can sign up for updates by adding your email to the list if you are interested here:

More news on the literary front is that Ben Goldfarb is still hard at work on his new book about road ecology. Recently he one of 8 recipients of the Whiting Grant for Nonfiction writing.

Whiting Creative Nonfiction Grant

The Whiting Creative Nonfiction Grant of $40,000 is awarded to writers in the process of completing a book of deeply researched and imaginatively composed nonfiction. The Whiting Foundation recognizes that these works are essential to our culture, but come into being at great cost to writers in time and resources. The grant is intended to encourage original and ambitious projects by giving recipients the additional means to do exacting research and devote time to composition.

I’m sure the much needed help with allow him to keep striving in what seems to be a very impressive effort, obviously one now affected by Covid and travel restrictions.

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More recent news from our friends at the Wildlife Trusts in England who managed to add a Beaver gift card added to their roster this year. For five pounds you can see some beavery good cheer to the naturalist in your life, and help a great cause..Click on the image to send your very own, of course we already know all the reasons why, but the background says:

This charity gift card helps look after habitat for beavers and all their friends. Wildlife is having a hard time in the UK. Habitat loss and climate change are just some of the factors that are making life harder for mammals, birds and insects.

That’s why The Wildlife Trusts are creating and protecting precious habitat and campaigning for nature’s recovery. Our mission is to protect, connect and restore at least 30% of land and sea for nature by 2030.

This gift supports our 3030 campaign. All funds raised will go towards supporting Wildlife Trust projects that look after wildlife and wild places in the UK.

Imagine such a thing in America. You really can’t can you, but it will happen someday. Just mark my words.

 

Well it happened. We knew it would.

Recently the odometer turned over to mark a cool 5000 times I have written on this website about beavers. More times than I have written about anything else except for maybe that dreamy Mark Hamil when once of us was 13. That’s every single day for 13 years. That’s longer than the lifespan of most beavers and certainly longer than I thought I’d have this gig. You would think there was nothing left to say. That every beaver mystery had unraveled itself long ago.

Just think, if  had been making paper cranes instead of blogging every morning I could have 5 wishes granted from the gods by now. And still I can’t even get beavers protected in one part of one state. Maybe I’m going about this all wrong.

But it makes it as good a time as any to ponder an important question in beaverology. There are in the world two known species of this valuable animal. And yet there are vast discrepancies in appearances, with some black and some golden and some with red highlights in their fur like they just came from the salon.

Why?

And why are the Martinez beavers so much prettier than most beavers I have ever seen? Is it prejudice? Am I like the parent of a third grader who thinks their child’s singing voice is the best in the choir? Or am I right, and our northern California beavers more attractive?

See for yourself.

The beaver on the left is our mom beaver photographed by Cheryl Reynolds in 2008. The beaver on the right is  a recent photo by Mike Digout in Saskatchewan. Is it just me or is mom a thousand times prettier?

I mean a variety of beavers look  very differently and their fur is different shades. Remember the very unique pied beaver from Winters. Of course there’s variation, think about people – some have eyes set too close together or big noses and some are just more attractive to look at. Maybe that’s true beaver beavers too?

This is our second mom photographed by Suzy Eszterhas. See the red highlights? Even if we were going to say it was just about coloring, and brown hair is irrationally pretty for beavers, there are other differences, the shape of the nose, the size of the eye. Or the shape of the ear. Check out this wombat looking beaver from Utah shared in the recent ASWM webinar I attended.

That’s not an unattractive creature, it looks kind of cuddly even and would make a great mascot or stuffed toy. But it doesn’t look like our beavers. Maybe its not an accident that ours were the most photographed and talked about beavers on the planet. Compare wombat to Cheryl’s fine photo of this yearling. Or this handsome image of our father beaver.

 

 

 

 

Not to be specist or bragging or whatever, but our beavers are just more lovely to look out. Don’t you think?  I mean sure I looked at them for a very very long time so  I’m biased and my opinion doesn’t really count, but I’ve probably looked more closely at more photos of more beavers than anyone on the planet and those are some good looking beavers.

Of course there’s the law of averages, Think about it, Out of all the millions of photos you’ve seen of yourself there are probably only a handful that you really like. Maybe having beavers so close by means we took more photos and there are naturally more beautiful moments captured on film. And maybe the fact that our beavers knew US means they were less anxious and their eyes were wider and they just looked more relaxed.

But still. Still. They’re just cuter. There is zero chance of denying it. As adults, or as beautiful youngsters, they were the Hollywood glam-beavers and in retrospect they deserved to be. Look at this photo I took in 2007. It was taken the morning the paper reported the city council decided they were going to be killed. It looks like it was staged by Cecil B. DeMille.

Well  5000 posts and even more beautiful images later, I can say we were lucky to have our beavers. In the big random wheel that is fate they could have been unappealing, porcine, or camera shy. We got lucky.

And so did they.

yearling grooming 2010: Cheryl Reynolds

We live vicariously.

Since Martinez no long has a thriving beaver population, I get a little thrill from hearing about the fairfield beavers, or the Sonoma beavers. or the Napa beavers. We love to learn about beavers and their reception from afar. It’s the second best thing to being there.

And when England proclaims that beavers should be reintroduced or Oregon argues why beavers matter and their lives should be protected on public lands, well we live vicariously through that too. This one is from Quinn Read, the policy director for the Center for biological diversity in Oregon.

Beavers can’t get a break in Oregon, the Beaver State

Who knew that beavers — those industrious, buck-toothed, mutant-tailed rodents — would still have such a rough go of it in Oregon?

We are the Beaver State. There’s even a beaver on our state flag. (Sure, it’s on the back of the flag, but it’s there.) Yet beavers are classified by law as predators and “furbearers,” a terrible moniker that, if applied to other species, would define salmon as meat-tubes and mule deer as antler-holders. This means beavers can be hunted and trapped across Oregon with few restrictions.

Refill that coffee cup, You just know this is going to be good.

And recently the Oregon Fish and Wildlife Commission rejected a petition that would have given beavers a break and closed federal public lands to commercial and recreational hunting and trapping.

Beavers rival humans in their ability to shape the landscape. Fortunately for us they do a much better job of it. In fact, we’ve spent untold millions of dollars trying to recreate what beavers do naturally.

Wetlands restored or created by beavers help mitigate the harmful impacts of climate change. Dams and ponds keep water on the landscape longer, slow water flows to prevent erosion and decrease flood damage, replenish the water table and even trap carbon.

Nice! Do trappers mitigate climate change or save water? No they do not. Say what you want about the age old skill passed on from father to son but trappers don’t increase biodiversity OR prevent erosion.

So beavers win.

During the commission’s Nov. 13 hearing, no one denied the important role beavers play in restoring and maintaining healthy ecosystems. But the group refused to have a science-based discussion on the impact of hunting and trapping on beavers and their activities.

Instead, the commission created a workgroup with a vague direction to analyze and provide guidance on beaver management without a timeline or any anticipated rulemaking. This decision ignores the fact that there is already a beaver workgroup and it hasn’t actually worked. It remains to be seen how or if this process will be different.

Beavers deserve better from the Beaver State.

The commission must be held accountable for reforming beaver management, and it must do so on a reasonable timeline. It must consider beavers in the context of climate change, the extinction crisis and water pollution and scarcity. And it cannot ignore the impact of hunting and trapping, which is under the commission’s direct authority to regulate.

No it can’t. Nor should it. Obviously public lands need to be preserved in a way that protects the interest of the greatest public good. Let’s see, in all of Oregon are their more trappers or people who drink water?

I’ll wait while you do the math.

If this commission won’t do its job, it’s incumbent upon Gov. Kate Brown to appoint commissioners who will. We need a commission that listens to science, respects the public and prioritizes conservation.

Today, with climate change bearing down on us in the form of extreme droughts, wildfires and floods, we understand that we cannot afford to turn our backs on such an important ally. 

AMEN!  I hope that makes the department heads squirm uncomfortably. Beavers will never win until it is in bureaucrats best interest to let the win. And I’d say columns like this help enormously. Great work Quinn.

It’s Saturday. Let’s have some more vicarious living from our friends in San Luis Obispo.

SLO County Beaver Brigade raises awareness of beavers in the Salinas River

Spotting a beaver-made dam is like walking into another world, according to Audrey Taub.

“You’re walking through this sandy-dry arid environment, and then all of a sudden it’s green, lush, and full of birdsong and herons. You can even see the fish and frogs,” Taub said. “Something big is happening here.”

Taub founded the San Luis Obispo County Beaver Brigade, a local advocacy group whose efforts include raising awareness about beavers in the county and educating the community about how beavers benefit wetland habitats.

Well, well, well. This may require a second cup of coffee. And a donut. Audrey  is our friend from way back and SLO is rapidly becoming the Martinez of the next generation.

The brigade is now working with Emily Fairfax, an assistant professor of environmental science and resource management at California State University Channel Islands.

Fairfax and Taub connected because Fairfax was moving to California from Colorado and wanted to find areas with beaver populations to study. She’s studied beavers her entire academic career.

A Google search led her to the Beaver Brigade, and now Fairfax studies SLO County beavers and leads educational walks to limited groups—for the time being.

Through her research thus far, Fairfax found that beavers have been present in the Paso Robles region of the Salinas River since 2013. In that time, 59 unique dams have been fairly active.

Biodiversity First! developed a university-funded grant opportunity for Fairfax and a group of students to study beaver complexes in the upper Salinas River through 2021. The grant, “Beavers, Climate Change, and Ecosystem Resilience,” will result in the first peer-reviewed study of beaver habitat in San Luis Obispo County.

This is the kind of story you want to tell your children every Christmas.  Regular people banding together to make a difference for beavers and the world.

In Southern and Central California and in the Salina River, especially, Fairfax said, the most pressing benefits of beavers is their ability to create wetland habitats that are resistant to stressors like droughts and wildfires.

“The way that beavers dig channels around the landscape, ultimately, makes it so that these patches in the landscape can withstand droughts and fires because it’s so soggy. It just holds a lot of water there and keeps it green and lush even when the rest of the landscape has been put into a degraded and stressed-out state,” she said.

Over the next year, Fairfax and her student group are hoping to continue locating beaver dams, identify the number of beavers in the area, understand their activity in the upper Salinas River, observe beaver activity during droughts, and study water quality.

Hurray! Beavers get way more respect if you attach a scientist to them. It’s not the way it should be, of course. But it’s the way it is. That works because any persuasive power that can help us keep beavers on the landscape is GOOD. In Martinez it was voters and their children. But in SLO it might be science.

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