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

Month: March 2021


You know how you have some project that you’re working on, with little success. And you try one thing. Then you try the other thing. But nothing seems to make a dent in the problem. And sometimes you feel like it’s hopeless and you might as well just give up and go do something else entirely. And then something GIVES and all of a sudden success just falls into place all around you and you feel the ground shifting between your feet in a good way?

Well, this feels a little like that.

Simple hand-built structures can help streams survive wildfires and drought

Many of the wetlands in the western United States have disappeared since the 1700s. California has lost an astonishing 90 percent of its wetlands, which includes streamsides, wet meadows and ponds. In Nevada, Idaho and Colorado, more than 50 percent of wetlands have vanished. Precious wet habitats now make up just 2 percent of the arid West — and those remaining wet places are struggling.

Nearly half of U.S. streams are in poor condition, unable to fully sustain wildlife and people, says Jeremy Maestas, a sagebrush ecosystem specialist with the NRCS who organized that workshop on Wilde’s ranch in 2016. As communities in the American West face increasing water shortages, more frequent and larger wildfires (SN: 9/26/20, p. 12) and unpredictable floods, restoring ailing waterways is becoming a necessity.

You’ll want to click on the headline and read every word over and over. This article is that good.

Landowners and conservation groups are bringing in teams of volunteers and workers, like the NRCS group, to build low-cost solutions from sticks and stones. And the work is making a difference. Streams are running longer into the summer, beavers and other animals are returning, and a study last December confirmed that landscapes irrigated by beaver activity can resist wildfires.

Bring back the beaver and let them do the work. Thanks Joe Wheaton for making this and a million other articles like this possible.

Filling the sponge

Think of a floodplain as a sponge: Each spring, floodplains in the West soak up snow melting from the mountains. The sponge is then wrung out during summer and fall, when the snow is gone and rainfall is scarce. The more water that stays in the sponge, the longer streams can flow and plants can thrive. A full sponge makes the landscape better equipped to handle natural disasters, since wet places full of green vegetation can slow floods, tolerate droughts or stall flames.

Typical modern-day stream and river restoration methods can cost about $500,000 per mile, says Joseph Wheaton, a geomorphologist at Utah State University in Logan. Projects are often complex, and involve excavators and bulldozers to shore up streambanks using giant boulders or to construct brand-new channels.

For smaller streams, hand-built restoration solutions work well, often at one-tenth the cost, Wheaton says, and can be self-sustaining once nature takes over. These low-tech approaches include building beaver dam analogs to entice beavers to stay and get to work, erecting small rock dams or strategically mounding mud and branches in a stream. The goal of these simple structures is to slow the flow of water and spread it across the floodplain to help plants grow and to fill the underground sponge.

Hey I wonder if that would work in California. What a crazy idea. We’re pretty special. Do you think it’s possible?

Fixes like these help cure a common ailment that afflicts most streams out West, including Birch Creek, Wheaton says: Human activities have altered these waterways into straightened channels largely devoid of debris. As a result, most riverscapes flow too straight and too fast.

“They should be messy and inefficient,” he says. “They need more structure, whether it’s wood, rock, roots or dirt. That’s what slows down the water.” Wheaton prefers the term “riverscape” over stream or river because he “can’t imagine a healthy river without including the land around it.”

Natural structures “feed the stream a healthy diet” of natural materials, allowing soil and water to accumulate again in the floodplain, he says.

Even in California? No wayyy…. That hardly seems possible! Hey maybe there should be a summit or something to teach people about this?

Beaver benefits

In watersheds across the West, beavers can be a big part of filling the floodplain’s sponge. The rodents gnaw down trees to create lodges and dams, and dig channels for transporting their logs to the dams. All this work slows down and spreads out the water.

On two creeks in northeastern Nevada, streamsides near beaver dams were up to 88 percent greener than undammed stream sections when measured from 2013 to 2016. Even better, beaver ponds helped maintain lush vegetation during the hottest summer months, even during a multiyear drought, Emily Fairfax, an ecohydrologist at California State University Channel Islands, and geologist Eric Small of University of Colorado Boulder reported in 2018 in Ecohydrology.

“Bringing beavers back just makes good common sense when you get down to the science of it,” Wilde says. He did it on his ranch.

Hell YA it does. Bringing back beavers makes dam good sense for all the places that need water and don’t like fires. This is such awesome news and divine timing. A person given to hyperbole might suddenly be given to exaltations.

Water doesn’t burn

The Sharps Fire that scorched south-central Idaho in July 2018 burned a wide swath of a watershed where Idaho Fish and Game had relocated beavers to restore a floodplain. A strip of wet, green vegetation stood untouched along the beavers’ ponds. Wheaton sent a drone to take photos, tweeting out an image on September 5, 2018: “Why is there an impressive patch of green in the middle of 65,000 acres of charcoal? Turns out water doesn’t burn. Thank you beaver!”

Baugh Creek from above
The green strip of vegetation along beaver-made ponds in Baugh Creek near Hailey, Idaho, resisted flames when a wildfire scorched the region in 2018, as shown in this drone image.J. Wheaton/Utah State Univ.

Fairfax, the ecohydrologist who reported that beaver dams increase streamside greenness, had been searching for evidence that beavers could help keep flames at bay. Wheaton’s tweet was a “kick in the pants to push my own research on beavers and fire forward,” she says.

With undergraduate student Andrew Whittle, now at the Colorado School of Mines, Fairfax got to work analyzing satellite imagery from recent wildfires. The two mapped thousands of beaver dams within wildfire-burned areas in several western states. Choosing five fires of varying severity in both shrubland and forested areas, the pair analyzed the data to see if creeks with beaver activity stayed greener than creeks without beavers during wildfires.

I’m breathing into a paper bag but I can’t seem to calm down at all. This is SUCH A GREAT ARTICLE and such good news for beavers. I am beside myself. What a great time to remind people that beavers matter.

Could I possibly be happier? Oh yes I could.

 Jon found this yesterday behind Susana park. So yes. It is truly the very best beaver day ever.  Oh and for those of you keeping track at home that’s a rock in the dam, a bottle of modela AND a crutch. Because beavers are the original recyclers.


Some headlines are more equal than others.

You can imagine how excited I was when Bob Kobres sent me this article in phys.org. A discussion of drinking water from the smartest minds at Stanford talking about what would save us. Of course I had dramatic notions of what it was going to say about climate change and fires and recharging the aquifer.

Imagine how surprised I was to see what was never mentioned.

The future of America’s drinking water

In 2020 wildfires ravaged more than 10 million acres of land across California, Oregon and Washington, making it the largest fire season in modern history. Across the country, hurricanes over Atlantic waters yielded a record-breaking number of storms.

While two very different kinds of natural disasters, scientists say they were spurred by a common catalyst—climate change—and that both also threaten drinking water supplies. As the nation already wrestles with water shortages, contamination and aging infrastructure, experts warn more frequent supercharged climate-induced events will exacerbate the pressing issue of safe drinking water.

Gosh fires and climate change sound like big dam problems. I wonder what can possibly help get us through this?

Whether it’s floods, fires, storms, droughts or sea level rise, climate impacts have a direct influence on water supplies. What types of climate mitigation policies should the Biden team enact to protect drinking water?

Marcus: Grants and low-cost financing for community preparedness, especially for underserved communities, to adapt and plan for climate impacts would make a tremendous difference. The should be doing leading-edge research, technology development and dispersion for lower-cost sensor and treatment systems for drinking water. Finally, the administration can explicitly make drinking water its highest priority for research and development, funding, and updating regulations based upon science.

Ajami: Water has to be the central part of both climate mitigation and adaptation discussions. Today we are facing many challenges that are the consequence of our approach to securing water and energy resources over the 20th century, building infrastructure networks under the assumption of abundance and overlooking inherent environmental interlinks. Source protection, demand management and public engagement strategies should be at the center of any climate policy.

Wow these women sound really smart. I’m sure they know all about that animal that builds dams to save water right? I mean I’m sure beavers are among the many sound solutions they can access to solve the issue of course?

clear water

Groundwater supplies drinking water to 99 percent of rural populations, but overpumping has led to aquifer depletion and water contamination. What federal and state actions can alleviate growing pressures on groundwater?

Knight: We need to change our approach to land use planning by recognizing that the most valuable use for some land is to become a site for managed recharge of the underlying groundwater system. Getting more water into regions below the ground increases the amount of stored water and can help prevent subsidence. The challenge is identifying the optimal locations for recharge zoning and requires seeing below the ground to find coarse-grained materials, such as sand and gravel, that can act as fast paths to move the water from where it is at the surface to the required depths for recharge. This is an area of work I’m currently focused on and it presents great potential to replenish and grow groundwater reserves.

Ajami: I see our groundwater supplies as our social security system; we all contribute and withdraw from it at different times. Unless we collectively contribute to it and protect it from degradation and contamination, there will be none left for future generations to draw from. I believe collaborative governance and land use management are the two most important parts of achieving groundwater sustainability, and neither can work without reliable data sources and accounting mechanisms.

Any minute now I’m sure they’ll talk about beavers. Right?

Well no. If you were holding your breath waiting for them to mention the “B” word you’d have passed out by now and be long dead before it ever happened. Of course I couldn’t let that stand so I wrote these researchers about the difference beavers make in fire resilience, water storage and mitigating climate change. And then suggested they check out what our great speakers at the beaver summit had to say about these subjects.

Two wrote back that they were very interested and would check it out. Felicia said she’s going to attend for as much of it as she can. Riley says she is extremely cool and used to be the head of the SF EPA and they go way back. So I had to find out more. See for yourself.

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I was waiting for this yesterday, This is a great article and Estuary magazine has been a good friend to beavers. From the very beginning.  Unfortunately Cheryl’s lovely photo is mistakenly attributed, but I’m thrilled with the article anyway.

It seems destined that two species known for their environmental engineering would struggle to live in unison. However, municipalities like Napa and Martinez in Contra Costa County have learned to live with their beavers, and the upcoming California Beaver Summit aims to set the record straight.

“Our approach is hands-off,” says Jeremy Sarrow, a resource specialist with Napa County Flood Control and Water Conservation District, describing the county’s tack toward managing beaver dams built along inhabited waterfronts. Sarrow suggests that a three-foot-high wrapping of hardware cloth (similar to chicken wire but more durable) around the trunk of a tree is sufficient to deter a beaver.

A fine nod to Napa. Now lets go looking for other clues that Estuary understands this story. Lets see. What really matters to California? Oh that’s right. Fire.

Furthermore, it’s becoming increasingly apparent that beaver habitats have a lasting positive impact on surrounding ecosystems. Emily Fairfax, a scientist and assistant professor at California State University Channel Islands interviewed by Estuary News last April, has focused her research on beavers’ impact on fire resilience. “In severe fires, areas with beaver dams held up pretty well,” says Fairfax. Viewed from

Beavers are getting a pretty deep bench. Did you notice? So many things are going right for them. And the best people seem to be on hand to make the best poings. Thanks Emily.

Recent Bay Area history has also shown that when a beaver moves in, a whole lot of biodiversity follows. In 2007, when one settled into Alhambra Creek in Martinez, Heidi Perryman and other community advocates fought to protect it from government-ordered extermination. “Within a few months, we saw green herons, wood ducks, and river otters returning to the creek,” Perryman says. She went on to found the community group Worth A Dam to tell the story of the Martinez beaver and advocate for a similar approach in other urban waterways.

Oh yes, Et in arcadio ego. And there Martinez is. Smack dab in the middle of a dynamic beaver tale once again.

To help educate the community and share best practices across agencies and counties, Perryman and others have organized the California Beaver Summit this April 7 and 9. Speakers will clarify beaver history, share the benefits their presence provides, and teach how to interact more responsibly with them. Fairfax, a featured speaker on the second day, will discuss her recent research on beavers and last year’s historic fire season.

“It’s not about having enough evidence at this point,” says Perryman on the value beavers bring to California waterways. “Everybody that drinks water and doesn’t want their house burned down should be interested in something that solves both problems.”

And………………………..scene! Credit to Napa, and Martinez plus some shade to Brentwood which is as it should be. This is a fine article to read and share. Share with as many people as you can think of. It’s so nice that this came just in time to promote the summit. Sometimes I do get the feeling that the earth is tipping in beaver favor.

 

 


You can tell right away when people aren’t accustomed to saying nice things about beavers, They reluctantly review Ben’s book with headlines like these:

The upside to beavers, a valuable rodent

You can feel them, stretching their fingers into the darkness with their eyes tightly closed afraid that something rat like is going to jump out at them.

SALISBURY — Ben Goldfarb, author of “Eager: The Surprising, Secret Life of Beavers and Why They Matter,” told a Zoom audience of more than 150 people that beavers and their activities are highly beneficial to the environment. Goldfarb’s talk, sponsored by the Scoville Memorial Library, was on Saturday, March 6.

The beaver is a rodent, Goldfarb explained. The animals typically weigh between 40 and 50 pounds.

Poor Connecticut reporter. Nobody told her she’d have to write about 50 lb rodents when she took this gig.

Goldfarb said this near-extirpation had serious environmental ramifications. Describing the beaver as a “keystone species,” he noted that the habitats beavers create also serve waterfowl and fish species, and serve as firebreaks and filtration systems for water

.Get out! You don’t say!

Looking forward, Goldfarb contrasted a photo of a freestone mountain brook “(“looks like something in a fly-fishing catalog”) with a photo of a swampy area, with trees in standing water.

The latter vista doesn’t appeal to people accustomed to thinking of wetlands as undesirable.

“So we have to remember what our lands are supposed to look like.”

Aw do we have to? That Ben Goldfarb, always making us think about things we don’t want to. First those nasty R.O.U.S.’s and now this! Next thing you’ll be telling me is that these monsters are everywhere. Like even Texas. Sheesh.

Beaver found in south Austin neighborhood undergoes rehab

 

AUSTIN (KXAN) — Navigating a growing city like Austin can be a difficult task, even for a human, so when a beaver took on the bustle, he may have bitten off more than he could chew.

The City of Austin’s Animal Protection unit got a call about a beaver in south Austin right before the winter storm. They found the male rodent in the road near a neighborhood off of Menchaca Road and Slaughter Lane. He wasn’t doing too well.

Beavers in Texas? Yes. One of my favorite urban beaver photos of all times comes from a suburb of Dallas.


I dreamed last night that the beaver summit was happening or about to happen, and I was very pleased to see that it was going really well. In real life we have about 700 signed up as of last friday – more probably after that interview aired this weekend and the article coming in tomorrow’s Estuary newsletter.

There are basically three jobs in pulling something like this together. Get the website/logo together. Get the speakers together. And get people to sign up. I’m pretty happy with all three at the moment. The event itself is really just icing on the cake to come.

And if you’re wondering what to do to stay busy on the first half of that important day, the beaver trust has some helpful ideas.

The Big Fat Beaver QUIZ

In celebration of the International Day of the Beaver – Beaver Trust are putting on a *LIVE* quiz to remember!

Eva Bishop and Sophie Pavelle, presenters of The Lodge Cast and dynamic duo of the Beaver Trust communications team, are joined by an array of famous faces including Chris Packham, David Oakes , Maddie Moate, Hannah Stitfall and Megan McCubbin – to see how much you really know about the second largest rodent in the world.

Grab a pint, pen and paper, and join in a lively and hilarious tribute to the beaver. (Spoiler alert: you might just learn something too!)

Well that sounds like a fun way to burn off the hour while waiting for an event you spent 6 months planning. Maybe I will grab a pint and be there. It’s free to attend but you have to buy a ticket to win prizes.

Besides. be fair, I have no idea who she is but just the name “Megan McCubbin” indicates fun WILL be had.

Oh and to celebrate after the first day of the conference? How about a Q&A with Ben Goldfarb himself?

Presentation and Q&A with Ben Goldfarb, author of Eager

Join us and Ben Goldfarb, author of Eager: The Surprising, Secret Life of Beavers and Why They Matter, for a live online presentation and Q & A on the amazing adaptations and capabilities of these natural engineers. 

April 7, 2021, International Beaver Day, at 6 p.m. 

Register at International Beaver Day – April 7th | The Wetlands Conservancy.

Wednesday, April 7, 2021 – 18:00 to 19:00
 
Something tells me it’s going to be the best dam international beaver day EVER!

 

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