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

Month: April 2021


It turns out, that to relocate beaver successfully, you have to care whether they live or die.

I know it’s a lot to ask, Mostly people just care that they’re GONE, I know, but you have to spare a thought for, Oh I don’t know, how is that beaver going to survive in its new home and have I really made things better by relocating him rather than putting him out of my misery? I mean you could idly glance at the internet and learn a little bit about best practices before you do it.

But maybe that’s too hard. It certainly seems too hard.

Banished beaver gets second chance in San Pedro River

Rather than kill the “nuisance animal,” Steven Martin from Critter Control of Northern Arizona worked with the Tucson-based Watershed Management Group to find the beaver a welcoming new home at an educational nature center on the San Pedro near Sierra Vista.

“We were all really excited. It made our week,” Martin said. “You don’t always get a win in this business, so it was nice to have a win.”

Private landowners in the small community of Cornville hired him to get rid of the beaver after trying and failing to keep the animal away from the cottonwood trees on their creek-front property.

The thing is, the  trapper probably  feel like HEROES for going the extra – well not mile – but certainly 7 inches -and live capturing and releasing the beaver rather than  killing it outright. The landowner feels like a saint because they wanted him moved instead of killed and the trapper feels like a wildlife hero because he was willing to do it. Of course a beaver alone in strange territory has no guarantee of survival and its odds would be better if they had A) thought to provide it shelter and b) thought to capture a family member at the same time.

This is about as noble as ‘catching the toddler’ from your neighbors kitchen and “setting it free” on the local highway.

That’s when Shipek turned to naturalist Sandy Anderson, whose nonprofit Gray Hawk Nature Center sits on private property and includes a stretch of the San Pedro River that has hosted beavers in the past.

Anderson was more than happy to welcome the transplant from up north. “Are you kidding me?” she said. “I told them, ‘Bring that beaver to me.’”

The aquatic rodents were once plentiful on the San Pedro, but they were hunted to extinction there in the early 1900s.

If beavers were first trapped out of the San Pedro in the early 1900’s I will eat a bug. But hey, it’s your article. Write whatever you like.

Within a decade, the population grew to more than 100 animals, only to decline again for reasons experts still can’t explain.

Now Watershed Management Group and others are trying to bolster beavers on the San Pedro and other so-called international rivers in the deserts of Arizona and Mexico.

Call it a hunch, but if you wonder what happened to all those beavers I would start talking to the neighbors. Because if I’ve learned anything in this 15 years it’s that most dangerous animal as far as beavers are concerned is about six feet and walks on two legs.

And it ain’t an ostrich.


It is true that beaver can live in estuary’s and tolerate water as salty as 10 parts per 1000 but they are never happy when this happens, Poor little guy. Dispersal is such a hard time in a beaver life already and South Carolina is a rotten place to be a beaver under any conditions.

‘This may be a first for us’: Beaver on beach a sight for onlookers in Murrells Inlet

While visiting Huntington Beach State Park in Murrells Inlet on Wednesday, South Carolina Department of National Resources staff encountered an interesting sight: a beaver on the beach.

“We’ve seen lots of interesting things on the beach, but this may be a first for us,” the DNR posted on Facebook.

The DNR relayed that park ranger Mark Walker said the animal most likely wound up on the ocean’s shoreline while fleeing a predator, such as an alligator, in a native freshwater pond, where it’s more typical to see the species building dams and such. Walker noted the beaver would likely make its way back to its natural habitat as long as people didn’t get in the way of his trek home.

What a surprise! The DNR is totally wrong about beavers! I’m thinking that beaver departed his family somewhere along the way and used the intercoastal waterwy to get to a new home. Then found himself stranded in salt water. Hope he makes it. But often beavers that get this ‘oceaned’ need rehab.

Speaking of rehab, Cheryl wrote that a rehab buddy had attended the California Beaver Summit and really enjoyed it. She is going to add it to the International Wildlife Rehabilitation Coalition website, as an educational tool. Which was great because I just finished Day One’s highlights reel. Of course the best rehab advice for beavers is to tell people to STOP TRAPPING THEM, but a few salty or orphaned souls will really need their care.

It was two weeks of steady work to snip out the best 35 seconds of each talk, edit into a five minute presentation. add music and snip together video but I’m happy with how it came out. Part 2 is coming in another fortnight. Feel free to share.
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You might remember that on valentine’s day I did a talk with Bob Boucher for the Oakmont Symposium in Sonoma. He was very excited that the final draft of this academic paper had just been released and talked about the difference this could mean to Milwaukee. Fittingly this research was paid for by a grant from the local water agency. Which is the kind of thing that makes sense but rarely happens.

UWM researchers find that beavers could be a remedy for downstream floods

A new study by two UWM researchers shows that restoration of an animal that Wisconsin was known for 300 years ago – beavers – could be a part of the solution.

Enough of the dam-building animals living in the right spots along creeks and streams can alleviate flooding in some of Milwaukee County’s worst-struck areas, according to research by Qian Liao, an associate professor of civil engineering, and Changshan Wu, a professor of geography.

When beavers build homes, called lodges, in wetland habitats, they also construct dams to create a pond so that they can enter the lodge from under water. A significant amount of water backs up as the pond forms, and that hinders fast-moving water, which has a cumulative effect downstream.

Whoohoo! Everything about the opening is perfect, except for that line about Wisconsin knowing beavers for 3oo years. Hmm I’m thinking they’ve been around a bit longer than that. Maybe you want to check in with the Oneida or the Chippewa about that? They might have other opinions.

Bob Boucher, founder of the environmental advocacy organization Milwaukee Riverkeeper, proposed the study to officials at the Milwaukee Metropolitan Sewerage District, which funded the research.

“If there are hundreds of beaver dams distributed across the entire watershed, you have many locations where you can reduce the water flow,” Liao said. “And not just the volume, but also the timing, so that the combined delay at each dam has a significant impact on the downstream peak flow.”

Collecting data with their cellphones, Boucher, Holloway and students Max Rock and Madeline Flanner spent much of 2020 visiting 163 locations on the GIS maps. They made observations either by canoe or by hiking into areas at bridge road crossings to evaluate whether locations had ample food sources and the kinds of trees the animals use for building.

A cellphone app that Rock developed helped the team rank the locations by quality, based on all the data. What they found was enough habitat to support around 4,500 beavers – or about one family for each 100 acres of wetlands

That’s right. Bob is so skilled at maneuvering these things he got Milwakee sewage to pay for it and a student to develop a cell phone app that could study it.

Liao fed the model different scenarios of beaver dam activity at 52 locations that would provide the highest potential to reduce downstream flooding, while also having ideal conditions for beaver. According to the model, dams would reduce the peak flow by between 14% to 48%, depending on the details of the storm, but also on the dam location.

“For example, if the storm was relatively uniform across the entire watershed, then you would have the highest reduction of water flow,” he said. “But if the storm dropped most of its rain on southern areas of the river watershed, then dams located upstream where there’s less rain will have a diminished effect.”

How awesome is this research? Beaver dams can make a huge difference. But we need MORE OF THEM. That’s what I take away from this article.

“There have been other studies that showed the effect on flooding of introducing beaver dams, but those studies only measured the effect a few miles downstream,” Liao said. “What we did is a little different. We looked at it on the watershed scale.”


You know you think you’re contributing in some small way. You like to think what you do makes a difference. And then someone comes along and says “Is this thing on?” And you realize you’ve been writing about beavers every morning for nothing.

At least that’s how it feels when author Frances Backhouse posted this yesterday on the beaver management forum and said “I think this is the FIRST time this ever happened!”

Hundreds lose internet service in northern B.C. after beaver chews through cable

Internet service was down for about 900 customers in Tumbler Ridge, B.C., after a beaver chewed through a crucial fibre cable, causing “extensive” damage.

In a statement, Telus spokesperson Liz Sauvé wrote that in a “very bizarre and uniquely Canadian turn of events,” crews found that a beaver chewed through the cable at multiple points, causing the internet to go down on Saturday at about 4 a.m.

“Our team located a nearby dam, and it appears the beavers dug underground alongside the creek to reach our cable, which is buried about three feet underground and protected by a 4.5-inch thick conduit. The beavers first chewed through the conduit before chewing through the cable in multiple locations,” the statement said.

First time?

First time?

This tale is SO OLD that the first time I heard it I fell off my dinosaur and broke my wooden underwear. Remember the beaver that started fires by chewing through the power pole? Or the beaver that ruined medical supplies? Or the beaver that shut down 911 calls by chewing through the cord? Or the beaver that knocked out power at that wedding ceremony?

Gee do you think, just maybe, MAYBE that beavers get blamed kind of like you blamed your little brother when your mom didn’t see who spilled at the table? Do you think it’s an easy way to explain something that should have been avoided or averted or planned for but got overlooked and happened anyway?

I believe if you google the phrase “Blame it on the Beaver” you will get many,many hits. 17 headlines from this website alone. I remember making this graphic 11 years ago for just such an article.

So no, paying attention to crimes against beavers doesn’t matter or change the world in any meaningful way. Even people who are known for being obsessed with beavers do not notice. And people who like to pretend this never happened before so that they don’t look irresponsible for not planning how to avoid it, get away with it when they say it’s unHEARD of.

But sometimes it gets noticed. I remind myself I did make it into the “acknowledgements” section of Ben Golfarb famous book.

“Second, Heidi Perryman has supplied me with an endless stream of stories, sources, studies and quips since our first email exchange. This book would be far drier without her involvement.”

Okay. I’m a book moistener, Maybe I won’t stop just yet.


This is so good I just have to share it right away. What a fantastic synthesis of several brilliant beaver voices. Mark Beardsley is one of the names I see a lot but have never crossed paths with. I think that needs to change after seeing this.

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This is as good as a whole beaver summit in one talk. And it the first slide reminded me of something that I just had to go find.

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