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

Month: April 2021


And on then seventh day, beaver rested.

That’s the way of the world I guess. Bad beaver news chased or avoided all week long and then when finally delicious beaver stories are released its always on the same day, Sunday. What a wondeful beaver day of rest, All the way from Alberta to Angor.

Where Beavers Go, Surprises Follow

BY GLYNNIS HOOD

It’s an usually warm day in January and my snowshoes are only partially necessary on the frozen ponds that aid my route through the Ministik Game Bird Sanctuary in east-central Alberta. Having studied beaver populations and their influence on wetland ecosystems for 20 years in the Beaver Hills moraine, this is my first serious exploration of the beaver ponds of Ministik. It is a world that defies explanation at times — towering lodges, beaver dams dropping in step-like formation to yet another perched wetland, and then to another, and another. As I rest against a beaver lodge to have my tea, I realize that after all these years, there is still so much more to learn about these rodents, which can engineer entire landscapes unlike any other mammal, other than humans.

You just know if Glynnis us writing it it’s going to be good. Go get that second cup and settle in.

By modifying the shorelines and basins of ponds so dramatically, habitat complexity increases, which in turn influences habitat use and availability for other species. In a study with Dr. David Larson, we collected samples of aquatic invertebrates at three different habitats within occupied and unoccupied beaver ponds: along the vegetated shoreline, in the open water column, and in beaver channels. We fully expected that beaver channels would function much like the vegetated edges of the ponds, but were surprised to find that beaver channels served as “hunting hotspots” for predaceous aquatic invertebrates. Perhaps the regular movement of water in and out of the channel when beavers used them to access foraging areas, or the release of other food sources as beavers excavated the sides and bottoms of the channels, provided a regular influx of new prey. Whatever the reason, these tiny aquatic predators were found in higher abundance in these often-overlooked habitats. Other invertebrate species were also found exclusively in active beaver ponds, regardless of the type of habitat they used within the pond.

Click on the headline to go read the whole thing, It’s that good. And if Glynnis cares enough to put down her professor/researcher hat and start writing news paper op-eds, its really the least we could do,

Beavers can be a valuable wildlife management partner on your homestead

  • When it comes to designing wildhabitat, there are few things more efficient than a beaver. That’s good news for property owners who want to attract a diverse population of Maine animals and birds to their property. According to wildlife biologists, just about everything the beaver does improves its surroundings for other animals.

“If you t ” hink about it from a wildlife perspective, the beaver is the Tom Brady or the MVP of the wildlife world,” said Keel Kemper, regional wildlife biologist with the Maine Department of Inland Fisheries and Wildlife. “The reason for that is the beaver has the ability to alter habitat for the benefit of every other critter out there.ere.Hmm. Beavers as Tom Brady.

Not a bad metaphor.Beavers as Tom Brady. Really really talented and still, for some reason,  widely hated.  That works for me.

The beaver shows up and pretty soon you have a pond that is great for fire protection,” Kemper said. “Those ponds also provide fresh water for crop irrigation or to water your garden.”

Sometimes beavers do their best work in not the best places,” he said. “People don’t always like them cutting down trees or backing up water on their land.”

The good news is, there are steps you can take t“o mitigate the impact of beaver activity on your property, especially when it comes to trees.

Ahh an article from Maine that praises beavers AND recommends wrapping trees. Be still my heart. The only way this could get any better us if he talks about installing a flow device.


This is an outstanding outcome to what inspired is many. We want to hear all about it

Beavers causing dam problems in bosque

Now, Jones is spearheading a new program to direct the beavers away from the acequia and point them to other areas of the pond where they can continue building dams for their safety and to help them access food. The plan starts with using a so-called flow device in the coming weeks.

“The one we’re going to put in here is similar to a culvert, so we’ll have an exclusion fence with a pipe going to a cage on the front end of that pipe. That way the water can flow unimpeded,” Jones said.

Jones said they know of at least two beaver groups in the area, one living in each marsh pond. This program will be done in collaboration with the New Mexico Department of Game and Fish, the city’s Open Space Division, and the Beaver Institute in Massachusetts.

There could not BE a better outcome than trees wrapped, natives planted and a flow device installed in cooperation with Game and Fish AND the beaver institute. Kudos to everyone involved.

 


Here’s a beaver origin story for you. Stop me of you’ve heard this one before.

In the beginning Skip Lisle taught Mike Callahan to install flow devices. Skip later taught Jake Jacobsen of Washington public works, Glynnis Hood of University of Alberta, Amy Cunningham of Wyoming and Sherri Tippie of Colorado. In between all that Skip came to Martinez, saved our beavers and made this story possible.

Meanwhilewhile Glynnis taught her students and did research proving that flow devices work and save money, Sherri taught Jackie Cordry who was working in Colorado Park District at the time. and Amy taught her friends at the wilderness federation in Montana.

At the same time Mike taught Mike Settell of Idaho, Jakob Schokey of Oregon, Ben Dittbrenner then of Washington, and went on to found the beaver institute which teachers many students from many states and four countries every year.

This interview tells you something about how far their efforts have gone.

Earth Day Special: The Beaver Coalition

 

As we honor Earth Day 2021, the theme running through today’s KBOO programming is the impending climate crisis, and its affect on our home planet. And we’ll be introducing you to people and organizations who are working to protect our environment, and all its inhabitants.

On today’s show, we focus on one of those inhabitants, a species of great importance especially here in the Pacific Northwest. I’m referring to Oregon’s official state animal, the beaver.


Happy Earth day. And fingers crossed we give her the respect she deserves. And maybe some beavers.


I  found this very inspiring. Quite a way to spend a ‘gap year’. Abelino Fernando Leger has a fine environmental career ahead of him I think.

In New Mexico, beavers and people aren’t so different

In fall of 2020, I worked with Trout Unlimited and Defenders of Wildlife and River Source — a small company specializing in watershed restoration, education and research in New Mexico — on a beaver habitat assessment survey in northern New Mexico. The project goal was to find rivers where beavers could be relocatedand where beavers could do the work to restore riparian water tables, wetland vegetation and in some places, improve the health of trout habitat.

Can you think of a better job description or something you’d rather be doing? No you cannot. I cannot either. Trout Unlimited is one of the few places on the planet where beaver wisdom doesn’t come as a surprise. They know what their fishes need.

Over the course of a few months, I worked with Rich Schrader, my mentor and River Source founder, on what he aptly described as our “dream project.” Rich and I completed the surveys with the help and teaching of former a wilderness guide, David Fay, and River Source water scientist and Cochiti Pueblo member, Carlos Herrera. We did both ground and drone surveys to discover as much as we could about the impact of cattle, riparian geomorphology and the vegetation present to determine if it would be a good beaver relocation site. It was also our job to determine what part of their historic range any beavers were still occupying.

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Can I get an amen? You hit the proverbial nail on the head Abe. I think the rest of your education is going to fall easily into place now that you’ve learned the beaver lesson.

This is not the only common goal we share with beavers. In one ephemeral creek we hiked along, private landowners had built a series of rock berms and grade controls in an attempt to retain surface water on their property. In Ponil Creek, another ephemeral waterway, the beavers we found had managed to keep several large, deep pools behind their dams in spite of seeing four weeks with no rain.

When doing this work, I learned so much about hydrology, riparian ecology, and, of course, the beavers themselves. After hiking along the rivers where beavers were present, I came to really appreciate the animals. They may not be the cutest rodent out there, they are awesome creatures. Hard-working, family-oriented and constantly molding the environment around them to their needs, beavers are not so different from us in the end.

I have to agree with you, Abe. Beavers can teach us most of what we need to know about hydrology, ecology, community and responsibility. You see beavers and humans are pretty different.

Beavers are better,

Beaver building dam with two rocks: Rusty Cohn

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