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

Month: June 2021


This was a lovely find for the end of June. A sound that I have particularly missed hearing every summer for nearly 6 years. Recognize it?


It’s a funny thing how some beaver article have a big flashy web design with eye catching parallex and not much to say,and others have dense random horribly designed pages with miles of powerful content and careful writing. We’re classifying this article from Brianna Randall in the second group. Because you judge a beaver by its web design.

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

Wearing waders and work gloves, three dozen employees from the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Natural Resources Conservation Service stood at a small creek amid the dry sagebrush of southeastern Idaho. The group was eager to learn how to repair a stream the old­-fashioned way.

Tipping back his white cowboy hat, 73-year-old rancher Jay Wilde told the group that he grew up swimming and fishing at this place, Birch Creek, all summer long. But when he took over the family farm from his parents in 1995, the stream was dry by mid-June.

Wilde realized this was partly because his family and neighbors, like generations of American settlers before them, had trapped and removed most of the dam-building beavers. The settlers also built roads, cut trees, mined streams, overgrazed livestock and created flood-control and irrigation structures, all of which changed the plumbing of watersheds like Birch Creek’s.

 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.

Great introduction. I know we’ve read about Jay Wild and Birch creek before but this article is really exemplary. It follows the logic threads through Joe Wheaton, Emily Fairfax and even Carol Evans! If you can’t figure out why beavers matter after this lets just say that  its your own dam fault.

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.

“Even though we spend at least $15 billion per year repairing waterways in the U.S., we’re hardly scratching the surface of what needs fixing,” Wheaton says. Big yellow machines are certainly necessary for restoring big rivers. But 90 percent of all U.S. waterways are small streams, the kind you can hop over or wade across.

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.

Well said. And I’m always happy when an article gives Joe Wheaton enough time to explain.

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.

It worked like a charm. In just three years, those beavers built 149 dams, transforming the once-narrow strip of green along the stream into a wide, vibrant floodplain. Birch Creek flowed 42 days longer, through the hottest part of the summer. Fish rebounded quickly too: Native Bonneville cutthroat trout populations were up to 50 times as abundant in the ponded sections in 2019 as they were when surveyed by the U.S. Forest Service in 2000, before beavers went to work.
Of course it worked like a charm. Beavers are charming. Didn’t you know?

Rock dams in the desert

Beaver-powered restoration isn’t the answer everywhere, especially in the desert where creeks are ephemeral, flowing only intermittently. In Colorado’s Gunnison River basin, ranchers were looking for ways to boost water availability to ensure their cattle had enough drinking water and green grass in the face of climate change. Meanwhile, the area’s public land managers wanted to restore streams to help at-risk wildlife species like the Gunnison sage grouse, once prolific across sagebrush country.

In 2012, a group of private landowners, public agencies and nonprofit organizations launched the Gunnison Basin Wet Meadow and Riparian Restoration and Resilience-building Project to revive streams and keep meadows green. The group hired Bill Zeedyk to instruct on how to build simple, low-profile dams by stacking rocks, known widely as Zeedyk structures, to slow down the water.

Zeedyk, now 85, runs his own wetland and stream restoration firm in New Mexico, after 34 years as a wildlife biologist at the U.S. Forest Service. His 2014 book Let the Water Do the Work has inspired people across the West — including Maestas and Wheaton — to turn to simple, nature-based stream restoration solutions.

Water in the bank

The Gunnison basin is not the only place where sticks-and-stones restoration is paying dividends for people and wildlife. Nick Silverman, a hydroclimatologist and geospatial data scientist, and his colleagues at the University of Montana in Missoula used satellite imagery to evaluate changes in “greenness” at three sites that used different simple stream restoration treatments: Zeedyk’s rock structures in Gunnison, beaver dam analogs in Oregon’s Bridge Creek and fencing projects that kept livestock away from streambanks in northeastern Nevada’s Maggie Creek.

Late summer greenness increased up to 25 percent after streams were restored compared with before, the researchers reported in 2018 in Restoration Ecology. Plus, the streams showed greater resilience to climate variability as time went on: Along Maggie Creek, restored more than two decades before the study, the plants stayed green even when rainfall was low, and the area had substantial increases in plant production during late summer, when vegetation usually dries out.

Actually this article talks about work I’ve never heard of in places like New Mexico. Same principal. Let the beavers do the work they do best and keep water on the landscape. Parts of it were published in Science News in March, but this is a major undertaking.

After that hard work I think we deserve something easy. Here’s a lucky kit enjoying the lily pads at GlenView ponds in Illinois.

 


They say no good deed ever goes unpunished. I agree, Last night MY OPED was posted in some stupid news site WITHOUT MY NAME and with a photo of a NUTRIA and a fricken OTTER. GRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRR. The lying thieves don’t deserve a link but I’ll post a photo so you believe me.

 


Of course I complained and contacted who I could but these aggregate news-nappers are about as responsible as the people who scrape your vehicle ID off before resale. I guess the compensating factor for the crime is that more people read about this.

Even if they are left thinking that nutrias prevent fires.

In the meantime this headline made me laugh yesterday, especially considering the video they ran with it.

Wildlife crews find a solution to flooding caused by beaver dams in Bear Swamp area

here’s the video that runs right below the headline.

I guess that would stop beavers in their tracks alright.

Once again the fault of aggregate news where unrelated stories are tossed together for resale, But the actual story goes like this.

HAMPTON —  Beavers build dams. That’s just what they do.

While the ponds created by the dams are vital to their livelihood by providing transportation routes to and from their food supply and safety from their enemies, they occasionally cause problems for humans.

In early spring, members of the Wildlife Services Section, a part of the Division of Fish and Wildlife, were called to Bear Swamp Wildlife Management Area because one of the beaver ponds in the 1,000-acre preserve was flooding private property, causing problems with a septic system.

Hmm it starts out like the same old story but it gets better. Look at this.

Anthony McBride, the supervising biologist for Wildlife Services Section and his crew solved the problem Bear Swamp, located along the eastern slope of the Kittatinny Ridge in Hampton Township, in Sussex County by installing a baffle in the pond near the beaver dam. The baffle, or pipe system, does not hurt the semiaquatic rodents or their habitat.

Beaver dams, McBride said, and the ponds/wetlands they create, are important to creating habitat for other wildlife such as waterflowl, songbirds, frogs, turtles, and otters and muskrats who need the water bodies for their lifestyles The ponds also absorb extra water during rainstorms, allowing the slow release of water into the streams which flow out of the pond. They also help clean pollutants from water. 

Well well well. Some acknowedgement that beavers matter and an adorable bonus mention of frog lifestyles. hahahaha

Decades ago, remediation efforts took a couple of routes — trap out all the beavers in the colony or engage in a circuitous battle — tear down the dam, beavers rebuild; tear down, rebuild; put up fencing to hamper dam-building compensated by a bigger, longer dam. 

The problem is that to beavers, the sound of running water means repairs need to be made to the dam. It is, after all, a “simple” structure of branches and shrubs held together with mud. Most often repairs are done by the night shift. 

‘Made from a long piece of flexible plastic pipe, both ends are capped by a cage made from gnaw-proof wire mesh. A cut is made through the top of the dam and the pipe is laid in the trench.

The length of pipe is enough to bridge the dam and extend about 10 feet into the pond and another 10 feet downstream of the dam. The human engineers then loosely throw some brush and what was dug out of the dam back over the pipe.

plugged filter: photo by Mike Callahan

Huh, I always wondered what a ‘beaver baffle’ looked like,,= Now I wonder how often those cages get covered in mud and dammed around. Even round filters on flow devices get covered when the beavers figure out why their dam is losing water. Mike Callahan sent me this photo. years ago.

You know that’s not going to work don’t you? Oh yes, he does.

McBride said the cage on each end keeps the water flowing and any sound it makes is far enough away from the dam that the beavers generally don’t attempt to block the ends of the pipe.

At the same time, the biologists trapped and euthanized several beavers to control the size of the colony, usually made up of generations of the same beaver family. 

Clearly a man who gets paid by the hour. First he installs a solution that will solve nothing AND THEN he kills family members to keep the COLONY size small. Because you know how colonies get so large.

Maybe that’s where the shark comes in handy?

 

 

 


Well I wouldn’t describe yesterday’s accolades as “pouring in” they nonetheless dribbled in until I went to bed. I definitely heard nice things about the beaver oped all day, plenty from people who had NO IDEA beavers helped prevent fires or were being killed in California. Some even sent shared how they sent the article to the governor or posted a tweet about it. Gail from Palo Alto (the lyracist from the raging grannies who was responsible for bringing the grannies to the festival lo these many years ago) was so nice she even inspired me to do some lyrics of my own.

Late last night, when we were all in bed
Beavers were building us a dam and pond instead
You know that this stopped flames from coming to our town
They’ll be no hot time, keep beavers around!
FIRE FIRE FIRE!

Now tell me that wouldn’t be fun to sing with some girlscouts around the campfire!

Anyway, I was hopeful in the end that somebody, somewhere is going to make sure gavin’s staffer sees this on the train, so I felt better. I also noticed there was a mention of the issue in Bay Nature with Janet Kim’s new illustrated guide.This lovely image is SO CLOSE to being accurate, I had to write and tell her the secret about bever teeth.

Summer 2021 Almanac: An Illustrated Guide to Bay Area Nature

Smokey Bear is out and Smokey the Beaver is in. If the baritone-voiced, hat-wearing bear embodied an era of fire suppression, then the eco-engineering, industrious beaver heralds a future of restoration. Research by environmental scientist Emily Fairfax (who conceived of Smokey the Beaver) shows that where there are American beaver (Castor canadensis) dams, the surrounding plants survive during dry times. As water pools behind the dam, it spreads and saturates the adjacent soil. These verdant and waterlogged areas may provide a refuge for wildlife during fire. Sections of creek without beavers “were on average more than three times as affected by fire,” Fairfax writes.

Okay she kind of mangled the research but at least she mentioned the topic. Hopefully someone from bay Nature will see the OpEd and do a serious dive into the topic!

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Well it arrived as promised! Let the conversations begin!

This was first published in the San Francisco Chronicle.

A beaver strips the leaves off of a freshly cut branch in Grand Teton National Park, Wyo. Heidi Perryman says that California is killing off one of nature’s best firefighters: beavers. Tom Gable/Associated Press

Reservoirs are shriveling around California. Ranchers are cutting losses by selling stock they can’t afford to give water. Municipalities are getting ready to restrict household water usage.

California has barely reopened from COVID restrictions and the crushing combination of climate change and drought has already made life feel dire again.

And it’s only a matter of time before the fires start.

Last summer California endured the single most flammable year in modern history. Record-setting fire after record-setting fire churned through the state, including the August Complex fire, the first “gigafire” ever recorded in state, which burned more than 1 million acres.

This summer, more than $2 billion in state funds will go towards fighting fires. And even with those record expenditures, we’re likely to endure a heavy loss. Once again there is too little water and too much dry fuel. And once again we continue to ignore or even kill the water-saving firefighter who would work for free to protect us: the beaver.

In 2018, Dr. Joe Wheaton, watershed sciences professor at Utah State, posted a tweet showing a green watery ribbon snaking through charred desolation after the Sharp’s fire, with the caption: “Turns out water doesn’t burn. Thank you beaver!”

The striking image caught the attention of a Colorado University Boulder doctoral student named Emily Fairfax, who happened to be studying the role of beaver habitat in large-scale fire events across five states.

Her subsequent research, published under the title “Smokey the beaver,” used satellite imagery to look at vegetation in riparian areas with and without beaver dams. She found beaver complexes were three times more resistant to wildfire than similar areas without beaver.

Beaver habitat, with its dams, ponds and canals showed less wildfire damage than un-beavered streams. In keeping water on the landscape beaver reduce fire, mitigate drought and recharge groundwater — all things we need in California.

In April of this year, Sonoma State University held the first ever “California Beaver Summit” to discuss how beaver could help mitigate the effects of climate change in a drying state, assist salmon and reduce risk of fire. Nearly 1,000 people enrolled, including California Department of Fish and Wildlife officials.

There is growing interest in the value these engineers can deliver. But this has not translated into policy, even in the face of climate change. Instead, California continues to depredate beaver at an alarming rate, issuing more than 170 permits for beaver killing in 29 counties around the state. This year alone, the state sanctioned the take of more than 2,500 beaver.

Meanwhile, Dr. Fairfax’s research made a handful of headlines in a few strategic places, but went largely unmentioned in broader discussions of potential fire mitigation strategies in the wake of last year’s blazes. No one discussed the beaver population in fire-stricken Butte or San Joaquin counties. Ranchers who kept beaver dams in their waterways weren’t given state funds for “reducing fire risk.” Farmers who maintained beaver dams in their streams received no environmental tax credit for helping the state save water.

Next year’s proposed budget for California increases funding to CDFW by 17%. Unfortunately, zero of these dollars will go towards beaver solutions or educating landowners about the animal’s many benefits. Likewise, none of the proposed Cal fire budget will be directed towards keeping beavers on the landscape and letting their otherwise free ecosystem services lower fire risk for everyone.

Beaver save water and reduce the risk and severity of wildfire. They do it all day, every day, at zero tax-payer expense. Their ponds have been consistently shown to increase biodiversity from stoneflies to steelhead. Beaver ponds help fish survive at a time when the Pacific coast is hemorrhaging salmon.

Our own self-interest dictates our attention. Yet California isn’t learning. We’re locked in a beaver blind-spot.

As we face another flammable summer, California is alone among the 11 contiguous western states in refusing to allow beaver relocation to restore riparian function or increase water storage. Other states with better beaver management and more sensible policies — Washington, Colorado, even New Mexico — must be asking what we are thinking.

California is literally burning for answers.

Heidi Perryman is a child psychologist and “beaver advocate.” She founded the group “Worth A Dam” to educate cities about how and why to coexist with beaver.

Annnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnd scene! It has been a long and disappointment filled 15 years. I no longer am naive enough to think that this will change everything, but I’m fairly certain it has to help change something.firefighter

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