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

Month: June 2021


A shadowy influence in my life (for obvious reasons) has always been the Peter Schaffer play Equus, about the unhappy child psychiatrist who treats a disturbed teen who blinded horses in the English stable, I believe the Harry Potter actor played the teen most recently. They angry boy puts the older man through his paces by dashing his efforts one after the other, until rapport is sufficiently established to tell his grisly story. This is the way it always works, you see.

At one point in the beginning the boy dismissively calls him a “Swizz” and later explains that the term means “something that has the appearance of giving you something, when really is taking something away.”

I don’t know if it’s a real english slang, or was 60 years ago, or is just the product of the characters warped mind, but the term stuck with me. There are times in my life when it explains things better than any other words possibly could.

Like now for instance. What a total Swizz,

Beaver trapping nixed in favour of dam removal, Council decides

Aurora will discontinue beaver trapping, a method to maintain the flows of local water courses and stormwater ponds, in favour of dam removal.Council made the decision last week following a motion from Mayor Tom Mrakas – and concerns from members of the public.

In his motion, Mayor Mrakas called on staff to discontinue trapping and instead follow dam removal “as it is the only humane option available to the municipality at this time,” while also exploring alternate ways to manage water levels.

“For me, it comes down to one simple point: what we’re doing right now is directing staff to discontinue any return to trapping and while we discontinued it, if it is necessary, that we implement dam removal and during that time we work with the Conservation Authority (Lake Simcoe Region Conservation Authority – LSRCA) on how we can explore alternative water level management controls to ensure it is in compliance with the ECA (Environmental Compliance Approval).

Raise your hand if you think removing the beaver dam is going to SOLVE the problem. No hands raised I see? You and I and the milkman all know that removing the beaver dam is only going to make the beaver rebuild. Maybe that night. Gee I wonder what the sensitive mayor will say then?

“Not only did I speak with the Conservation Authority, I have also spoken to experts, whether [from] York University or some other professors as well. They stated too that when it comes to the Ministry of Natural Resources and their philosophy as far as beavers cannot be trapped and transported… they say that it is not feasible, ‘you can’t do that, that it shouldn’t be done.’ A lot of people are saying that that philosophy is outdated and that [it] needs to be revisited and looked at. This is some of the work staff need to do through the Conservation Authority, working in partnership in how we can get to a place to ensure our infrastructure remains safe while we have a proper mitigation strategy.”

Ohhh puzeeze ya big swizz.

It is, he said, a short-term strategy and a long-term plan will need to be hammered out by municipal staff, the LSRCA, and the Ministry of the Environment.

Ya think? Well that’s the only thing that vaguely sounds promising in all your pontificating. How is it humanely possible that you live 10 from Furbearer Defenders and no one is uttering the word FLOW DEVICE?

I ask you?

 

 


So Gavin Newsome announced the new budget for California with a budget for CDFW that’s 252 million  more than they usually get and guess how much of it is ear marked for beavers? Go ahead. Guess.

California wants to buy nonlethal bear traps and pay ranchers when wolves kill their cows

That evolution is reflected in the budget submitted last month by Gov. Gavin Newsom to fund the California Department of Fish and Wildlife, which oversees a vast state with 33 million acres of wildland and species that range from humpback whales to endangered condors.

 Newsom’s latest budget proposal would increase the department’s funding by $252 million — a 28 percent increase — and allow it to hire 216 new positions. Department director Chuck Bonham called it “the single biggest, serious investment … of one-time funds” in decades.
 

“That’s unheard of growth for us,” Bonham said. “This has been a many-decades journey to provide our department the capacity to do the job people have asked us to do.”

So the plan is to pay ranchers when wolves eat cattle and pay farmers not to irrigate their crops in the klamath and build a wildlife overpass for Beth Pratt’s mountain lion, but there’s not a drop left for that rotten beaver that could keep the entire state from going up in flames.

Because who cares about beavers?

The department, whose origins as a fishing and hunting regulator go back more than 100 years, is now responsible for chemical-spill cleanups, issuing renewable energy permits, managing 1.3 million acres of public wildlife areas and ecological reserves, keeping whales and sea turtles from getting tangled in fishing gear, heading scientific research and protecting endangered species.

The department recently published a report that concludes the department “is unable to fully meet its diverse mission — managing and protecting California’s diverse species and habitats and bolstering equitable public access to lands in the face of increasing population and resource demands in a changing climate.”

Just in case you’re curious the report doesn’t mention beavers either. Because really, why bother?

The governor’s budget pays special attention to one particular growing demand on the department’s staff: The conflicts that occur when animals like coyotes, bears and mountain lions wander into populated areas — a problem that Bonham said seems to get worse during droughts, as the animals head into urban areas seeking food and water.

Last year, the state responded to close to 6,500 human-wildlife conflicts alone, Bonham said.

“We’ve seen about a 300% increase in five or six years in this workload,” Bonham said.

The department’s budget proposal includes $7 million in funds for the department to buy traps and other equipment to capture and relocate animals, as well as nonlethal deterrents such as flagging and fences to protect livestock from wolves.

Bonham said that as it stands the state doesn’t have nearly the equipment it needs.

So CDFW gets thirty percent more funding next year. I’m guessing we can look forward to a healthy increase in depredation permits too! More staff means more time to kill beavers right?


There’s plenty of beaver news out there. But on this sunny Thursday morning I thought we’d talk about the OTHER B word that was wiped out in the 1800’s by greed. I’m speaking of course about Bison. An article was published yesterday in Wilderness News that is still getting under my skin. And should get under yours. This is by George Wuerthner.

Indian Culpability in Bison Demise

I want to clarify that most of what follows is not a direct rebuttal to Sonneblume’s essay. Still, his assertions did prompt me to explore some of the common assumptions that he appears to hold, as do many others who champion Indigenous people as role models for sustainable living.

This theme is a familiar trope of many who advocate exploitation of wild nature, arguing that humans have always modified the landscape.

However, despite this human influence, ecosystem processes were sustainable, one assumes because Indigenous people exercised restraint due to their cultural values or by some quirk of genetics.

Beyond the danger to conservation efforts in such ideas is the False Cause Fallacy. Correlation is not Causation. The False Cause Fallacy occurs when we wrongly assume that one thing leads to something else because we’ve noticed what appears to be a relationship between them.

A common argument of those who advocate for Indigenous people is that in places where native people dominated wildlife and natural processes, ecosystems were more sustainable. They assume this was because Indigenous people were more in “tune” with the landscape and practiced cultural techniques that did not disrupt ecosystem processes.

His these is, as near as I can understand it, that all humans will exploit resources for their own personal gain and that when we paid natives for Buffalo hides they did too. So they aren’t that noble okay?

What is common in all these instances is low population and low technology. Change either of these factors, and humans everywhere, no matter their religion, race, or cultural identity, frequently overexploit the land.

The fallacy is saying because there were more wolves or more bison or whatever in times past when Indigenous people occupied a specific location, it was due to the people’s cultural values.

You see it was JUST A COINCIDENCE that there were more bison before white man came and destroyed tribal culture with their guns and firewater. And correlation doesn’t mean CAUSATION. Indians would have used up the bison too. Left to their own destructive devices. And when WE came and changed the culture they definitely did,

Let us examine, for instance, the common assertion that tribal people somehow sustainably utilized wildlife. It is widely assumed that white commercial hunters caused the demise of the western bison herds. This is such a widespread assertion that most people take it as fact, but particularly by Native American advocates.

Tribal people in North America were like humans throughout the world and demonstrated intelligence and self-interest and this often meant overexploitation of resources–when they had the capability to do so.

There is no doubt that commercial hunting provided the final nail in the coffin of wild bison. But a careful reading of early historical accounts of the western plains indicates that bison numbers were already in steep decline before significant commercial buffalo hunting began in the 1870s.

Once tribal people acquired the horse, and in particular, the rifle, bison numbers began to decline. Most tribes on the Great Plains had horses by the 1750s, and the typical “plains Indian” nomadic bison hunting lifestyle was in full swing by 1800.

You see the reason all those beavers were allowed to live until the 1800’s was that the white man hadn’t politely explained why they were valuable as hats. Once they did the natives were perfectly willing to exploit the population for their own gain.

The idea that Indians “used” all parts of the bison and didn’t “waste” wildlife is another myth. There are plenty of documented instances of tribes killing bison merely for their tongues and leaving behind hundreds and sometimes thousands of dead animals. How many bison were killed annually in this manner is unknown; however, it was common to take only the best parts of a bison if one anticipated encountering more bison in a few days.

Those wasteful Indians. I just wish R, Grace Moran were alive today to slash this article with her little red pen. Never mind that our best accounts of native life come from the period after which we had already destroyed and ruined their culture. Never mind that ascribing their greed to our own is blaming them for wanting to exist in the culture we transformed. Never mind that natives and bison (and beavers) lived together for centuries without using the other up.

I go through this detail to demonstrate that many of the assumptions and traits ascribed to the presumed “conservation ethic” of Indigenious people can be explained in other ways. No matter where they originate, humans have similar biological controls on their behavior. In general, all people seek to further their self-interest. And among more “primitive” cultures (I use that term to denote more limited technologies), the self-awareness of their actions on wildlife and natural processes was limited.

See we’re all humans. And native Americans were just as bad as us. That’s why it only took a little influence to get them to act like us. And since they weren’t really better than us. I don’t have to feel guilty. Nor do you.

Here endeth the lesson;

I am quite sure they well know how many irate natives voices and scholars are going to respond to this diatribe. I’m sure publishing this article is the equivalent of tapping the microphone and asking “Is this thing on?” They want to increase their readership when every irate reader shares this with three others.

Let them hear from you too.


I had such an interesting meeting yesterday. I was told by Joe Wheaton’s sister Anne that the mayor of St Helena wanted to know more about beavers and their impact on fire prevention. The meeting happened on Zoom and Brock Dolman and Kate Lundquist from OAEC were there too.  He talked about identifying places for beaver in the Napa River and I pointed out that there already were plenty on the Napa River including some that are depredated for eating grape vines. Then we talked about how  to involve and educate the public and how to get the wineries on board by stressing the impact they could have on fire. He was especially interested in coordinating with the Suscol intertribal council who had grown interested in beavers and thought maybe the local college would be willing to participate.

It was a heck of an interesting meeting.

Two facts stood out in my mind. Did you know our governor owns a vineyard in St Helena? And that the past president of the California Fish and Wildlife commission lives in St. Helena? I did not. That sure makes St Helena an idea location for a high profile Emily Fairfax-Joe Wheaton collaborative study about the impact of beavers on California wine country Wildfires don’t you think?

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This will start the week off with a bang,

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As you’ll note it’s the usual players with a few exceptions. Imperial county was a surprise. And not much activity south of Oakhurst. I guess either folks in Fresno were either too busy in the pandemic to kill beavers or they killed them anyway and never bothered with a permit. Here’s a look at the numbers, which is a little more shocking.

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