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

Month: October 2021


I told you to expect more good news for beavers this week.. Here’s a healthy dose from Rocky Mountains Colorado PBS.

SILVERTON, Colo. — Colorado’s San Juan Mountains are home to about 15,000 abandoned mines, according to Rory Cowie, the president and owner of Alpine Water Resources. Several hundred of these abandoned mines are in need of a cleanup, which is something multiple federal agencies are working on. Cowie refers to these mines as “legacy mines”— mines that are no longer in use.

“They either have draining water that’s of poor quality, or they may have a bunch of mine waste or tailings … near them,” Cowie said. “And so, for the past 25 or 30 years, there’s been efforts to clean up these mines, but there are a lot of them and it takes a lot of funding.”

But Cowie has a low-cost, natural solution in mind: the American beaver.

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The animals also improve water quality. When water sits in beaver-built ponds, it soaks into the ground and the porous earth acts as a filter before the water re-enters the water system down river.

These ponds also help slow the flow of water, which helps with filtering and erosion. “By slowing the water down in some of these tributary headwater areas, it helps to settle out excess sediments and suspended materials that are in the water,” Cowie clarified.

Slowing water flow will also be helpful in the face of climate change. Warmer conditions mean less snowpack and therefore less runoff, leading to dryer rivers in the late summer and fall.

Oh sure beavers can do all that and more,

“By increasing the beaver habitat in these headwaters, we can slow down that and capture the snow melt over a longer period of time in the summer and slowly release it to the rivers. So, by late summer there’s more water in the rivers than there may be now.”

All these functions could help in the long-term, expensive process of mine cleanup.

Many of these abandoned mines could collapse at any time. Dilapidated structures and sediments block mine entrances. Behind these blocked openings, “discolored and metal-laid waters” collect and, eventually, the pressure and water levels could increase enough to push through the blockage and run downstream.

But with a healthy population of beavers, such releases could be captured in pond systems and filtered out before reaching other water systems downstream.

Of course they could, Give us a hard problem to solve.

But the beaver isn’t just a great long-term, cost-effective solution for mining cleanup. Healthier watersheds are also important to economies downstream, whether that be clean water for agriculture or wildlife viewing opportunities for ecotourism. And as long as there is good habitat, beavers will continuously maintain a dam and pond.

“Engineering has been a huge part of how we manage our water. We’ve been building dams and reservoirs and hydropower and bridges and infrastructure for many decades. And when you take a step back, you realize that beavers are nature’s engineers,” Cowie said.

“And I think there’s a lot to be learned from nature’s engineers.”

Oh and here are the recently released nature-based solutions for climate start strategy. in California. Let me know if you’re spotting a theme. I mean honestly, how much good news can anyone take?

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Wow. That was some rain. I guess it didn’t forget how after all. Jon heard last that we received a nearly a quarter of the yearly rainfall in a single day. Cyclone Bombs aren’t fooling around I guess. For the first time in a long, long, while I was glad we didn’t have our beavers to be worried about. Still I watched nervously as Virginia from Fairfield posted updates on their flooded dams and eventually flooded lodge.

A beaver lodge is like a stationary big coconut shell turned over in the water. As the water rises there gets less and less of it that’s not flooded, I was touched to see how the beavers gathered together  and tried to groom a little.

One by one the rest of the family came to the ‘island’ and was kindly received by family members. There must be a bank hole upstream where some of them spent the night. It was exciting and terrifying to see them band together. But then she saw the most exciting part of all. (more…)


Can it be? Are we getting TWO DAYS of beaver good news IN A ROW? I think we are. We might get more than that. I mean anything is possible. Actual rain came from the actual sky all last night and this morning so we know anything is possible.

Beavers Chip in on Landscape Engineering

Beavers are among the best ecosystem engineers. Their mighty chompers make quick work of trees, and the resulting logs dam up moving water to create swampy ponds. These changes to the landscape can open up important new habitats for all kinds of species, from amphibians to moose, within the beavers’ native range in North America.

They are unique in this regard, in the ability to modify their habitat,” says Steve Windels, a wildlife biologist who studies beavers at Voyageurs National Park in Minnesota. They are second only to humans in their ability to completely change an ecosystem, he adds. (more…)


So beavers were on science fucking friday yesterday and Emily did a fantastic job. I will also say Ira asked excellent question. Especially asking her to describe the states with the best beaver policy. Of course I would have answered differently, maybe Washington and Vermont which installs flow devices to keep beavers on the landscape, or Utah which took the unheard of step a decade ago of creating a beaver management plan for the entire Forest service, but you get the idea. There are states with good beaver policy,

And it ain’t California.

Beavers Build Ecosystems of Resilience

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Wow.

Yesterday was a blast of beaver education and what did I learn? First and foremost I learned that California is the slack-jawed yokel of the beaver world. Did you know that New Mexico is going to outlaw trapping on public lands? Or that Montana counted the beaver population? Or that Idaho BLM was relocating beavers to improve habitat? No you did not. Because we’re just stupid California people who only know how to surf and check our cell phones and trap beavers for eating our avocado trees,

When they were handing out beaver brains we were at the end of the line, baby. the very end.

Lucky for us they were willing to share some of their education. This was presented yesterday by Mark Beardsley of Ecometrics in Colorado. I will share more when it’s available. (more…)

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