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

Month: April 2022


Headline in Sierra Club magazine today, just really takes the matter and lays it out for everyone to see. This is what I think to myself most mornings.

We Don’t Deserve Beavers

Tar Creek doesn’t seem like an inviting home for wildlife. For more than 70 years, miners blasted open the earth underneath the Oklahoma waterway in search of lead and zinc. Today, mountains of waste material from the mines tower above what is now classified by the EPA as a Superfund site. Groundwater that flows through the abandoned mines flushes toxic heavy metals, including cadmium and lead—both potent neurotoxins even at low concentrations—into the creek. The water runs bright orange.

One family of toothy critters didn’t seem to care. In 2014, the beavers set up shop in a nearby tributary. “At first, they were a nuisance,” said Nick Shepherd, an environmental consultant and research assistant at the University of Oklahoma. At the time, Shepherd was conducting research at Tar Creek, and the beaver’s dam-building was messing with his data. “We couldn’t get measurements because the beavers had totally transformed the stream from a three-foot-wide channel to an 80-foot-wide meandering wetland,” Shepherd said.

Wait. I can guess what happens next. Can you?

Shepherd and his colleagues kept collecting data when they could. Then, two years after the beavers moved in, a team visiting the site noticed something interesting—the water that spilled over the beaver dams was running clear. Water-quality measurements seemed to confirm what they were seeing: just above one of the beaver dams, cadmium concentrations were 57 percent lower than they were upstream, where the polluted stream flowed into the beaver-created wetland, according to results they recently published in the journal Science of the Total Environment. Iron concentrations were 63 percent lower. The beavers were cleaning up Tar Creek.

Yes it’s true. You make the messes. We clean the messes. That’s just the way it is. Any questions?

Beavers build dams because they’re safer in the water. On land, with their unwieldy tails and awkward waddle, they make easy pickings for coyotes and bobcats. These beaver refuges flood the landscape around waterways, turning tiny tributaries into sprawling wetlands, flush with life. “When we have beavers, there’s deep pools and shallow spots; fast water and slow water all mixed together,” said Emily Fairfax, an ecohydrologist at California State University Channel Islands. This variation in aquatic habitat not only creates habitat for a diversity of species, but it also supports a diversity of chemical processes—including those that can remove toxic contaminants from a Superfund site.

A stream without beaver dams “is like a firehose,” said Sarah Koeningburg, a researcher and filmmaker at conservation nonprofit the Beaver Coalition. Water rushes through, pulling any contaminants along with it. But as water slows down above a beaver dam, it interfaces with the air above it and the groundwater seeping in from below. “You can just watch the chemical reactions happening in front of you as the stream is flowing,” said Rachel Gabor, a watershed hydrologist at the Ohio State University. At the ponds created by the beavers of the Tar Creek Superfund site, oxygen mixed and mingled into the water column. As it did so, it reacted with the iron turning the water orange and created ferrous oxide—rust. In its pure elemental form, iron dissolves into water, but rust forms heavy particulates, which sank to the bottom of the pond. Cadmium likes to bind onto rust, and so it too wound up at the bottom of the beaver pond.

Beaver Cleanup Crew: Kyle Holsworth

In the study they published, Shepherd and his colleagues didn’t measure a difference in lead concentrations. However, the beaver dams might still work their magic with lead levels too. The mucky bottoms of beaver ponds create the perfect conditions for anaerobic bacteria, which thrive without oxygen. Instead, these microbes breathe sulfate, kickstarting a complex series of chemical reactions that eventually transform dissolved elemental lead into iron ore. Like rust, iron ore sinks to the bottom of beaver ponds. As the beavers continue to engineer the riparian ecosystem, Shepherd hopes that bacteria will pull lead and zinc out of the water. Right now, the beaver pond is young, so the bottom of the pond hasn’t yet developed into the thick sludge of a mature wetland.” That happens with time, as plants and other organic matter sink to the bottom of the wetland and break down. “Right now, there isn’t much organic matter to create those anaerobic conditions,” Shepherd said. Plus, not much water makes its way through dense beaver-pond muck, which makes it a slow filter, Shepherd said. “But given a bigger wetland and more time, it’s possible.”

The Tar Creek beavers aren’t the only crew doing remediation work. At The Wilds, an Ohio site heavily polluted by coal mining, beavers succeeded in bringing dangerously acidic water, a common side-effect of mining, back to a healthy pH, Gabor said. It’s not entirely clear how the beavers are doing this, but Gabor thinks it has something to do with the interface between surface water and groundwater, which might dilute acidic surface water as it washes into the beaver-engineered wetland. That explanation doesn’t work for sites like Tar Creek, though, where groundwater is the source of pollution.

Well sure. And do we EVER say thank you? No of course not. We just kill them and trap them and call them names.

Beavers are doing us a favor by cleaning up these toxic sites. But doesn’t the pollution hurt them? “Would beavers prefer not to live in pollution? Sure!” Fairfax said. “But their habitat is really pinched, and they are going to build wherever they can. If they can live and thrive and create a colony in a polluted stream, they will.”

In the future, Shepherd and his colleagues plan to collect samples from the beavers from the Tar Creek site in order to analyze the heavy metal concentrations in their tissues. But the colony seems to be healthy and thriving; “It doesn’t seem to slow them down,” Shepherd said.

Introducing beavers to a toxic ecosystem would be an entirely different matter, Fairfax said. “If they don’t want to move in, it’s ethically questionable to put an animal into a known contamination site.” But, she said, scientists can get habitats ready for beavers by building human-made structures that resemble beaver dams, called beaver dam analogs (BDAs). These structures slow down water much like a beaver would, kickstarting the biochemical reactions that clean up waterways, and hopefully encouraging move in and take over the maintenance of those BDAs. “If beavers choose to come into those areas, that’s their prerogative as a creature that can make decisions,” Fairfax said. And who are we to object?

Tissue samples? That’s our reward for getting you out of this terrible jam? Nobody ever just says “thank you” anymore, do they?


You win some. You lose some. I heard yesterday that troop 429 will be helping us with the festival. 13 12-13 year olds. The troop’s leader is a pediatrician and she says her children have loved the festival for years and can’t wait to help. Another leader is a member of the CERT team so they are also volunteering our emergency plan for the festival to check another city requirement.

How lucky can you get? (more…)


I suppose you’ve all read the old quote wrongly attributed to Gandhi? First they ignore you, then they laugh at you, then they fight with you, then you win. It’s a nice progression that feels good to say. But it forgets one KEY step.

Then they take credit for your work.

I mean that says it all doesn’t it? First they don’t mention you at all. Then they laugh at your ridiculous claims. Then they  line up the big guns to insist what you say can’t possibly be true. Then your point of view triumphs and people accept what you said as true.

And then they argue they said it first and knew it all along.

Truly this article proves my point.

For many years, scientists were misinformed about the habitats and behaviors of beavers in Northern California and did not consider beavers native to the waterways that feed into the San Francisco Bay. Recently, historians and scientists with the California Department of Fish and Game presented evidence that challenged long held beliefs about where beavers belong, and ecologists are establishing important links between the presence of beavers and the health of our watersheds.

Really? Really? The closed minded pseudo scientists at CDFW achieved this momentous reordering of history? REALLY? They did that hard work all by themselves?The funny thing is I don’t see a single name from CDFW named on that paper. But I guess in the end it really comes down to this: Do you want to have your own way? Or do you want credit for your way?

I’ll settle for my own way, thank you very much.

Busy Beavers! Unlikely Watershed Heroes on the Napa River

The hard work of beavers can be seen all along the Napa River and its tributaries. Scientists and biologists working in our local waterways estimate there to be at least 20 different colonies (families of beavers) spotted as far up the valley as St. Helena. In Napa, the Tulocay Creek colony has grown popular among locals; mama beaver and her kits (babies) are regularly featured in the Napa Valley Register.

Evidence of beavers has been documented by white trappers and settlers in the Napa River as early as 1832. Many indigenous peoples in our area have a word for beaver in their native language, suggesting that the presence of beavers extends far beyond written records. White settlers widely considered beavers a nuisance; beavers that weren’t killed by trappers were later killed by landowners. Now that scientists are beginning to gain a better understanding of the critical role beavers play in maintaining healthy watersheds, they are looking to change the way people view beavers from pests to protectors of our waterways.

At the end of the day you have to admit that as much as it’s annoying, as much as it rankles your finer feels, it’s better that the powers that be take credit for the changes you worked so hard to make happen. I learned this first hand in Martinez, where we fought like hell to get the smallest accommodations from the city for the beavers and then had to stew quietly while the mayor got praised for it. I believe I said on Nov 11 2011

 

I am as happy with that paragraph as any single thing I have ever written on this website. It comforts me more than you can possibly imagine.

Beavers are best known for the impressive dams they can build across a waterway. Using their powerful teeth to chew down trees and branches, they skillfully intertwine these materials to build their dams. Next they scour the river bottom and shores to gather mud, rocks, leaves, and grasses to seal the barrier walls and slow down the water flow. As the water level rises, it covers the entrance to their home on the nearby riverbank, known as a lodge, to protect the beavers from predators. A colony of beavers may build several dams on a single stretch of waterway to create the ideal conditions for their home. Holding the water back, the dams forms deep pools where fish, amphibians, birds, and other mammals come to live.

Beavers are a keystone species in the wetland ecosystem. They play a critical role in providing beneficial habitat and food for a wide range of species, who otherwise wouldn’t be able to thrive in the Napa River. Dams form reservoirs that provide food and shelter for creatures of all sizes, keep water temperatures cooler throughout the warm summer months, and filter fine sediment in the water to improve water quality. This provides ideal conditions for the young of threatened species such as Chinook Salmon and Steelhead Trout to thrive. Visit a local beaver dam downtown or on Tulocay Creek, and you can see a wide range of animals, including turtles, otters, mink, and birds. Beavers transform our waterways from channels prone to erosion to oases of ecological diversity.

Fantastic article from the Napa Library crediting the beavers of Napa. I just wish every single city posted articles like this.

Aside from helping other animals, reservoirs created by beaver dams help the land by slowing the flow of water in the river. Rainfall has more time to be absorbed back into the watershed instead of rushing out to the sea, hydrating surrounding soils and keeping tributaries flowing longer into the dry season. Because of this, dams built by beavers make it more likely rivers and streams are able to rebound after a drought season. In addition to slowing down the water to recharge our water supplies, slower flow also helps prevent erosion. Ponds created by dams help support the growth of plants that stabilize riverbanks during high flows and reduce the amount of land lost. The debris also helps absorb the force of the water that would otherwise flow too fast and wash the land on the banks away.

In Napa County, we recognize the valuable contribution of the beavers to our watershed; government organizations including the Flood Control and Water Conservation District as well as the Resource Conservation District work to help beavers and people coexist. Engineers, scientists, and biologists work to make sure development in the valley doesn’t drive the beavers away from their homes, and work with local residents and businesses to prevent and mitigate damages done by beavers as they chew down trees and raise water levels in creeks.

Let’s have more like this please. And who cares who gets the credit.

 

 


Let’s just say this couldn’t happen to a better county, or, as fate would have it, at a better time.
If you don’t hit play on this video you will be very lonely at the water cooler.


Beavers bring relief to drought-stricken California

FOX Weather’s Max Gorden discusses how beavers are making land more resilient to extreme weather in The Golden State.


I want to live in naturalist Patti Smith’s world.

I don’t care if it’s as a person, a beaver, a possum or a slug. I just want to live in a world where she notices things and describes things and fixes things and makes them better. If that means moving to Vermont, fine. You probably want to come too.

The View from Heifer Hill: The perfect place to be a beaver

Pumpkin has always had important things to do. Beavers’ lives depend upon creating and maintaining the watery world that keeps them safe. Because he is an orphan, however, his work has been stymied. How does one deepen a metal tank? How can one harvest building materials on the other side of a fence? (more…)

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