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

Month: July 2022


Penticton is a city in British Columbia  in the Okanagan Valley with a population of about 4o,ooo. It is one of the rare parts of Canada that gets very little or no snow, and it boasts of being nestled between two lakes with lots of summer fun.

It is also a tool belt with only hammers to its name where beavers are concerned.

3 beavers culled from Skaha Park pond

Industriousness killed the beavers.

Three of the flat-tailed, sharp-toothed animals were trapped and euthanized last month after making nuisances of themselves in the stormwater retention pond on the east side of Skaha Lake Park in Penticton.

You see what happens in this paragraph right? The words are carefully selected to present the least sympathetic picture of the beaver and the MOST sympathetic description of their dispatch. “Euthanized” “Culled” they just sound so gentle. And “sharptoothed animals” sounds like something that should be a jurassic park.

Len Robson, the city’s manager of public works, said the beavers were damming culverts and other equipment within the system, potentially putting the public at risk.

“If we let the beavers go in there, that pond won’t work and we end up backing up South Main Street and all those other areas during a flood event, so, unfortunately we have to exterminate the beaver from time to time,” said Robson.

“It’s not one of those things we like to do – it’s a necessity.”

Robson said the number of beavers that need to be removed from the pond varies on a year-to-year basis, with no animals destroyed in 2021.

It sounds so rational doesn’t it? Of course there’s NO OTHER WAY to prevent beavers from damming a culvert besides killing them right? You know like how we can only stop speeding on the hire with assassination?

Some one better write Len about a beaver deceiver, or maybe since it’s Canada a beaver baffler. Apparently the internet has been down since 1993 in those parts.


I have learned in my travels that there are people who study beavers – their impacts, their benefits and their management,  and people who observe beavers – their lives, their habits and their families. Long ago when I was first struggling to catch up to everything going on in Martinez I was told by my inspiration Bob  Arnebeck not to worry about all the science I didn’t know yet, because actually watching and spending time with beavers was a very important way to understand them. Maybe even a better way.

Now with 15 years under my belt I understand that there are people who study beavers, people who observe beavers, and then there is Patti Smith.     

Patti Smith | The View from Heifer Hill: An Unconventional Beaver

When I became an observer of the beavers in my wild backyard, I already had a list in my brain entitled “Beaver Facts.” Fourteen years into the project, many entries have been scratched out or amended. “Facts” has been replaced with “Observations.” Among my teachers is Dew, a beaver I have known since she was born 11 years ago. I saw a lot of her for the first four years of her life when she lived with her parents, Willow and Bunchberry. Scratch “Beaver kits live with their parents for two years and then disperse

 When she was five, I found Dew living at a remote pond. I visited her throughout the winter and spring and saw no sign of another beaver. When I returned in September, I found a beaver kit swimming behind her, along with a shy mate I named Ilex. Since Dew had been living alone during the late-winter mating season, I was baffled by the presence of the kit. I later found that Ilex had been maintaining separate quarters at another pond upstream. Sometimes the couple lived together and sometimes they didn’t. They must have gotten together for a “date” in February. So much for “Beavers live in nuclear family units — a mated pair and their offspring.”           

Take this as proof that beavers DO NOT READ THEIR OWN RESEARCH. They make decisions based on a secret data log known only to themselves. They disperse, or don’t disperse, they marry or don’t marry, they raise a family, or don’t raise a family, they build a dam or do not build a dam. They are free to decide their fate and they exercise that freedom.

• Dew arrived, alone, in mid-December, at a new site below my house. I do not know what calamity led to such a desperate act. According to the list of Beaver Observations, by December beavers have finished their preparations for a season under the ice and snow. Because Dew is of heroic stock, she succeeded in establishing a homestead and finding food in the heart of winter.

I have heard biologists sniff disdainfully that it is never a good idea to “name” an animal you are studying. You can see the steady dedication of this in the field as they refer to their  tracked  targets as “P-22 or B-51”. At first blush this appears so much more rational and distant. Like the behavior of real scientists.

But after a while you start to notice that these appellations are just NAMES – (albeit particularly charmless ones). When my naturalist buddies on facebook are discussing a wolf or puma that got hit by a car they all use the proper title – but with just as much affection as if it had been named Dewdrop or Willow after all. “P-17 was killed crossing the 405” they mourn numerically. And you can still feel the sorrow.

• Dew survived an attack by a bear, almost certainly the same bear that killed her mother, Willow, the previous fall. Once Dew recovered, she moved in with Henry, Willow’s widower, and since I’m using definitions applied to human families, we’ll call him her step-father.

I now resume the untold chapters. Early the next winter, Henry disappeared, probably victim of a predator. Dew remained alone through the next year and prepared for winter at a new site. When I skied upstream during a frigid spell in January, I discovered her tracks by a hole in the ice upstream from her lodge and food supply. I couldn’t find any openings in the ice that would allow her to return home. Because she is of heroic stock, I assumed she would find a way back.

Back when I myself was a beaver observer, I saw a few things that even I didn’t believe. Take “Reed” for instance. S/he was one of the three orphans left behind when our first female died. I always thought of him as a male but I’ve come to understand him as female now. Reed had the unique habit of only building dams with reeds – (hence the name). Her tightly woven dams were packed with tulles and looked like baskets. One morning not too long after the father returned from his time away I saw him swim up to the secondary dam where she was working – weaving. He was floating a big tree trunk beside him and earnestly suggesting this should be on the dam.

The observer in me saw him lift that trunk onto the dam. And just as clearly watched Reed push it back down off the dam. The psychologist in my head filled in the lines “Son, we use logs when we build:” But the young architect ignored this advice. “I have to do it my own way father”.

And she did. Dad never interfered again, and Reed never used trees. She dispersed a few months later and when I saw the first woven dam in Napa I wondered if it was hers.

I returned to search for Dew in late spring. Her half-sibling, Gentian, had spent the winter just below my house. I checked in with her first, and then worked my way upstream looking for signs of beaver activity. At Dew’s winter home, I found her intact food cache. As I continued on, I found beaver activity from the past few months, but not the past few days. I arrived at Popple’s Pond, a mile from my starting point, and decided it was time to turn back. First, I would walk across the dam to see if there was any sign of life in the little pond just below. In the middle of the dam someone had deposited a fresh armload of mud. “Dew?” I asked, hopefully. Sure enough, a beaver appeared from the ruins of a lodge and swam toward me. I headed for the shore and a reunion. The beaver who climbed up to join me was the skinniest beaver I have ever seen. I suspect she had, indeed, survived the winter cut off from her food supply.

EEK! A skinny beaver!

In the ensuing weeks, she has put some weight back on. We have shared the golden light of many evenings. This week, as she raised herself to eat an apple, I noticed that her belly was exceptionally large and that she had visible nipples. Dew is going to have kits! How is this possible? The only local beaver I know of is Gentian. You know, the half-sibling who lives a mile downstream. I have assumed the two are sisters since even closely related beavers will form a pair bond if there is no other choice. Maybe Gentian is a male and they decided to mate during a spring thaw, but not live together? Could there be another beaver I haven’t found who is living in his own lodge upstream? Perhaps the answer is immaculate conception? I’ll let you know if a beaver kit with a halo appears. That will be a new one for my list of Beaver Observations.

I don’t know how Dew found herself pregnant, I don’t know why beavers build dams with reeds when there are perfectly good trees available. But you don’t either. And I have learned we are better off just watching than pointing reflexively to the science.

Thanks Patti.


Some great coverage for Chris Jordan and Emily Fairfax’s new article on climate change, this time in Scientific American. I’m sure this will get seen by some of the right eyes. The article ran first in Politico with a photo of a nutria but I’m sure none of us our surprised.

The Beaver Emerges as a ‘Climate-Solving Hero’

CLIMATEWIRE | Behold the beaver: master engineer, wetland dweller and a national symbol of Canada.

Now add climate change specialist to the list, scientists say.

According to new research, beavers are among the world’s most effective practitioners of climate adaptation and resilience, something biologists have known for years but have recently documented through field study.

Experts from the Northwest Fisheries Science Center and the California State University Channel Islands say that as droughts and floods become more acute with global warming, dam-building beavers are helping stave off the worst impacts by holding back essential water that otherwise would run off or dry up.

“It may seem trite to say that beavers are a key part of a national climate action plan, but the reality is that they are a force of 15–40 million highly skilled environmental engineers. We cannot afford to work against them any longer; we need to work with them,” Chris E. Jordan and Emily Fairfax wrote in their paper titled “Beaver: The North American freshwater climate action plan.”

Whooo hoo hoo! I’m an American and I think that’s plenty scientific. The article continues:

The research, published in the journal WIREs Water, found that the kind of climate benefits provided by a species like the beaver — categorized as “low-tech process-based stream restoration” — are “rapidly gaining traction in the face of looming climate and biodiversity crises.”

“If you just put a beaver there and let it do its thing, the number of ecosystem services they provide to help with climate change, it’s huge,” Fairfax said in a phone interview last week.

“It’s also less expensive: Beavers are free.”

Yes they are. They’re born free and they have a right to live free. And not be dropped in parachutes over every scarred mistake this country has made. But that’s just me.

They are also abundant, which poses a unique challenge for the landscape-altering mammal both in North America and elsewhere.

For centuries, Eurocentric cultures valued beaver only for their pelts, and they were hunted to fractions of their natural populations across their traditional range, according to researchers.

As human settlement encroached upon streams and wetlands, beaver populations crashed again by as much as 90 percent, even as they continued to thrive in wild areas and pockets of protected habitat. Their dam-building ways also earned them a reputation as pests, especially to farmers.

Fairfax noted that while restoring public acceptance is a gradual process, wildlife managers have come to value the animals for their role in creating fire protection.

She characterized such natural adaptation measures as “low-hanging fruit” — meaning it requires virtually no effort on the part of those seeking fire protection. “Wildfires in California are getting out of control year after year, so people are saying, ‘You know, I’ll take the flooding if it means I won’t burn,” Fairfax said.

Good point. But of course people don’t have to “Take flooding”. They have to “Address flooding”. Just like they fix a flat tire on the way home from the feed mart. If you can fix a fence you can fix a flow device. We need to think of them more as investments in our landscape and less as  curiosities. I’m dreaming of the day when insurance even reimburses you for properly installing one.

“I’m happy to see people going out of the traditional disaster mode and taking a chance on beavers,” she added.

In Oregon, the nonprofit organization Beaver Works has promoted beaver swamps as a critical habitat for other species such as deer, elk, fish and songbirds that also provides cool riparian environments during hot days. “Without these ponds and channels — without the beaver — wildlife habitat on high desert landscapes becomes increasingly scarce which accelerates with climate change,” the group states on its website.

California recently approved a specialized license plate program sought by Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom that should yield more than $1.6 million during the next fiscal year and $1.4 million annually thereafter for climate resilience through beaver habitat restoration. When introducing the proposal in May, Newsom characterized the beaver “an untapped, creative, climate-solving hero.”

 

It feels like a million years ago that Skip Lisle came to Martinez to install our flow device. I think I have aged dramatically since that time, and I can barely remember the way it started. So many things were different. I was working. Jon was working. Martinez had a Gazette. We had a different president. The housing market hadn’t crashed. There was no covid.

And yet when I watch this video looking at Skip makes me think it wasn’t that long ago after all.


There are a few parts of this story that don’t add up for me. Two of the videos show a beaver. But I’m not sure that’s what this man saw. His comments about ‘Backflips” and “Human eyes” and “Squeaks” sound otter to me. Don’t they to you? I can’t embed this here but click on the image to go to the news story. This needs your help to unravel.

Aggressive beaver forces Spokane Valley fisherman to find a new spot

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