If anyone in the world knows you like beavers besides us you have been sent this video in the past week or so. It’s from Newhouse wildlife rescue in Virginia. This video was taken down for a while because it was posted without permission. And the thing all of the world is “oohing” and “Awing” about is that the beaver appears to be building a dam across an open doorway.
Which is cute. I’ll grant you. But not what interested me because watching a beaver pick up shoes or newspapers to build a dam in rehab is no longer a surprise. Nor is posting rehab videos without permission. Because good lord when mother beaver went to Lindsay wildlife museum all those years ago that happened. What IS a surprise is what happens next. At 28 seconds in to be precise.
That’s hopping. This beaver hops. Do all beavers hop? In all the many hours I spent in their presence I never ever saw a beaver hop. What have I been missing? Are there secret hopping meetings that take place only when I am safely out of sight? I thought I’d ask Patti Smith who has spent many hours with beavers in the wild and in rehab and thankfully she agreed it was remarkable and said it was a surprise to her also.
So maybe all beavers don’t hop. But this beaver hops. Has he been sharing a cage with a bunny? Is he just extra special? Patti thought it might have something to with the slippery floor surface. But pretty much all beavers in rehab have walked on a similar floor.
Now as I watch this again I think maybe that beaver’s left paw isn’t feeling great – the one on the right side of the screen. She appears to be favoring it. Maybe more her ankle than her foot. Maybe hopping allows her to not use it and rely on the other front foot entirely. Maybe hopping is a kind of adaption that is easier on it than walking.
What do you think?
A reply from Mike Digout makes sense.
If you had a younger sibling as a child, there was plenty to resent them for. They were cuter and got more presents and didn’t have to go to school or do as many chores as you. But all that youth and innocence had its advantages too. Life came with a built-in escape route. As long as you never overplayed your hand you could always blame the crayon on the kitchen floor or the mess in the hallway on your younger brother or sister. And sometimes this worked well enough to get you out of the jam for a while.
For much of public works beavers play this role too.
Stuff city crews and storm engineers are supposed to do routinely often pass unnoticed. Like monitor the sewers of clean out debris. When they are called on the carpet or there’s a problem they invariably point to the rodent. “It was the beavers” they say. And because the city mangers and mayors of the world apparently believe any wild lie they can possibly hear about the animals they are off the hook. And sometimes it’s entirely bunk and sometimes beavers were dimly involved in making a problem worse that if they were doing their jobs would have been fixed long ago.
But it’s always the beavers.
In Rocklin right now the beavers at Monte Verde are being blamed for tunneling into the levy. Which may or may not have actually occurred. The levy needs repairing and because of this all the water must be taken away, the fish must be captured and rehomed, the nesting pond turtles relocated. Crews and bulldozers ripped out the beaver dam to take the water away and are currently assuming that ripping out all the trees and cattails means that beavers never come back.
Our poor friend watching over them is spending every day in utter horror observing the torment and hoping that the beavers themselves are spared. She sent a photo this morning. On the right you can see what the entire lovely dam used to look like On the left is evidence of their savagery.
You can imagine what a silty muddy mess the water is downstream. And how the evicted birds are flying around and around looking for the trees where they used to perch. CDFW gave permission for this atrocity, and my that must make them very proud.
All we can say is that we’ve been there and we share your pain, Laurie.
Now here’s something pleasant to improve your mood after all that. Sometimes it turns out experts get it right.
I came across an interesting article today about a research studying the incidence of fur-bearers past and present. It got all my attention with a phrase I’ve heard from Rick many times “Shifting Baselines” which basically means we assume what we are seeing means that’s what we’ve always seen. For example like the wildly crazy people in Wisconsin who insist that the beaver population is BIGGER than is ever been.
The article mentioned a project they are working on with some grad students up in the coast of maine about the now extinct “Sea mink”. Apparently the only evidence of this species now are some jawbones that were found in midden heaps. Just like we found beaver bones in the shell mounds in Emeryville. The mink was apparently very attractive to trappers because of its large size. Having more fur to go around proved its undoing, and even though it had been written about for years. it officially was extinct by 1903.
What can furbearers past and present teach us about future conservation efforts?
NORMAN, OKLA. – Over the years, humans have had a profound effect on biodiversity. Whether through population, land use, exploitation or lifestyle, everywhere people go, they have an impact on the environment and ecosystem services that we all rely on.
This pattern is exemplified by the beaver and its extirpation (local extinction) in the northeastern part of the country, a result of the fur trade industry between roughly 1600-1900. European demand for mammal pelts, such as the beaver, altered life for Indigenous North Americans and shifted thousands of years of traditional harvest practices.
While existing research has given us some insight, scientists hope the eager beaver and its furry cohorts will improve our understanding of the past, and better manage current and future conservation efforts for these furbearers.
Courtney Hofman, President’s Associates Presidential Professor in the Department of Anthropology, Dodge Family College of Arts and Sciences at the University of Oklahoma, is leading a project studying how human management schemes and Indigenous relationships influenced furbearers, specifically beaver, mink and muskrat.
Hofman’s work is the focus of a $1.5 million grant from the National Science Foundation. The four-year study uses ancient DNA samples derived from archaeological specimens housed at the Smithsonian Institute’s Natural History Museum and among other museums, as well as samples from modern beaver, mink and muskrat provided by wildlife managers and fur-trappers, to better understand the relationship between people and these animals. The study incorporates a diverse group of collaborators, including the Smithsonian, Middlebury College, the University of Maine and tribal partners.
Hofman said shifting baselines – the idea that as resources decline, each new generation accepts that what the previous generation experienced was normal – often make it hard to determine what should be considered normal in the area of ecological restoration. By extracting DNA from archaeological and historic specimens, scientists can get closer to the truth.
“We can use the archaeological record as a time machine to go back and see how much genetic diversity has been lost due to the fur trade and then think about how that impacts the management of these species today,” she said.
This brought back immediate memories of our historic beaver population papers and hunting about for ecological and tribal evidence of their presence in California. It is just crazy luck that any beavers ever remained on the landscape to allow us to repopulate their presence. They almost went the way of the sea mink.
“Sea mink, now extinct, lived on the coast of Maine. It was larger and probably smellier than the American mink. It went extinct in the late 1800s, probably due to overharvesting,” she said. “The larger sea mink was more attractive because for the same amount of effort you could get a bigger skin to sell.”
Hofman said most of what we know about sea mink is from the archaeological record. There’s not much other information available except in museums.
“We have been sequencing the DNA of extinct sea mink to figure out what this extinct species was and how it relates to the modern mink that live in North America today,” she said. “But there’s a shifting baselines question here because the sea mink went extinct and on the coastal islands where it used to live there’s a great interest in protecting sea birds and nesting sea birds. Closely related American mink from the mainland have been swimming out to these islands and predating on the sea birds living on the islands. Right now, managers are removing mink when they find them on these islands to protect the birds. But there used to be sea mink that lived on these islands that went extinct before our recent memory. Perhaps the sea birds on these islands, instead of being in decline, are fluctuating to population levels when the sea mink existed on the landscape.”
Sara Williams, a University of Oklahoma dual major in human health and biology as well as microbiology, and Elizabeth Austin, an environmental science and earth and climate science major at Middlebury College in Vermont, spent time interning at the Smithsonian’s Natural History Museum, where they helped identify specimens for use in Hofman’s project, including the sea mink. They blogged about the experience before presenting their internship findings at the Furbearer’s Conference at Shoals Marine Lab in Maine, organized by Hofman and project co-investigator Alexis Mychajliw. This workshop brought together wildlife managers, fur trappers, archaeologists and Indigenous community members to help direct future research.
Interestingly enough, in some trapper journals I read for our research the sea otter was referred to as a SEA BEAVER. Because obviously beaver just means “An animal whose fur I want”. It’s also interesting because of the paucity of fossil record. People often say there are so few bones or skulls of beavers found in California that this is proof they weren’t native. Obviously being a marine mammal means your bone record is pretty hard to maintain.
This past June, Hofman and Mychajliw attended an archaeological field school led by Bonnie Newsom, a Penobscot Nation citizen, assistant professor at the University of Maine and senior personnel on the project. Newsom has done extensive work on Indigenous archaeological methods, utilizing language experts in her workshops to connect objects to the language.
“We’re using archaeological material from Wabanaki ancestors, so we want to make sure this project is inclusive of the people who lived on these landscapes and continue to live on these landscapes and seascapes,” Hofman said. “We’re looking at the human influence on the furbearers as part of this project, so making sure that those communities are represented is incredibly important.”
The project, “DISES: Cultural Resilience and Shifting Baselines of the North American Fur Trade,” is funded by the National Science Foundation Division of Research, Innovation, Synergies and Education, Award no. 2109168. The project began on Sept. 21, 2021, and is expected to be complete by Aug. 31, 2025. Principal investigator is Courtney Hofman. Co-principal investigators are Torben Rick (Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History) and Alexis Mychajliw (Middlebury College).
Just so you know. the National Science Foundation did not fund our beaver research. Even though I’m pretty sure sea mink never saved water or fought wildfires or improved biodiversity. Go figure. But that’s saltwater under the bridge now. Good luck on your shifting baselines research. Oh and by the way, I know what past generations of fur bearers would tell us about our current fur bearer population.
“Stop trapping”
There was one question from Leila’s beaver interview yesterday that I didn’t post. It was the “How smart are beavers?” trope. I thought that was a bigger conversation and wasn’t ready to get into it yesterday. Today there is a new article in The scientist about how creative they are. So I guess we’ll make time.
Opinion: Biodiversity Loss Worsened by Extinguishing Animal Innovators
To some people—road engineers, for instance—beavers and their dams may seem like the ultimate foe of human progress. But to the scientists who study them, beavers exemplify animal creativity. In a recent study on methods for rewilding freshwater wetlands, researchers found that the reintroduction of beavers as ecosystem engineers often creates unique habitats that benefit biodiversity at numerous spatial scales. Importantly, beavers actively creating and maintaining their ponds also produces aquatic habitats superior to those that are human-made. In other words, by exercising their unequaled creativity, beavers benefit not only themselves, but myriad other species, large and small, that share their ecosystems in ways humans simply cannot accomplish.
Allow me to be the first to say that beavers are wonderful and perfect and I love them very much. Beavers are better than otters and better than border collies and they are excellent at what they do.
But they are not creative. They are not smart.
The beaver, at once a potential solution to biodiversity loss and a troublesome force acting against the goals of human development, illuminates our conflicted relationship with the approximately 2.1 million other animal species who share our planet. If we understand that nonhuman animals—and not only beavers—also have inherently valuable skills, unique to individuals and to species, might we widen our tunnel vision to see them as collaborators and guides in conserving their habitats and biodiversity?
Remember that once upon a time I was an actual psychologist who administered actual intelligence tests and routinely commented on the capacity for things like set shifting and recall memory. Even though I have long since melted down all my Stanford Binets and Weschler’s into Beaver belt buckles It is fair to say I still know something about intelligence.
Intelligence is about shortcuts. Saving time. Accomplishing the same thing with less work. Facing problems with new solutions. Creativity is about trying new things in new ways and creating solutions no one ever considered before.
Beavers never look at a stream and think, “Wait just this once I’ll try building my dam on the bank”. Beavers never invent tools for building dams faster. They also never realize “All this building is kind of pointless, its just going to wash out anyway and I’ll just have to do it again.”
Beavers are BETTER than smart or creative. Yes. I’ve said it. Creativity and intelligence are only useful when the problems keep changing or have new challenges or you are super busy and have to fix it in a very short amount of time before you move on to the next problem.
Beavers don’t have anywhere to be and water has been flowing pretty much the same way since the big bang. They don’t need any new skills. There completely prepared for their environmental challenges. Because they are not burdened by being ‘smart’ they never look at their last years work and think “I GIVE UP!” They just keep trying. Sometimes they decide to try somewhere else.
Growing interest within the humanities and sciences in how the creative impulse works across many domains, not only in the arts, has fostered a reluctance to limit creative license to only a few special human individuals. The idea that creativity may be a common thread that runs throughout human activity has become accepted throughout the academy just as ideas about animal creativity are gaining traction in the biological sciences. Appreciating beavers for their contributions to biodiversity is not a hard sell among many biologists. But being open to the possibility that creativity exists across species requires open minds, a willingness to see behaviors in a new way, and a comfort with complexity. These qualities, the same ones often associated with creative behaviors, will assist humans in understanding that the creative agency of animals is a foundation of biodiversity. The world loses their genomes when species disappear, but what also disappears are creative pathways to saving ecosystems and habitats for all on this planet.
You saw it first hand in your own life I’m sure. You went to high school with off the chart smart or creative people that never amounted to much. I’m here to tell you the secret your guidance counselor never shared. And it’s a secret beavers taught me. Being persistent is more important being smart or being an innovator or being the best. Keeping at something is more important than having talent at it.
They say writing a novel is about 10% Inspiration and 90% perspiration. Beavers don’t write novels. And I’m not even sure they perspire.
They work.
This is coming out just in time to put under the tree. I can think of several,bright shining faces that will be eager to see it. An excellent interview with the author ran at the end of September but there were always too many good climate stories to make space. Luckily it waited for us and will be for sale on the book shelves soon.
Give a Dam: PW Talks with Leila Philip
How are beavers tied up in America’s past?
They’re an extraordinary lens into our history. Explorers came here to look for beaver fur, and the American empire began with the conversion of natural resources, starting with their fur. We almost wiped them out. But through luck, the beavers’ natural resilience, and then some really good environmental policy, they were restored to their landscape.
Did that restoration have ecological benefits?
Yes. In the early 20th century, they were brought back to Connecticut, and beavers began to show us the extent to which they could repair extremely damaged river systems. When we took the beavers out of the landscape, the wetland systems began to dry and degrade. Many of the environmental problems we face today have to do with water, with river systems that are so degraded that even when it rains, the water rushes right out into the ocean instead of seeping back into the ground, hydrating everything it needs to hydrate or filling the aquifer.
There is just about nothing I like better that watching people who never ever expected to be having a conversation about beavers find themselves having a conversation about beavers. Isn’t it fun?
You write in the book that beavers make you hopeful. Why?
They’re extraordinary problem-solvers. When they have a hole in a dam, they just repair it with whatever they have to hand—a rock, a stone, some fiber-optic cable. They’ll just stuff that in. Mike Callahan, who heads up the Beaver Institute, sent me a picture of a beaver dam built around a pickup truck, which I thought was one of the best examples of our moment. I lie awake at night, worrying about the environment and the future, and I think beavers are just an extraordinary story of hopefulness. Because this is nature’s resiliency, doing what it can do, if we either leave it alone or give it the opportunity. We are in a moment where I think we need to adapt. And beavers are incredible adapters.
Theoretically the Martinez beavers will be in that book. But who knows, life is full of surprises and lots may end up edited away. But right before it went to press Leila said she was having trouble finding a great beaver silhouette and asked to use one of ours. They were made for us using Chery’s photos of our actual beavers so who knows? They might LITERALLY be in the book.
We’ll just have to buy it and see for ourselves.