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

Month: July 2023


Oh okay, beaver news is making waves finally in California and Oregon and New Mexico and Illinois. But Ohio? OHIO? In Farm and Dairy no less!

 

They were also able to witness the release of a 1-year-old male beaver who had been cared for by Fran and Ron Kitchen, of Operation Orphan Wildlife Rehabilitation, Inc., located at their home in Akron.

The beaver was a bit intimidated by the crowd of young people, so he hung around the person he knew on shore. When the students began boarding the buses, he finally ventured into the marsh and began swimming around.

He climbed onto a tree stump that had been covered with dirt and mud by another beaver. “When he sniffed it, his tail slammed down with a very loud whack,” Fran said. “Then he jumped off and swam away.”

It’s kind of amusing to picture the throng of 7th graders and reporters just standing there expectantly waiting for the sleepy recently recovered beaver to save the wetlands. “Go on now, do something keystoney”!

And that’s a good sign for Killbuck Marsh — or anywhere else that beavers can survive and thrive. Beavers are considered a keystone species; without them, wetland environments and populations of other species collapse.

“Beavers are the greatest wetland engineers we have,” said Dennis Solon, manager of the wildlife area. “They’re the only other species besides us that can change the environment.”

That ability to engineer wetlands is why Native Americans referred to them as “little people” and respected them as totem animals. It’s estimated that there were as many as 400 million beavers in North America when the first Europeans arrived

You so know what state you’re in right? I mean you didn’t just hit your head and accidentally think you were in Washington?

Since America’s land had been developed — including for agriculture — in the beaver’s absence, the country’s largest rodents weren’t always welcome when they moved back in. But limits were put on beaver trapping in 1961, and beavers are now protected in many places, like the nearly 6,000 acres of Killbuck Marsh.

When Solon began working there in 1980, beavers were just starting to move in. Since the Division of Wildlife bought the property, the beavers were now protected. And they wouldn’t be labeled a nuisance for doing what they did: Building dams that sometimes flooded as many as 30 acres at a time.

“For them it was like the Garden of Eden,” he said.

Beavers build dams to create safe places for their lodges, as well as plentiful food sources. Because there were already some deep marshes along Killbuck Creek, they only had to build low dams to flood large areas. Pretty soon there was almost no area of the marshes that hadn’t been influenced by beavers, Solon said.

In the process, the beavers made a variety of habitats for other species. Cutting trees creates niche habitats for species ranging from honeybees to foraging animals. It opens up the forest canopy, allowing plants, grasses and saplings to grow. It also soaks their ponds with sunlight, making water plants, invertebrates and insects multiply.

Thankfully, the beavers’ lowland habitat was not badly damaged by the derecho. That event, which Solon calls “tragic,” knocked down the trees in the 2.000-acre upland forest, some of which were 100 or 150 years old. The destruction was so complete that neither humans nor animals could get through the debris, which is still being cleared a year later.

Before today I had always thought of Ohio as a  tough spot to be a beaver. I figured there would be armies of farmers on every street corner ready to shoot any intruder on their land. But maybe I was wrong.

But there is something called the 100-year cycle that has affected Killbuck’s beaver populations. Although they also eat leaves, water lilies and other plants, beavers mainly feed on the cambium of trees, the layer between the bark and the trunk that creates new growth. When beavers flood an area, the trees eventually die and the beavers lose their most important food source.

Solon said many of Killbuck’s beavers have moved on, so he and his coworkers were happy to receive the one the Kitchens rehabilitated. As a baby, the beaver was apparently washed out by floodwaters in the Springfield Lake area. The people who found him couldn’t find the lodge or his parents.

Well you should be happy to get a beaver back. But honestly he needs a buddy or two.

The wetlands that beavers create help turtles, salamanders, frogs and other aquatic species and make great fish nurseries, away from the fast-running water. Waterfowl sometimes walk where fish are spawning, get eggs on their feet and carry them to new sites, she said.

Even when the beavers move on, the environments they’ve engineered continue to benefit other species. When dams break, the sediment creates grassy meadows. Other species are known to use abandoned beaver lodges, including river otters.

Kitchen said Springfield Lake is busy with boats and people and would not have been an ideal place to release the rehabbed beaver. She and her husband were happy the Killbuck management accepted the new resident.

“Dennis said he’d welcome any beavers that we have in the future,” she said. “That’s nice to know.”

Well that’s a match made in heaven, but honestly the fact that you occasionally find yourself with beaver orphans means that not everyone in Ohio feels the same way about the rodents.


Beaver narrowly escapes jaws of hungry wolf hunting it, ‘amazingly lucky’ video shows

A beaver in far northern Minnesota came within inches of a hungry wolf on the hunt, video shows. But researchers are calling the footage “amazingly lucky” for another reason. In the trail camera video, shared July 12 by the Voyageurs Wolf Project, a wolf is seen running along the lip of a pond, closing in on a beaver that seems, at least initially, unsure of what to do or where to go. At the last possible moment, the beaver flees down its dam, narrowly avoiding the wolf’s jaws, then escapes by jumping into a frigid pond, video shows.

 

Another exciting episode of what I would call more ‘Wolf porn’. But that;s just me.

This has been the talk of the town for a few days, what looks to be a narrow escape from a wolf by your average wile beaver:

Just remember that the dam structure this is filmed on and one that the wolves are running on was made and ,maintained by that beaver and his friends. Think about that.

I guess that’s what it feels like to be shot by the policeman  whose salary your tax dollars paid for.


Lots of news coverage yesterday about the Natural Resources Meeting about beavers wednesday, from the SF chronicle to Bay City News. CBS Bay area even re-ran the great clip about Rusty Cohn and his habit of photographing beavers in Napa. Funny thing is they all run the photo from the CDFW beaver page which is in fact OUR Martinez yearling taken in 2009 by Cheryl Reynolds. That seems right, don’t you think? Not a stitch of credit for what we did anywhere you look but our legacy is forever woven into the fabric which is as it should be.

If you missed the meeting you can rewatch it here:

Beyond California Sarah Koenigsberg posted this photo on facebook yesterday from Utah. I thought you needed to see it as much as me.


So yesterday’s meeting of the California Natural Resources agency was highly anticipated and very well received. It kicked off with a rousing historical introduction by Ben Goldfarb who came with his A game summary of what the state used to be like and what we lost when our beavers were taken from us. Then Kate summed up OAEC’s participation in the issue. Then Kenneth McDermit of the Tule Tribe talked about wanting beavers, then beaver friend Karen Pope gave a rousing speech from the forestry perspective, Valerie talked about the beaver restoration team and Chuck Bonham himself even showed up in person.

His notes were the most interesting to me.

My ears perked up when he started by alluding to the many changes the department had been through already and brought up the work of one swiss psychiatrist who wrote about our cycle of adjustments to change.

Just to be clear he was alluding to Kubler Ross and the five stages of grief, Which seeing his rueful expression I could literally belief he had been through about beavers:

DENIAL: Beavers are not native to California, Beavers don’t belong in the Sierras,or Martinez, or San Diego,

ANGER: A century of unlimited unreported depredation permits to every  county in the state. No assessment of the population or depredation impact on population.

DEPRESSION: Not bothering to follow science on the value of beavers to salmon or water storage, Not attending conferences where you might learn more, Not fighting USDA lawsuits and not changing policy.

BARGAINING: Allowing limited beaver relocation. Beavers may be of some value on the landscape but not here.

ACCEPTANCE: Beavers belong on the landscape and perform vital ecosystem services for us. We can coexist with them by wrapping trees and installing flow devices. We can do this, We should do this. We are doing this.

It all seemed to fit fairly well and I must admit that I was touched he would explain it in psychological terms just because I happened to be listening.


What are you doing for lunch today?

I know what you’re doing. This is your very last chance to sign up for the Natural Resources panel on beaver management in California.

California Natural Resources Agency Hosts Discussion on Beaver Management

Event Date and Time

WHAT: Secretary Speaker Series — Are You a Beaver Believer? The Evolving Story of California’s Beaver Management

WHEN: Wednesday, July 12 from noon to 1 p.m.

HOW: Register via Zoom.

WHO:

    1. California Natural Resources Agency Secretary Wade Crowfoot 

    2. Conservation journalist and author of Eager Ben Goldfarb 

    3. Occidental Arts and Ecology Center WATER Institute Director Kate Lundquist 

    4. Tule River Tribe Councilmember Kenneth McDarment 

    5. California Department of Fish and Wildlife Director Charlton H. Bonham 

    6. California Department of Fish and Wildlife Beaver Restoration Program Manager Valerie Cook 

    7. USDA Forest Service Research Ecologist Dr. Karen Pope

      With so many great speakers the hour will FLY by. Just remember that this is history in the making and you should be there at high noon..

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