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

Month: July 2023


Let’s say you lived in a family of all female siblings and your eldest sister was a highly successful model for vogue and came in second at the Olympic ski trials. And then one day you saw her sitting in front of the mirror sobbing because she was so “unattractive no one would ever love her”.

I suppose in those circumstances you might be forgiven for a response that is less than sympathetic.

Which I offer by way of a response to this article which complains:

“But environmental groups say policy makers in Oregon and Washington — where beavers continue to be managed as furbearers, nuisance animals and even predators — have been slow to respond.”

I guess it makes sense that the state who is the best about beaver management  in the entire country would also be the state with the least patience for poor or slightly unideal beaver management, but still this article in The Columbian made me snicker ruefully, and mutter over and over again: “tell me about it…”

Why are we still mismanaging beavers in the Northwest?

Recognition that American beavers are a vital and often missing component of riverine habitats is growing nationwide, especially in the Pacific Northwest.

Nearly wiped out across the West a century ago, beavers have spent recent decades regarded as a nuisance animal.

Now, their reputation as a keystone species is slowly taking hold.

The dams they create, for free, offer many of the same benefits as costly rehabilitation projects. Their work has been shown to expand floodplains and wetlands, recharge groundwater, provide higher summer flows, improve water quality, create healthy habitat for salmon and encourage a greater diversity of plants and animals.

The natural water storage they create slows the runoff process, keeps freshwater habitat cooler later into the summer and helps counter the impacts of drought.

And as wildfires become larger and more intense with climate change, beaver ponds have been shown to provide firebreaks and offer refuge for aquatic and land animals.

But environmental groups say policy makers in Oregon and Washington — where beavers continue to be managed as furbearers, nuisance animals and even predators — have been slow to respond.

Oregon—the Beaver State—allows unlimited killing of beavers, and has no mechanisms in place to track how many are taken each year. State agencies have no authority to manage them on private land, and do not know how many beavers there are or where they’re causing problems.

Unlimited killing of beavers? You mean like all those depredation permits that California issues every year that are literally for an UNLIMITED number of beavers? Maybe I’ve been out in the elements for too long to be shocked by these claims, but honestly, show me the state that has a cap on the number of beavers that need to be preserved for a healthy watershed or literally even knows a ball park population number about the amount of beavers they actually have?

In Oregon and Washington, proposals to provide beavers with greater protections are gaining ground.

Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife managers say that making the state’s relocation program permanent could begin as soon as this year. They also point to an opportunity to add beavers as a “species of greater conservation need” in the agency’s statewide wildlife action plan.

In the Oregon Legislature this session, a bill to remove the “predator” status of beavers passed. Beaver supporters say provisions in the bill are small but important measures that can help prevent the indiscriminate killing of beavers and help landowners learn to live with North America’s largest rodent.

Oregon Rep. Pam Marsh, D-Ashland, — the bill’s primary sponsor and chair of the House Committee on Climate, Energy and Environment — says it’s going to take time for beavers in Oregon to be seen as friends instead of foes.

Her bill, she says, is the first step.

Removing its “predator” status will move management of beavers from the Oregon Department of Agriculture to the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife, where they can be overseen as wildlife instead of agricultural pests.

Landowners could still kill them on their own property, but most people would need a permit to do so.

After introducing the bill — and before the walkout — Marsh worked with Republicans in her committee and agreed to amended language to gain more support. Under the amended bill, landowners with beavers causing damage that imminently threatens infrastructure or agricultural crops could bypass the permit, and owners of small forestland are exempt.

But everyone would have to report the beavers they kill to the state, giving ODFW an opportunity to estimate out how many beavers are in the state, understand where and how they’re causing problems and provide landowners with options other than killing them.

Honestly, I don’t think we need “protections for beavers”. We need “INCENTIVES FOR LANDOWNERS”. Environmental tax credits for keeping beavers on your property. Funding for installing a flow device. Groups that can help you wrap trees. A live beaver is more valuable than a dead one.

Marsh believes public support for beavers in Oregon is growing.

“We just heard increasing voices across the state for stepping up for beavers,” says Marsh. “We’re seeing beaver-affinity groups, and increasingly seeing landowners who are raving about the results” of allowing beavers to reclaim portions of their property.

Marsh admits beavers can quickly damage property if they’re not properly directed.

“When you know how to work with them, there’s a tremendous capacity to store water and to keep people safe during wildfires,” she says.

And when she evacuated her land in 2020 when the Riverside Fire ranged five miles away, she went to her beaver pond to take a picture of her farm that was threatened by wildfire. She said trees were breaking on her property from the 70 mph winds, and the sky was orange from the nearby blaze.

“In the beaver ponds, it was as if somebody put a glass dome over the ponds,” she said. “It was 10 degrees colder, and it was still. There was no wind. The trees were barely registering, and in that moment, I realized that there’s a lot more happening in these beaver ponds, especially during wildfires, than we’ve even begun to investigate.”

Lovell says the livestock they left behind in the haste of evacuation found refuge there. And the wildland firefighters who used the farm as the entryway to fight the fire identified the ponds as a backup water supply.

“That’s the climate resilience that we really didn’t see and anticipate,” she said.

That is the very best paragraph I’ve ever read about beaver benefits. And I’ve read a lot of them. That should be repeated over and over again until it becomes our national anthem.

The smart article goes on to talk about how farmers are afraid of the restrictions to their land and how beavers can cause problems. Then there’s a a great segment with Jakob Shockey about  how beaver problems can be solved.

Jakob Shockey has spent years educating landowners across Oregon about how to coexist with beavers.

Shockey is executive director of the Jacksonville, Ore.-based nonprofit Project Beaver (formerly The Beaver Coalition) and owner of the wildlife control business Beaver State Wildlife Solutions.

“I’ve managed to make a full-time job out of helping the monkeys outsmart the rodents,” Shockey told the House Committee on Climate, Energy and Environment in March.

Shockey told the committee about tools he uses to help growers and other landowners benefit from beavers without the damage that comes with them.

He says pond levelers work like the drain in a bathtub that can be set at any level to prevent the flooding of crops; electric fences have been highly successful at keeping beavers away from orchards; and methods to cage off irrigation culverts prevent them from getting blocked.

“We can come up with some pretty crafty things. Most beaver conflicts you can find a solution for,” says Shockey.

Changing the “predatory” status of beavers would also remove language that labels them as agricultural pests, says Shockey.

“A lot of folks feel like, if they have a pest species on their land, in order to be good stewards of that land they have to get rid of that pest species,” he says, adding that the label sends a signal to landowners that isn’t helpful. “Most folks I end up working with didn’t have any idea that another solution was available.”

Shockey says that landowners who get caught in the endless treadmill of trapping beavers to get rid of them instead of finding a permanent solution to live with them end up impacting neighbors who would benefit from them, too.

“Beavers are territorial, and they mate for life. If you remove one, another family will move in, so you’re going to be depopulating the surrounding region of beavers,” he explains.

Shockey believes the top priority in beaver management should be helping people learn to live with them in the places they choose to repopulate.

“The fact that in the House they were able to work together and get bipartisan support [for HB 3464A], I was just tickled. It feels like the bill we’ve all been hoping for for the last decade.”

Shockey hopes the Oregon Senate can meet and vote on the bill before this year’s legislative session ends.

How much do you love this article? With all your heart or with your intestines too? I guess that’s what happens when the tide starts turning. The places that are already saturated with beaver wisdom start getting more and more soaked and even the dry places like California start to get a little bit smarter.

To Shockey, the public’s perception of beavers changes one landowner at a time. He says even though Oregon is still working to legally change the status of beavers, he thinks the Beaver State is well positioned to lead the Northern Hemisphere in developing a healthier relationship with nature’s greatest engineers.

With help from agencies and Washington organizations, Project Beaver developed a manual for best management practices to help people coexist with them, which people in Europe are looking to adopt, he says.

Once people stop fighting with beavers and start working with them, says Shockey, they’re sold.

Go read the whole beautiful article and send it to all the fence sitters in your life. Great writing K.C. Mehaffey. A few more like this and I could be out of work any day.


Last month Brock Dolman of the Occidental Arts and Ecology Project spoke to the the California Fish and Game Commission and offered public comment on the new depredation policy for beavers in the state. Both he and the advocate Jennifer Fearing described how enormously hopeful and positive they felt about the changes and one commissioner even praised Brock for his leadership on the matter.

“Brock, I want to thank you for your leadership on this. I remember our first conversation about eight years ago when I first got on the commission. It’s folks like you who have passion and are tireless and resilient on these issues that make things like this happen. So thank you for your efforts.”

—Eric Sklar, President of the California Fish & Game commission

It’s a high water mark for beavers, to be sure, but I still can’t help being impatient and doubtful that it will change much down until we see it unfold and get the numbers on paper. Jennifer Fearing said she was giddy about the change. Why aren’t I giddy? When I considered my grumpy hesitancy I thought again of this passage I wrote years ago.

One of my favorite scenes in Ken Burns National Parks Series “America’s Best Idea” comes around the fourth episode when John Muir finally got president Roosevelt to Yosemite. The president and his people went out to see the park for himself. It was a huge Huge victory for Muir, The culmination of many years work. And that night John and Theodore slipped away by themselves to camp under the redwoods.

Think about that. Getting the most powerful man in the world to sneak away with you for a night in the redwoods where you can show him the most beautiful thing you care so passionately about with zero distractions. Yosemite will be protected. You are getting everything you want.

And that night as they lay in their bed rolls, just the two of them, under the trees with the tiniest of stars peeping between the branches, John Muir said to the president of the united states:

“Are you still hunting? You should stop that. There isn’t enough big game anymore and it just destroys the population.”

Because that’s what advocates do. We push and push and push and never get everything we said we wanted and we keep pushing for more. And that’s what it takes.

Endless Pressure. Endlessly Applied.

Once upon when Martinez agreed to do the right thing I was capable of thinking we “Turned a corner” and “Won the battle”. What I learned was that there were an unlimited number of more corners to navigate and that the battles were endless. Beavers have merely earned the right to step into the arena. A space at the table if you will. Okay that’s a big deal. There’s still a lot more to do.

I liked Brock choice of quote here, David Orr:

“Hope is a verb with it’s sleeves rolled up”

Let’s get to work California. Beavers have been waiting for you to join them. Sign up for the webinar on Beaver Policy this wednesday at noon.

Catch WATER Institute’s Kate Lundquist at the next Secretary Speaker Series webinar, hosted by California’s Natural Resources Secretary Wade Crowfoot, on Wednesday, July 12th from 12 noon – 1 pm.

The topic, “Are You a Beaver Believer? The Evolving Story of California’s Beaver Management” will feature a candid discussion of where things stand with beavers in California and an inspiring glimpse of what’s possible when we reconnect beavers to our landscapes.

Zoom registrationhttps://ca-water-gov.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_KYAnlLA9Rg-GevAHBD4n1w
The event is public, live-streamed on YouTube, and recorded for later viewing.


This was so delightful to hear. I feel like the entire beaver festival is usually a play that I spend all year producing and never once get to attend. Well now at least I get to listen. Thanks Jeanne and Linksporation!

I sure hope you’re pressing play because listening to this episode is a treat. Jeanne says she recorded much more but the track didn’t work so she was very sorry to only get this snippet of the first aisle she walked up, I’m so happy she got this!

Go check out her show notes page here.


Yesterday I was contacted by an AP reporter asking about the NEW policy in California about beavers and what it would mean in Martinez. She had heard that I was one of the three people to talk to about this in the state, She asked if I was a beaver researcher or famous beaver scientist.

Ha.

I let her down gently in all things saying I was just a child psychologist who had moved into a house 8 blocks from where the beavers settled in town and I didn’t want them killed so I started learning about them and started Worth A Dam and things just unfolded from there.

I also told her that biggest change to the beaver policy is that CDFW formally acknowledges that beavers are native t0 the state and that they are good for the state. Also, I said that at some point down the road they will allow beaver relocation and that they would try and educate people about the fact that beavers did good things and that conflicts could sometimes be resolved.

I wish I could have told her that the NEW BEAVER POLICY in california meant that each of the six regions of CDFW would now install flow devices and teach people to wrap trees and that every county had to make sure to hold their own beaver festival every year e Martinez. Also I wish that CDFW would grant biodiversity credits to a city or landowner co existing with beaver and that if you wanted to kill beavers on your property you had to show the state first that you could build the wetlands yourself that they would have maintained. I wish the new policy was that cities with beavers near by paid less for fire insurance and that every kindergarten and community college in California had to know where there closest beaver dam was and and spend at least one afternoon a month drawing or telling stories about it.

A girl can dream can’t she? Did I miss anything do you think?

What I did love that she actually asked was whether the new rules meant that more cities in the state needed to MARTINEZ-IZE their beaver policy.

Well no, but that made me very happy indeed to consider.

 


I bet Skip Lisle has something to say about this.

Vermonters struggle with beaver-related property damage

JOHNSON, Vt. (WCAX) – Beavers are our neighbors across the region, but they aren’t always the best group to share property with.

Rob Maynard and Deb Ravenelle and their yellow labs have lived in Johnson for over 20 years. In that time, they’ve been sharing their property with a bundle of beavers. They say they love seeing the beavers, but the cute rodents don’t always make it easy when they build their dam on culverts.

“If they plug it up completely — which they will — it’ll wash over the top of the road and start to wash out the roads. So, when you’re here, it’s often a daily battle to keep the road clear,” said Maynard.

The couple says their driveway will flood every few years when the beavers move in. They have already set up shop this summer, so they have been clearing the culvert out every few days for a month.

So Skip would say that the devices installed by VFW fail at an alarming rate and its bad for people to  see their failure because then they think flow devices don’t work and that leads to more beavers being killed.

Maybe,

But stories like this mean a whole lot of people watching the news learn that maybe they CAN work. More than if just Skip was installing a better one somewhere else. Plus there are NEVER news stories that cover these installations not working. So maybe a handful of property owners and their friends think they don’t work, but many more people have heard of them. And that’s something.

I think it’s a  numbers game. And anyway, call me a cynic but I’d be THRILLED to the moon and back if California Department of Fish and Wildlife started installing flow devices – whether they worked or not.

It would probably be a major step in the right direction>

The Johnson duo know beavers are important but are thankful for a rodent reprieve on their property. “It’s often a daily battle to keep the color clean. So we’re happy for fish and wildlife to come up with a solution to keep the beavers here and keep our habitat,” said Maynard.

These devices still allow beavers to make dams while allowing water to flow freely. Vermont Fish & Wildlife says trapping should always be a last resort if no other solution is keeping beavers at bay.

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