I just found out that our yearly trip to the ocean is cancelled this year thanks to Covid. That is pretty rotten and you may have to deal with a little more snark than usual for a long while. In the mean time I will comfort myself with the fine internship program offered in Montana.
Interning in Conflict Resolution: How do we co-exist with our wildlife neighbors
Beavers were once widespread in North America, with it estimated that 6 million thrived in our waterways before being trapped to near extinction in the 1800s. Unfortunately, removing beavers also removed their beneficial ecological impact, which includes cooler streams, greater habitat complexity, and increased biodiversity.
The same behaviors, such as felling trees and flooding sections of streams, that have huge ecological benefits can also conflict with the goals of landowners by threatening public safety and livelihoods. Without effective means of addressing these conflicts, landowners may perceive beaver presence as a threat and choose to lethally trap beavers to prevent future damage, even in cases where no current damage is occurring.
I like how the good things beavers do is so closely knitted to a description of the problems they cause. One man’s ceiling is another man’s floor, so to speak.
To gain the benefits of beaver activities throughout our watersheds, the National Wildlife Federation and the Clark Fork Coalition have partnered to support a pilot project focused on resolving these conflicts. As a Conflict Resolution Intern with the National Wildlife Federation, I was able to support the newly hired Conflict Resolution Beaver Tech, Elissa Chott, in a pilot project to build more acceptance for these crucial ecosystem engineers by effectively resolving the conflicts between their activities and the values of landowners.
Our main activities involved contacting landowners who have current conflicts, learning about their challenges, and installing a variety of technical solutions to address the threats posed by beaver activity. These solutions included tree fencing, pond levelers, beaver deceivers, and a variety of beaver fencing to prevent the damming of culverts or other pinch points along waterways. These technical solutions generally fall into two categories; preventing the felling of trees or preventing flooding.
Oh I wish there were beaver interns all across the land. This is the kind of pilot project that should be picked up by every governor and fire department across the nation.
These simple tools use our knowledge of beaver behavior to deter their activities in specific places where those activities are undesirable. Beaver deceivers, for example, enclose a drainage source for flooded ponds such that beavers cannot feel nor hear the running water. Without this sensory stimulus of a leak, the pond can be drained to a tolerable height without the beavers responding with additional damming activity.
Techniques to prevent tree felling and flooding were implemented at a variety of highly visible public and private locations and coupled with informational materials to build understanding in our communities around the ways we can co-exist with beaver. Through this pilot project, it has been a privilege to not only put these techniques into action, but to demonstrate the potential benefits of this program as it continues to refine and expand this approach to human-wildlife conflict.
Great work Elissa! And all her helpers! Take of the beavers and the beavers will take care of you. Just in case that isn’t motivation enough, here is some footage from our new friend at Suisun Wildlife.
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One comment on “A STITCH IN TIME SAVES BEAVERS”
Sarah Bates
August 30, 2020 at 9:09 amThanks for sharing!