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

Author: heidi08

Heidi is a child psychologist who became an accidental beaver advocate when a family of beavers moved into the creek near her home. Now she lectures about beavers nationwide and maintains the website martinezbeavers.org/wordpress which provides resources to make this work easier for others to do.

Don’t for one minute tell me that things are better for beavers. Because  some parts of this world are clinging to their ignorance as dearly as a drowning man clings to a sinking ship. Take Michigan for instance where they say they need to kill more beavers to protect trout.

Too many beavers harm Michigan’s trout streams, conservationists warn

LANSING, MI – Beavers are considered ecological architects, but certain conservationists are worried there can be too many in some areas of Michigan.

State wildlife and fisheries managers recently heard from multiple trout fishery advocates raising concerns about what they argue is an overabundance of beavers living in Michigan’s wilderness. The trouble is that trout species require cold, swiftly moving waters to thrive, but too many beaver dams in a stream may slow the water and raise its temperatures, driving the trout away.

Got that? The beaver dams are slowing the water and making it hotter. You know how they do. Driving the trout away. This according to the conservationists and fishermen in Michigan who unlike the fishermen in 47 other states think that that beaver dams make water HOTTER.

Michigan doesn’t believe about hyporheic exchange.

 

Interest in hunting has waned in recent years, but the number of fur trappers plummeted. It means animals like beaver have largely flourished in Northern Lower Michigan, where there are no wolves – their primary predator – to keep them in check.

Now officials at the Michigan Department of Natural Resources are being asked to change regulations to make it easier for trout conservationists to trap beaver in the places where the large rodents proliferated so successfully that they’ve negatively impacted trout streams.

More killing! That’s what Michigan needs for its streams! Make it easier to trap!

State officials in recent years updated internal beaver policies, one for agencies like road commissions, and a second for when beaver abundance runs loggerheads with trout habitat.

Beavers can now more easily be killed because of nuisance problems, but greater scrutiny for issues in trout streams to be addressed, said angling advocate Bryan Burroughs, executive director of nonprofit Michigan Trout Unlimited.

It makes dealing with the problem even more challenging, he said, especially since recreational trapping diminished from past decades and beaver-made dams have been stacking up on Up North rivers.

As examples, advocates recently explained to the Michigan Natural Resources Commission that as many as 16 beaver dams built up over the years in a single four-mile stretch of the Upper main branch of the Black River in Cheboygan County. Nine were counted in a one mile stretch of the North Branch of the Manistee River in Kalkaska County.

Good lord! 13 beaver dams in a row! Wow you better hurry. If you don’t do something fast you’ll have a lower fire risk and cleaner water in addition to more trout! Thank god you worried about this in time!.

I am in love with this letter to the editor, and before you ask, no. I swear that I didn’t write it. It is from Tillamook Oregon.

Letter: Stop destroying Clear Lake beaver dam

My wife and I own a residence at 488 South Anchor St., Rockaway Beach, where we have been part time residents for over 20 years, improving the property, participating in the community and enjoying the setting.

Our yard backs onto Clear Lake, a beautiful pond of several acres, the center piece of a large wetland, that drains directly into the ocean. The pond is home to large large numbers of birds, small fish, mammals, including beavers. The latter have had dams for a number of years, which maintain the pond level.

Several times, the city has torn down the dams, leaving only slightly Mudflats and destroying the habitat so central to thls wetlands ecology. I have complained, only to be told that some people do not like mosquitoes. There are none, of course, because the swallows, bats and fish control the insects.

You see of course why I am in love with this letter? I am especially fond of the argument that there are no mosquitoes because the thriving bird and bat population eat them. That is a rare counter argument that rarely gets raised.

The author is very skilled. Maybe we know him or her?

This year I called the city manager to compliment the city for allowing the DAM to exist. It had meant some species of birds had appeared who had disappeared over the last few years, including Osprey and wood ducks. I returned yesterday to find the dam destroyed, the pond gone and only ugly mud flats and puddles left.

I am appalled. The beauty is gone. An invaluable community asset is destroyed. Moreover, my wife and I feel financially damaged, as we have just spent $25,000 for a new roof, on a home now significantly devalued.

I invite you to come and see for yourself. I will send separately photos from last week and yesterday. Please feel free to call me to discuss this.

Art Lafrance

Rockaway Beach

Thank you Art LaFrance.  I consider myself somewhat of a connoisseur of letters to the editor about beaver dams as I have written and read them over and over again for a mere 17 years.

And yours is the best. The apex of letters. The gold standard.

The only thing it lacks is children. Say if every third month you had first graders wearing felt beaver tails from Miss Tillie’s class over for a field trip to count the species they can find or maybe draw them in crayon for a new urban wildlife children’s book the school is working on,

Come to think of it, invite the mayor and city manager and the local news that day. That w0uld have been better. See if you can’t add that next time.

Otherwise, great work, Art.


Sometimes if you are very lucky and eat your vegetables you get exactly what you want. This week I was emailed by a kindly gentleman whose home abuts the segment of Walnut Creek where beavers moved in. It turns out there is no public access in the area and he loves being able to see the wildlife that shows up there. He even has a trail came set up.

Maybe the God’s felt sorry for me after you-know-what.

Remember how I was a little concerned by only seeing one adult beaver on the bank in that group of five? Well obviously there’s a pair in residence.

Check out this video. The first seconds show one adult beaver waiting in line behind another adult beaver.

And this that shows a adult leading the way for this youngster.

So remember next time you’re stuck in traffic on 680 or making an illegal right turn at a red light  on Monument Blvd, there are beavers in our midst.

Everywhere.

 

 

 


‘Exceptionally Rare’ Footage: Wolf Hunts Beaver on Trail Cam

A trail camera caught “exceptionally rare” footage of a wolf hunting a beaver in the greater Voyageurs National Park area of northern Minnesota. The Voyageurs Wolf Project operates trail cameras in this area and frequently shares interesting footage of wolves and other animals native to Voyageurs. In this case, a wolf stalked and killed a beaver—a scene the nonprofit says has only ever been captured on camera “a handful of times ever.”

Another beaver snack at Voyagers. This one is described as “Exceptionally rare” which I find hard to believe. Beavers are eaten by wolves so much at voyageurs that it’s a meme. Around here it’s a punnchline. And if wolves held potluck dinners all the wolf-wives would show up with the same thing. (I guess since it’s Minnesota they would be covered in Tater-tots)

Apparently they say  that THIS is rare because it was entire caught on film.

Love the helpful sign explaining that the animal with a big tail in the wolf’s mouth ks a beaver.

Did we think it was an otter?

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