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

Category: Beavers and Fire Prevention


This report ran on Colorado NPR just after my birthday but last night it was played again to a national audience on All things Considered. I’m especially happy because the reporter swapped out the negative Joe Wheaton soundbyte for a more informative one, leaving a better overall message. Good work, Emily.

MICHEL MARTIN, HOST:

Last year Colorado saw the two largest wildfires in it’s history, destroying hundreds of homes and 600 square miles of forest. Largely unbothered, though, are beavers, whose wet habitats offer refuge. It can take decades for landscapes burned by wildfires to recover. Colorado had its two largest fires ever last year. Those fires left more than 600 square miles of ashy soil and charred trees. But there are spots that were largely spared thanks to one animal. Alex Hager from member station KUNC has this report on what researchers are learning about fire resistance from beavers.

Nice. So here’s the mundane reason why this matters. If you’re a plucky new affiliate reporter that gets your story to run on NATIONAL All things considered you think, HEY, that was cool. Maybe beavers are hot news. Maybe I should report on them again so my mom hears my name on the radio.

Lets hope it catches on.

Another beaver made a famed appearance in Detroit last night, I thought you’d find it amusing.

Beaver goes for a stroll along Detroit’s RiverWalk

The Detroit RiverWalk’s swoon-worthy views are open to all — beavers included. 

A popular destination for families, friends and couples wanting to go on a relaxing walk, the RiverWalk was graced with a special guest Friday.  The beaver, spotted in the Cullen Plaza area, is part of a family that lives in a nearby state park, according to Marc Pasco, director of communications for the Detroit Riverfront Conservancy.

“(It) has been spotted before in and around the state park,” Pasco said in a message. “That’s where he/she lives. There was no reason to involve the DNR or animal control. He/she was just going about her business and heading home.”

Come to think of it I’ve never seen a beaver carousel. I’ve seen horses and tigers and even an colorful ostrich but none of the decorative mounts are ever made to look like a beaver. Fix that okay?


There are a few different ways to try to save beavers. Dam by dam at the local level, which we have in Martinez. County by county like we have by reviewing the depredation permits and shaming the offenders.. State by state like we did the summit.

Or larger scale still, like trying to keep beavers in National Forests all across the country.

A Guide to Advocating for Beaver Restoration in National Forest Plans

A Guide to Advocating for Beaver Restoration in National Forest Plans offers guidance for public engagement in the national forest planning process to ensure that newly revised plans include affirmative and proactive language around beavers and beaver habitat restoration.

National forest plans set the overall management direction for a given forest and provide guidance for the design and execution of specific management actions. As the pace, scale, and magnitude of climate change has become increasingly evident, there is an urgent need for these plans to explicitly address the impacts and implications of a rapidly changing climate, and offer solutions to build resilience and ecological integrity.

WOW! Describing this as a ambitious undertaking undercuts it. This is an lofty mic drop of a move by our friends at the National Wildlife Federation. The main report is 21 pages long and the appendix contains specific resources like how to structure comments about including beavers in National forests.It comes out of Montana and credits these authors mainly

Contributors: Sarah Bates (National Wildlife Federation), Taylor Simpson and Taylor Heggen (University of
Montana Alexander Blewitt III College of Law), and Lowell Chandler (University of Montana W.A. Franke College of Forestry & Conservation)

Citing forest service policy and specific language about climate change it is meant to be a useful tool in beaver advocacy. It talks about forest policy and how to best engage the public, Go Download the whole fascinating report by clicking here:

Thanks Montana! Now if you need good beaver news from another state check out this guide from Hermit’s Peak Watershed Alliance in New Mexico. We are building up our tool kit, one beaver at  a time.


A couple of weeks ago Emily Fairfax posted some photos on FB showing her trip to Colorado and saying she had shown a reporter from NPR around the sight of the largest fire which happened to have some amazing beaver habitat that survived. You’ll remember I shared her google map of the visit which is very cool and if you haven’t seen it you still should.

Well that story dropped this morning on the local KUNC station and its definitely worth a listen. After which I am sure you will join me in a hearty chorus of “Go Emily!” as we raise our glasses and click our coffee mugs together.

Enjoy!

Even Colorado’s Largest Wildfire Was No Match For Beavers

Deep in the Cameron Peak burn scar, nestled among charred hills, there’s an oasis of green — an idyllic patch of trickling streams that wind through a lush grass field. Apart from a few scorched branches on the periphery, it’s hard to tell that this particular spot was in the middle of Colorado’s largest-ever wildfire just a year ago.

his wetland was spared thanks to the work of beavers.

The mammals, quite famously, dam up streams to make ponds and a sprawling network of channels. Beavers are clumsy on land, but talented swimmers; so the web of pools and canals lets them find safety anywhere within the meadow.

On a recent visit to that patch of preserved land in Poudre Canyon, ecohydrologist Emily Fairfax emphasized the size of the beavers’ canal network.

“Oh my gosh, I can’t even count them,” she said. “It’s a lot. There’s at least 10 ponds up here that are large enough to see in satellite images. And then between all those ponds is just an absolute spiderweb of canals, many of which are too small for me to see until I’m here on the ground.”

 

Do see the charred brush there? The fire burned right to the waters edge. Everything went in flames. Except what the beaver had made and flooded and maintained. Maybe their lodge even burned. But no matter, they dumped the seared logs and made it anew.

Fairfax researches how beavers re-shape the landscapes where they live. Across the West, she’s seen beaver-created wetlands survive wildfires.

“When you’re at this beaver complex,” she said, “it never stops being green. Everything else in the landscape – the hill slopes on either side, they both charred. They lost all their vegetation during this fire. But this spot, it did not. These plants were here last year and they’re still here today.”

The Cameron Peak Fire left some hints that it had burned nearby, like these blackened branches poking out of an otherwise verdant meadow.

Fairfax stands in the middle of a vibrant meadow, with golden-green grass up to her knees. She points to a row of trees about 100 feet away, where the trunks have clearly been singed, but brown needles still cling to branches – a sign of “moderately intense” burning. Just another 100 feet past that, another row of trees has been scorched completely black and free of needles – a telltale indicator of “high intensity” burning.

Isn’t it amazing to think that Emily was inspired to change direction in her own life and leave engineering to go study beavers after she watched Jari Osbourne’s awesome documentary? Who knows who is right now getting inspired by Emily’s work and going to make the next transformation?

“The beaver complex and the beaver wetland is so much more than the dam,” Fairfax said. “It’s the channels, it’s the digging, it’s the chewing, it’s the constantly changing the landscape, the dynamics, the flexibility.”

Beavers have millions of years of practice repairing dams and shaping rivers, and that makes them capable water managers.

Fairfax did see a beaver complex serve as a fire break one time in Colorado, but she said it’ll take far more research before we can figure out how effective they are when it comes to slowing down wildfires on a large scale. But for now, these areas are surviving as oases of green in big fires all across the West.

I will say Joe Wheaton sounds like a little bit of a killjoy in the quote alex chose to use from him. Lots of little bits of water add up. And he knows that better than anyone.

 


Looks like Dr, Emily Fairfax had a wonderful summer vacation. She just posted this:

The 2020 Cameron Peak Fire was Colorado’s biggest fire. And yet, a bunch of the beaver complexes in it didn’t burn. This past week I went & saw one of the untouched beaver wetlands surrounded by burned trees & hills in person. You can see it (in 360 view) too! Click the link below to view an interactive 360 photo in Google Maps.

Click on the photo to explore a truly wonderful beaver pond. If you honestly aren’t curious to see for yourself there is little hope I can persuade you. Just do it.

CLICK TO VIEW

 


They say “old ways are the best ways” and maybe they’re right, This article is a lot to digest, but it sure makes sense to me.

Forests and watersheds: status quo not going to cut it anymore

The increasingly dire situation on the Chemainus River is also being seen on the neighbouring Koksilah and Cowichan Rivers and most other rivers on Vancouver Island, for that matter. While most are quick to attribute water scarcity solely to drought from climate change, Erik Piikkila of Ladysmith takes it a step farther from his experience to cite several other factors.

He refers to five prongs that must be properly addressed for the betterment of the environment and the ecosystems that contribute to such things as water flow on rivers. These include: ecosystem based management forestry, forest thinning (with multiple objectives), restoring fire in forests, restoring damaged ecosystems, and local governance of forest resources with regional districts and local governments engaging with small private landowners who have ecosystems such as the Coastal Douglas fir ecosystem.

“We have to look after all these factors and act on them immediately,” Piikkila said. “I don’t think we can keep logging old growth anymore. We need to change how our forests are managed and we need to start thinning these forests in a coordinated and massive way across the province.”

He recommends selective logging, of all forests and points out that when old growth trees are  allowed to remain they are like upright rivers retaining moisture on the landscape.

“It’s the trees up on the hillsides. The tree itself is like a vertical river, you’ve got moss, lichen and tree needles in the forest canopy. Old growth forest slows water down. Old growth Douglas-fir trees with 60 million needles slows down water, and rain and snow and allows the precipitation to drip slowly to the ground. On the ground, thick moss mats and logs on the ground act like dams, and once water reaches creeks and streams logs that have fallen in from riparian forests also dam water. All of these natural forest structures and species slow water down.”

“We need to stop clear-cutting,” Piikkila added. “We need to go to a selective logging system where we select more trees and patches of trees and logs to be retained during logging operations and left as biological legacies in the next and future forest. You need to have intact forest cover which shades and cools the soil, allowing moisture to stay in the soil, and creating the shady, cool and moist conditions moss, lichen and fungi require.

“Having moisture available in the ecosystem well into summer could counteract summer droughts like those we have experienced in the past decade and will experience as summer droughts intensify under climate change over the next century. Wetter soils may equal survival for trees like red cedar, grand fir and alder that are dying out from lack of summer moisture. Forests and, in particular old growth forests, capture moisture and release it slowly throughout the year, making sure there’s a water supply and good cold water for salmon.”

Something about this seems smart to me. Maybe because it seems like every forest in California is on fire at the moment, but maybe its the idea of old growth representing “Upright rivers”. That really appeals.

The importance of older forest structures is demonstrated by “rainfall washing over large, decaying downed 100-year-old and older logs covered by moss and lichen, inputs 49 pounds/acre/year of nitrogen into the soil. By harvesting old growth and middle age second growth forests, we are converting all of our older forests into young forests (0-60 years old) which is like a stock market crash where our older and long term forest portfolio is drastically reduced in size and amount.”

True.

Types of restoration include: planting riparian trees and plants such as broadleaf trees like alder, maple and cottonwood which provide leaf fall into streams that are eaten by small aquatic species and then become food for salmon, and placing logs in streams to create salmon habitat, restoring wetlands or building new wetlands, especially in urban areas. “Instead of hard infrastructure assets like storm drains and levees and pumping stations like in Duncan, bring back fire onto the landscape, bring back beavers to dam waters which provides a steady supply of water in periods of low water in late summer and early fall, and removing dams like Elwha Dam in Washington State which allows natural flows of water, natural flooding and deposition of silts and gravels creating salmon spawning habitat,” Piikkila noted.

Anything this smart was going to mention beavers sooner or later. You knew that right? Now I agree with him even more!

People might wonder about the implications of restoring fire as one of the factors. New research out of California on Aug. 6 reinforced the relation between fire, water and biodiversity, Piikkila said.

“They found that letting some prescribed fires burn more freely increased soil moisture, a 30 per cent increase in summer soil moisture, drought induced tree mortality decreased and increased biodiversity (pyrodiversity). When charred by fire, logs not completely burned and wetted by winter rains become super nutrient and water sponges.”

Not fires like we have now. Not EVERYTHING at once fires. But small controlled burns.

“Natural ecosystems like forests and the ecological goods and services that they produce for free such as clean air and water and store carbon, are going to be one of our cheapest options in fighting climate change. We just have to let and help them, to help provide for and protect us.

Go read the entire article. It is well worth your time. Our forests need wisdom.

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