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

Category: Beavers and Forests


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.


I know it’s hard to believe, but California isn’t the only flammable state. There’s plenty of attention to fires in other places too, Even other countries. Here’s some focused attention on the role beavers can play in fire prevention from Canada of all places.

Beavers may have untapped wildfire fighting skills

The small iconic Canadian mammal known known for chopping down trees may also have a decent set of natural firefighting skills.

By building dams and digging channels, beavers can change small streams into broad wetland areas, keeping plants lush even during a drought, according to a study published by American researchers last year who studied beaver dams and their impacts on wildfires in California, Colorado, Idaho, Oregon and Wyoming.

Green vegetation near beaver ponds is more difficult to burn than nearby dry vegetation and fire’s will often take the path of least resistance, burning through dry vegetation away from the beaver ponds, according to Emily Fairfax, an environmental professor at California State University Channels and lead author of the study.

Good work Emily! Her dissertation turned America’s head and is now marching into Canada. Will this be what changes the news about beavers? I’m not holding my breath, but I’m a cynical bastard, so let’s just be happy they are talking about it right now I guess,

It’s possible in parts of Canada, and in northeastern areas of B.C., beavers’ impact could have a similar effect in dryland ecosystems with relatively open vegetation cover, said Jean Thie, an Ottawa-based landscape ecologist.

In denser forested areas in B.C. the beavers would have little effect and in locations where they is already lush vegetation.

Hahahaha. The single most predictable thing about research.”That’s a very interesting finding, but it might not apply HERE because our forests are forest-y-er”. Very similar to the research showing that has show for 2 decade that beavers help salmon and the response from PEI and England saying “It  probably doesn’t apply to our fish which are salmon-y-er,” “More research needs to be done.”

There’s no evidence to suggest beavers in the Okanagan, or in Canada, have currently implemented any effective fire breaks with their beaver dams, but it could be possible in locations where beavers have built dams on small sloped creeks and created larger wetland zones, he said.

In B.C.’s northeast corner, east of the Rockies, he said there are a large number of dams that appear to have created more green vegetation in the area with a higher water level than normal. It also appears that a fire came short of the vegetation zone but would require more study as the moisture in the area could have played a role, he said.

“This is another beautiful example… These trees have more water because of beaver and wetlands too,” Thie said. “Definitely they would be helping to reduce the spread of fire in this area.”’

Are you following along? Yes it’s true that lush vegetation might catch fire less often. But all of Canada is Lush. I personally am lush. (Close enough). So beavers won’t make a difference here.

The sheer number of dams in an area would have a more beneficial impact in that landscape as well.

Ya think?

It’s nice to know they seriously considering this. We were just give this photo of the Minister of the Environment and hist staff reading through Dr. Fairfax’s research.

Three Wise Monkeys

 

 


Isn’t it nice when people STOP KILLING BEAVERS long enough to realize they do really useful stuff when they’re alive? This story mad it  onto YAHOO news this morning and even the local radio station. Good.

Greene’s taxpayers have an unlikely hero to thank: a local beaver

Do you suppose somebody makes a fireman’s helmet that will fit a semiaquatic rodent? Because as far as the Greene Fire Department is concerned, there’s a certain beaver along Bull Run Road that deserves a spot on the roster. 

The department’s fire pond was brought up to level recently, and town taxpayers were possibly saved thousands of dollars, when a beaver constructed a dam in just the right place at just the right time. 

Who needs a crew of engineers when you’ve got buck teeth and a long flat tail? 

“A couple years ago we had noticed the level in the fire pond on Bull Run Road was very low and actually got to the level where the hydrant was out of service,” Greene Fire Chief John Soucy explains. “We thought it was due to the drought and the water level never had a chance to recover. This past spring we had noticed that the spillway had eroded to the point that it would not allow the pond level to rise.” 

For years, the department had been using the pond to haul water to areas where there are no fire hydrants. The pond water is considered a crucial part of the department’s firefighting efforts in rural areas. So, with that in mind, fire officials glumly went about trying to deduce what they’d need to shore up that eroded spillway and to bring the pond up to snuff.  

Now wait just a dog gone minute. The town relied on this particular pond to keep their fire hydrants full and the that had needed repair for a couple of years? Ummm… I guess they’re not that worried about fires in Maine? Well I’m glad they got the help  they needed anyway.

By some estimates, repairs would have cost up to $4,000. But that was before the unnamed beaver, a member of a species best known for its dam building abilities, went to work for free.

“Recently we began to make plans to fix the problem,” Soucy said, “but noticed that the pond level had risen suddenly, and when we looked into it further we noticed that a beaver had built a dam at the spillway, raising the water level to the point where the hydrant is now in service. The beaver saved the town of Greene thousands of dollars in repairs to the fire pond.”

The hero beaver has yet to be spotted in action, yet there is evidence that his or her work continues in service to the fire department. 

“He is currently maintaining that dam,” Soucy said, “and the department’s plans to fix the spillway have been canceled.” 

Well sure beavers can do a hell of a lot more than that too, if we just let them. I wish every city that noticed beaver benefits made it into the news cycle.

Here’s their headline on yahoo news where the very same article will be read by millions:

Hot dam! Beaver saves the day in Greene

And here’s the report on the local radio station, complete with a groundhog photo:

You

Yes beavers do good things that benefit humans. You would think this was big news or something.


Time for another fun interview, this time from Emily Faifax at KCRW in Santa Monica. I knew the Doty story would get a bunch of eyes. With host Madeleine Brand.

Beavers to prevent wildfires? Conservationists are enlisting the help of these buck-toothed rodents

As California continues to grapple with a mega-drought and wildfires, we’re trying to do whatever we can to help our parched landscapes and abate that wildfire threat. But the process can be costly and time-consuming. 

A few weeks ago, the Sacramento Bee reported on a floodplain in Placer County. During California’s last big drought in 2014, ecologists wanted to restore the dry, barren grassland. It would’ve taken 10 years and cost as much as $2 million. But there was another option: beavers. 

Conservationists turned the buck-toothed, oversized rodents loose and got out of their way. And unlike every other contractor on the planet, they finished under budget and ahead of schedule.

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