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

Category: Beavers and Forests


Just in time for the graphic I was working on yesterday, I didn’t know our buddy Ben Dittbrenner was working at NorthEastern. Good for him, and good for the lucky environmental students in his class. For now appreciate an awesome article from News@Northeastern by Khalida Sarwari

They’re cute. They’re furry. And they’re the unsung heroes of wildfire protection efforts.

From California to Washington, the West Coast is experiencing a fire season unlike any other on record. Since August, climate change-fueled wildfires have scorched more than five million acres across the three states, taking dozens of lives, destroying thousands of buildings, and making the air unbearable for millions of people.

Benjamin Dittbrenner, an associate teaching professor in the Marine and Environmental Sciences department at Northeastern, says wetlands and beavers are an important part of the fire protection puzzle. Beaver ponds and wetlands have been shown to filter out water pollution, sequester carbon, and attenuate floods. 

But perhaps a lesser-known fact about the tiny rodents is that they play a key role in creating fireproof shelters for plants and animals. And by building dams, forming ponds, and digging canals, these architects of the natural world irrigate stream corridors that help slow the spread of wildfire.

Ben! My goodness, looking all professor-y, Does that mean we have good beaver researchers on both coasts now? Gosh, I’m so old I can remember when he was working for public works and squeezed in with us at the lunch table so he could hear everything Mike Callahan had to say about flow devices at the beaver conference.

He’s come a long way baby.

One of Dittbrenner’s techniques involved relocating beavers to streams from areas where they were at risk for entrapment. As the critters went to work building dams in their new habitats, Dittbrenner evaluated the transformation of the streams into a wetland complex—multiple wetlands that share adjacent streamside land.

“Wetlands are definitely an endangered or threatened land type,” Dittbrenner says. “There are a ton of existing wetland regulations, but human encroachment is really the biggest threat to that.” 

Dittbrenner traces the degradation of streams and the disappearance of natural dams to the fur trade in the 1600s, which at the time centered on the beaver. Prior to the arrival of the European settlers in North America, he says, beavers existed in nearly every stream system, and dams could be found in abundance. As the beaver population was nearly extirpated because of heavy trapping, the dams disappeared, too.

“As those beaver dams degraded and disappeared, those [wetland] systems became much simpler,” Dittbrenner says. “A lot of the wetlands that were there were gone. A lot of the sediment that was there that was doing things like pollution attenuation was gone. And the flood storage capacity was gone.”

Nicely done Ben. Now we are getting fire skills preached from both sides of the country! Let’s hope it catches on and becomes part of our conversation about how to cope with this going forward.

The resulting decrease in water availability for surrounding plants leads to forest stress, says Dittbrenner.

“[The trees] become more prone to insect infestation,” says Dittbrenner, explaining that forest pests contribute to the fires prevalent on the West Coast. The dams also enable water to back up, producing pockets of both deep and shallow waters as well as rocky, sandy, and muddy habitats for birds, fish, mammals, amphibians, and reptiles, Dittbrenner says. As such, he says, the number of interactions between these species is higher. 

“Beavers are modifying the environment to create their preferred habitat—we call them ecosystem engineers,” he says. “In doing so, they provide all of this traditional habitat for other species, and all of these additional potential ecosystem services for people as well.”

An excellent point. Althought I’m thinking you maybe should at least mention Emily’s work. Maybe you did and the reporter just didn’t write it down, but this issue would hardly be in the limelight without her right?

“As we have these big fires, much of the vegetation in the forest (such as trees) is basically gone,” he says. “And it creates ash and underlying soil easily migrates when there’s precipitation. When there’s a big storm, all that ash and soil will wash—sometimes quickly—down in streams and fill up some of those streams.”

The ash and sediment cover salmon egg nests, he says, causing the eggs to suffocate because they can’t get enough oxygen. The absence of trees—which help slow down river and overland flow—leads to an uncontrolled surge of water following rainfall and increasing stream flows, which puts added stress on man-made infrastructure, such as bridges and wastewater treatment plants, Dittbrenner says.

You know looking at the great photo by Joe Wheaton I don’t think that beaver dams burned. Which means they stuck around and helped catch all that erosion and soil runoff. Just another service amount their many provided.

And not just aquatic species, he says, but trees lose water as well. The stress makes them more prone to disease and insect infestation. This systemic stress creates what Dittbrenner calls a “positive feedback mechanism” that often results in environmental disasters.

“If there’s a fire, those trees might already be dried out; some might be dead,” he says. “And that standing fuel load allows for increased forest fire prevalence.”

Research shows that healthy streams promote aquatic life and nurture surrounding lands. Dittbrenner’s work provides clues to how beaver ecosystems and wetlands fit into that equation—and contribute to wildfire protection and recovery.

Well, those are good clues to have. It’s great to see this discussed more broadly, and I hope Ben gets lots of interested undergrads to help him carry on the work. In the mean time here’s the graphic I worked on yesterday. Feel free to share.

 


The horrible glass fire is threatening our friends at Safari West AGAIN, so if you have any leftover space in your thoughts and prayers please after praying for our constitution. our supreme court and asking to spare members of your family from Covid, please send some metta and loving kindness their way. Fire is very much on our minds in California. Like mercy it droppeth as the gentle rains from heaven. Ash is covering our decks and our gardens and the smell of smoke woke me up.

I’m so glad Rick Lanman updated his wikipedia page.

Beaver ponds as wildlife refugia and firebreaks in wildfires

Beaver and their associated ponds and wetlands may be overlooked as effective wildfire-fighting tools.[145] Eric Collier’s 1959 book, Three Against the Wilderness, provides an early description of a string of beaver ponds serving as a firebreak, saving the home of his pioneer family from a wildfire in interior British Columbia.[146] Reduction of fuel loads by beaver removal of riparian trees, increased moisture content in riparian vegetation by beaver-raised water tables, and water held in beaver ponds all act as barriers to wildfires. In a study of vegetation after five large wildfires in the western United States, riparian corridors within 100 meters of beaver ponds were buffered from wildfires when compared to similar riparian corridors without beaver dams. [147] Professor Joe Wheaton of Utah State University studied the barren landscape left one month after the Sharps Fire burned 65,000 acres (260 km2) in Idaho’s Blaine County in 2018. He found a lone surviving green ribbon of riparian vegetation along Baugh Creek,[148] (see image) illustrating how a string of beaver ponds resists wildfires, creating an “emerald refuge” for wildlife.[145] Lastly, two studies of the Methow River watershed, after the 2014 Carlton Complex Fire burned 256,000 acres (1,040 km2) in north central Washington State, have shown that beaver dams reduced the negative impacts of wildfire on sediment runoff, reduced post-wildfire sediment and nutrient loads, and preserved both plant and macroinvertebrate communities.[149][150]

In addition to citing Emily and Alexis fantastic paper he also came across an outstanding thesis by Edin Stewart entitled: Beavers Buffering Blazes: The Potential Role of Castor canadensis in Mitigating Wildfire Impacts on Stream Ecosystems. I will add the whole paper to our library but suffice it to say it concludes whoppingly with the following sentence: “our study provides support for the hypothesis that beaver dams reduce the negative impacts of wildfire on stream habitats and communities.”

Yup.

Speaking of fire, one of the evacuations I heard on the news yesterday was the Oakmont region of Sonoma. This has been on my mind lately because of the famed Oakmont Symposium which is a dynamic and coveted  and widely attended lecture series. I think we met a fellow from the group years ago at the dam watching beavers in Martinez.

Well, recently one of their influencers was vacationing out of state and wound up running into Bob Boucher of beaver fame in Wisconsin and they concocted the idea of a beaver talk for Valentine’s day. Zoom friendly, of course. Thinking it would be excellent to add a California beaver voice Bob asked me to ‘co-present’ with him. And the host recently asked for a thread that would tie it all to theme of the day.

So I spent yesterday working on this. Fire notwithstanding, I assume this will happen?

Some say the world will end in fire,
Some say in ice.
From what I’ve tasted of desire
I hold with those who favor fire.
But if it had to perish twice,
I think I know enough of hate
To say that for destruction ice
Is also great
And would suffice.

Robert Frost


Now, you know I don’t drag out the star wars award scene for just ANY achievement. I save it for the best of the best. And this is better than that. Yesterday NPR was busy shouting that beavers create climate change, I got calls from Idaho and Wisconsin and my own mother. But National Geographic was doing this:

 

When Emily Fairfax became assistant professor at Cal State Channel Islands, I knew the beaver world was in for a treat. But I couldn’t have possibly guessed how much of one. Emily and beavers are the subject of a glossy new pair of articles in Ojai & Ventura Co Edible, and she just published her fire research in the journal of Ecological Applications.  I can’t decide which one to write about first, but I’ll just give a preview.

Smokey the Beaver: beaver‐dammed riparian corridors stay green during wildfire throughout the western USA

The articleS in Edible are a two fold, one is a slam dunk look at whether beavers belong in Ventura county (they do) with a fantastic discussion with Rick Lanman and look at our research lovingly written by Leslie Baehr. The other is a walk and talk with Emily about the good things beaver dams bring. Well save the first one for another day.

Tour a Stream with a Beaver Expert

Emily Fairfax, PhD., is an ecohydrologist and assistant professor of environmental science and resource management at CSU Channel Islands. Emily researches how beavers, which are native to California, change waterways and riparian ecosystems. In particular, she studies how beaver damming makes drought and fire resistant patches in the landscape. Her students and colleagues can affirm that when Emily says she can talk about beavers for hours, she’s not kidding.

Click twice on the image to see it larger.

STREAMS WITHOUT BEAVER are mostly characterized by what you don’t see. They tend to be a single straight and deep channel that doesn’t meander much through the landscape. As a result, the water does not spread throughout the landscape and the vegetation tends to be a lot smaller, scrubbier, and drier. There is also a lack of wildlife.

Oh my goodness Emily, who do I thank at the Channel Islands for hiring you? You could have ended up in Wisconsin or Colorado and we are soooo grateful for you being in California!

Contrary to popular depiction, a healthy riparian ecosystem often looks less like a stream and more like a wetland. One of the first things you will notice about STREAMS WITH BEAVER is how green they are. Vegetation tends to be healthier, bigger, and more abundant. Vegetation also stays greener further into the dry season. In fact, vegetation in some of the local beaver areas I study has become even greener into the dry season.

The heavy ponds also push water into the ground, recharging our aquifers. This groundwater is then released to the surface when pond-levels are low, buffering drought and creating year-round stream flow.

Locally, in the Los Padres where I study, we see dams between one and three feet tall and maybe 20 to 50 yards long, which is not that big for a beaver dam.

Lucky, lucky beavers in Los Padres. And lucky, lucky people that get a chance to learn from her.

Beaver habitat is characterized by abundant wildlife. Birds, insects, and frogs all thrive here and larger mammals may use the ponds as a watering hole.

Many researchers are particularly interested in the habitat’s effect on fish like salmon and our endangered steelhead who are born in streams, live their lives in the sea, and migrate back to the stream to reproduce. The beaver ponds provide slow-water rest areas for fish swimming upstream, abundant food for the young swimming downstream, and deep water protection from predators for both. This results in increased fish numbers and size.

Oh my goodness. I’m officially hiring you as the new beaver publicist of the golden state. It’s so nice to think someone will take over for me when I retire.

It’s not just wildlife that benefit. Beaver make for great ranching buddies since they create watering holes for cattle and healthier grazing pasture. An ecosystem that captures water can act as a natural fire break with fires fizzling out when they encounter the wetlands.

You might also find humans in this verdant ecosystem. In many areas, such as wine country, beavers attract tourism.

Okay I’m sold. Where do I sign up? Check out Emily’s new article complete with some very good reasons for California to befriend beaver.

Abstract

Beaver dams are gaining popularity as a low‐tech, low‐cost strategy to build climate resiliency at the landscape scale. They slow and store water that can be accessed by riparian vegetation during dry periods, effectively protecting riparian ecosystems from droughts. Whether or not this protection extends to wildfire has been discussed anecdotally but has not been examined in a scientific context. We used remotely sensed Normalized Difference Vegetation Index (NDVI) data to compare riparian vegetation greenness in areas with and without beaver damming during wildfire. We include data from five large wildfires of varying burn severity and dominant landcover settings in the western USA in our analysis. We found that beaver‐dammed riparian corridors are relatively unaffected by wildfire when compared to similar riparian corridors without beaver damming. On average, the decrease in NDVI during fire in areas without beaver is 3.05 times as large as it is in areas with beaver. However, plant greenness rebounded in the year after wildfire regardless of beaver activity. Thus, we conclude that while beaver activity does not necessarily play a role in riparian vegetation post‐fire resilience, it does play a significant role in riparian vegetation fire resistance and refugia creation.

I’ll post the full article or your perusal but here’s the whopping conclusion and my favorite part:

As it stands today, wetland habitat is very limited and beavers can create and
maintain wetland habitat that persists through flood, drought, and as we have shown in this study – fire. This has immediate relevance to scientists and practitioners across the North America  and Eurasia – particularly in places with increasing wildfire risk and existing or planned beaver populations. Perhaps instead of relying solely on human engineering and management to create and maintain fire-resistant landscape patches, we could benefit from beaver’s ecosystem engineering to achieve the same goals at a lower cost.

And scene! Emily is our hero. I believe she can do anything. Here’s the famed researcher gamely trying out Bob Rust’s junior beavercycle at a certain beaver festival.

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Go read the whole thing. And share if you share any friends with the Governor.

FairfaxWhittle_2020_SmokeyTheBeaver

 


The first time the “Bioneers” conference appeared on this website was 2010. In 2009 Brock Dolman had presented and mentioned the importance of beavers. It was surprising news at the time. But it is mainstream today. Because that’s the way change happens, slowly at first, and then all at once.

Fire and Water: Land and Watershed Management in the Age of Climate Change

California is a biodiversity hotspot, but its complex ecosystems are some of the first to model the consequences of a warming atmosphere. Wildfires are currently raging throughout California, burning through hundreds of thousands of acres and spreading rapidly. Climate change is fueling these wildfires — a problem that will only continue to escalate as the environment becomes drier and hotter.

Fire ecology experts are leading the search for solutions, as they seek to restore the healthy and natural role of fire in ecosystems, while combating the poor land and watershed management practices that have led us to this crisis. In this panel discussion from the 2016 Bioneers Conference, four leading fire ecologists discuss one burning question: How can modern society renew our relationship with the land to stop the wildfire crisis?

Ooh ooh I know, call on me! Or, hey maybe Brock can take this one.

And then there is one very special critter in the riparian part of our watersheds, and that’s our beaver. Right now many of our watersheds have been damaged in all sorts of ways, including by being overharvested and eroded by roads and off-road vehicles. We’ve reduced the complexity of those systems and their capacity to support diverse life, especially aquatic life, but really all life that depends on water. But beavers are forest farmers. They slow, spread and sink water, and they increase the wetted width of their habitats to grow the food that they eat because they’re herbivores. They eat bark and cambium and cattail roots and grasses.  They need to slow water down to grow riparian forests and wetlands, which happen to be then sequestering carbon and creating other habitat. They are great hydrological engineers, and we should hire as many of them as possible.

Right now in California we have a decreasing snow pack in many of our high elevation systems, but runoff volumes are increasing in mountain meadows and systems lower down. Our natural water storage capacity and distribution system is out of balance. If we can we work with beavers as a keystone species, they can interface with these processes and play an important role in re-establishing a healthy hydrologic cycle. And there’s some good science on beaver habitat mitigating the intensity of fire by creating fuel breaks in the bottom ends of these systems. Beavers rehydrate the valley bottoms and increase the wetted width of these linear corridors that then act as natural firebreak systems. So bring back the beaver in California! 

Excellent work! Especially the last part about beavers mitigating fire by providing fuel breaks. That’s pretty much what we need in the west. Damper soil that’s less flammable. Go Beavers. I’ve been thinking that our ecosystem poster might work in an hourglass shape, with the creatures underwater at the bottom and the ones above at the top. Of course the beaver dam would be the middle, giving both sides what they need. I played around with the notion yesterday. What do you think?

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