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

Category: Beavers and Nitrogen removal


What, me worry?

When beavers are on NPR? Not bloody likely. In addition to being most excellent reporting and great news for beavers, this also happens to provide me with the perfect audio to make into a powtoon later today which is an ideal low-stress way to spend nerve-racking election day. Thank you Dr. Brazier!

Beavers bring rich biodiversity back to Devon, England

Come to think of it. America is pretty darn lucky England killed all their beavers 500 years ago. Hear me out. I mean in addition to the shortage driving people to look for them elsewhere and paying for the pilgrims to come to America and basically starting our whole country, the fact that they want them back NOW and are doing such excellent research to justify their existence works well for us in America.

So, thanks England.

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Yesterday’s NM Summit was beyond awesome. Any day when you get to listen to Joe Wheaton AND Jeff Ogburn in the same place you should literally jump at the chance. Jeff is the North Eastern Habitat Biologist for NM Game an Fish so of course he’s very interested beaver. He also has that enviable, pragmatic, energetic style that says ‘lets solve problems and work together and I’m not trying to sell you beavers’ which is SO SO SO helpful and needed on the landscape. (Something I will never be able to do because I am literally always trying to sell beavers, obviously.)

The entire presentation will be available online later an you can bet I’ll be sharing it. Much of Joe’s work is available already in his guidebook online, but wow here’s just a little. Remember he is from the Bay Area, went to high school in Napa where his mother still lives AND his sister came to the beaver festival twice.

By which I mean to say obviously he’s brilliant.Beavers are SO LUCKY to have Joe an all these amazing defenders on their side. Mary Obrien will bring it all home tomorrow, and hopefully by then we will know much more than we do now.

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Now here’s one last gift to get you through today. It has already made the humans in this household cry hopeful tears several times today which is not something I ever believer Taylor Swift could do.

You’re welcome.

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Do you remember the beaver festival? Yes, I know it was a long, long time ago. But for the last two festivals artist Frogard Schmidt has been working with children on some lovely painted curtains that will ultimately go behind the stage, Well I hard from her the other day that their finished touching up and weatherizing and she’s dropping them off tomorrow. She sent a little snap shot that I knew you’d want to appreciate.


 Isn’t that awesome? Doesn’t Martinez have the best child  artists and the most gently repairing art instructor in the entire world? I just love the “Enter” and “exit” reminders on the lodge. (Because you wouldn’t want to forget and have beavers bumping into each other.) It’s going to look FANTASTIC on stage. I can’t wait to see them in person.

Time again for another fabulous article on beavers that doesn’t know its about beavers from our friends at Phys.org. Apparently the University of Delaware in for a big surprise.

Antiquated dams hold key to water quality

 

All over the eastern part of the United States, thousands of small dams block the flow of water in streams and rivers, harkening back to colonial times. Originally constructed for energy and milling operations by settlers or companies, most of the milldams no longer serve human purposes. Now, many of these inactive dams are being removed by government and private agencies—driven by a need or hope of increasing public safety, reducing liability and improving aquatic habitats.

However, less attention is being paid to whether removing the dams will harm , which is precisely what University of Delaware Professor Shreeram Inamdar is investigating. As the researcher explains, blocking the water unintentionally provides a valuable benefit. Soil upstream of the dam becomes richer in carbon, which acts as an important filter of nitrogen, a key pollutant in our nation’s waterways.

Of course this article is talking about the importance of “Mill Dams” and you know we’re thinking of another kind of small dam entirely. I guess I’m going to need one of the many graduate students working on this research to sit down and explain to me why a beaver dam is any fucking different. And why they aren’t broadening their research to include the removal and destruction of the tens of thousands of beaver dams that are taken out every year by responsible cities and landowners just “Doing the right thing” for their property.

“This natural filtering service reduces stream water nitrogen concentrations, improves water quality and saves limited conservation resources,” said Inamdar, who serves as director of UD’s Water Science and Policy Graduate Program.

The rapid response grant focuses on the effects of milldam removal on riparian (riverside) groundwater and stream water quality in Pennsylvania, which has the highest dam removal rate of any state. Dam removals could potentially undermine this filtering service, which is valuable to ecosystems, and increase the cost of cleaning up waterways. On the other hand, removal of dams could introduce a more dynamic groundwater regime—like greater fluctuations of water levels in stream-side soils leading to potentially greater processing and removal of nitrogen. Determining which of these two scenarios happen is the focus of the study.

So removing dams is bad in many ways, And thank goodness we’re here with a crack team of researchers to tell you which is worse.  I mean it would be one thing if there were skilled teams on hand responsible for all these dams and making repairs every time one faltered night after night and costing us nothing. But that’s impossible. Of course progress and human infrastructure demands that we keep on ripping out beaver dams anyway.

I guess it’s nice of you to admit it matters.

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I guess if you live to be old enough everything seems new eventually. Yesterday I was hunting around for a pithy urban beaver quote and stumbled onto this article. I can’t even tell if I wrote about it before because neither the author or the headline comes up on a search. Lets pretend we know I didn’t and be shocked that a jewel like this ever slipped by.

OHH I found it. 3 days before my last day of work closing down 25 years of office record so no wonder I forgot!

Leaving it to beavers: Communities make room for natural engineers

Once valued as little more than pelts, beavers are back in vogue and rebuilding their reputation as habitat engineers.

It helps their cause that the dams they build as homes also create water quality-boosting wetlands and habitat for other species. In the process, the structures slow the flow of water and filter out sediment that would otherwise be on its way to the Chesapeake Bay.

And a new study out of the Northeast suggests the dams, which can alter the course of entire river systems, can also substantially reduce the amount of nitrogen in them.

Arthur Gold, chair of the natural resources science department at the University of Rhode Island, along with graduate student Julia Lazar, was interested in the role of certain landscapes in cleaning up waters before they reach key estuaries. With a focus on natural resources, the team looked for important landscape features that have “pollution-cleansing capacity.”

Beaver dams “had all the ingredients,” Gold said.

The researchers knew beaver dams deployed wet, organic soils to trap nitrates, but could they also transform it into a gas that would float away from the water altogether?

The answer, it turns out, is yes.

Now I know we have talked a lot about Gold’s research on nitrogen removal. But I just don’t remember an article specifically saying this was especially good news for urban beavers. Do you?

The larger beaver ponds they studied removed up to 45 percent of the nitrogen from the water that moved through them, while smaller ponds removed closer to 5 percent. Gold said some of the lower removal rates were in ponds that had little nitrogen work to do in the first place because they filtered forested landscapes.

They’ve come back to a landscape with much more nitrogen in it,” he said, “So, because of the conditions that beaver ponds create, we now have a new removal ecosystem that we didn’t have.”

Where have you been all my life, you precious perfect article!

Residents can use tree guards to protect their expensive ornamentals from beavers’ teeth. Rather than destroying dams or trapping beavers, they can mitigate the impact of rising water tables with devices like the “beaver deceiver,” which uses pipes to channel water through the dam while giving the beaver the feeling of damming the stream.

Beavers and their dams also bring new habitats to urban and suburban environments, creating the wetlands known to be key to several species’ survival. Griffin said more people are warming to the idea that a beaver can bring benefits to the neighborhood.

“On a larger scale, there is the realization that we have shrinking wetlands. Harnessing these creatures to [create wetlands] in places where it’s possible is a great way to control runoff and create new systems,” he said.

In more rural environments, beavers not only have room to roam but their dams can help remove excess nitrogen associated with septic systems and animal farms. That impact can be even more powerful if we make room for dams — or simply conserve patchworks of the landscape — between urban and rural areas throughout the watershed.

“By conserving the area and creating places for the beaver, you may not have to go in later on and install stormwater management,” Kaushal said. “You could have a [nitrogen-absorbing] sink that’s there by just conserving some of the land.”

Newly flooded forest ponds attract herons to form new rookeries and eagles to find new feeding grounds. Amphibians flourish in the shallow ponds and juvenile fish find room to grow.

In the West, natural resource departments have deployed beavers to help restore watersheds, where the ponds they create become rich with invertebrate life.

But beaver dams are also the foundation for “a riot of plant life,” Gold said. The plants contribute to the ponds’ ability to remove nitrogen from the water.

Honestly. I still can’t get over the fact that I’m not sure if I ever saw this before. The Bay Journal is based in Pennsylvania. How does such wisdom slip right past Washington and California and end up there?

When that plant material dies in the fall, Gold explained, the microbial community has a feast similar to what takes place in a compost pile. They need oxygen to fuel this decomposition, but there’s only so much to be had in a beaver pond.

The researchers found that those microbes are then able to use an alternate source of oxygen by stripping one of the oxygen molecules from the nitrate molecule, made up of one nitrogen atom and three oxygen atoms. Subsequent steps carried out by anaerobic bacteria in the wet soil strip the remaining oxygen atoms and may ultimately free the nitrogen atoms, a gas, and allow it to leave the watershed.

The chemical process is the same as what happens in a streamside wetland as it filters runoff from adjacent land. But, unlike a riparian filter, beaver ponds might be filtering — and removing nitrogen from — water that’s flowed off an entire watershed, perhaps 2,000 acres.

Gold thinks this research makes the case for beaver dams interspersed throughout a stream system and, as often as possible, downstream from major sources of nitrogen pollution.

Urban parks can be a great place for beavers to redefine the landscape, as they have at Bladensburg Waterfront Park along the District of Columbia’s stretch of the Anacostia River. Jorge Bogantes Montero, stewardship program specialist in natural resources for the Anacostia Watershed Society, said three beaver dams constructed in one stretch of the park demonstrate their ability to attract wildlife and clean the water even in the middle of the city.

There, he said, you can see firsthand “how beaver engineering inspired these new systems that bioengineers use for stream stabilization.”

Kaushal agrees that there’s room for them in these urban landscapes, especially as we learn more about their pollution-removal capacity.

“We need to, I don’t want to say embrace the beaver, but it’s a bigger symbol of some bigger things,” h

Oh man I need a cigarette after that article. This predates Ben’s book AND my retirement. And it deserves entry into the beaver hall of fame. Great work Whitney Pipkin pulling together some very complicated threads and tying it with a bow. You are my new hero from 4 years ago.


Dunawi creek is near Covalis Oregon and prides itself in being  a little more ecofriendly than other creeks. In 2012 it reported there was a beaver dam flooding out its ball-fields so it responded by installing a pipe to drain the dam!

(No, really)

Now they brought in an expert to do it even better, This year I’m told the lovingly named “Beaver strike team” partnered with Jakob Shockey of Beaver State Wildlife Solutions and the Benton County Public Works Department to install a flexible leveler. (Is it just me or does this photo look kinda like the cover of an epic romance novel?)

On January 17th, the Benton County Agriculture and Wildlife Protection Program (AWPP) partnered with the Benton County Public Works Department to fund the installation of a beaver pond leveler on Dunawi Creek.  The device should help reduce flooding of 53rd Street near the Willamette Pacific Railroad overpass while allowing beavers to continue to provide important ecological services.

 

The device was installed by Jakob Shockey of Beaver State Wildlife Solutions with help from members of the Benton County Beaver Strike Team.  Oregon State University Productions filmed the installation for inclusion in a future documentary film about beavers.

Whooo hoo! Hurray for the good folks at Dunawi creek, and hurray for Jakob Shockey, who met up with Mike Callahan at the last beaver conference I attended and decided to start a career. Let’s hope this conference sees many more such inspirations blossom across the west. All of a sudden I’m remembering a certain flow device installation that was helped out by our own public works crew lo, these many years ago.

Ahh memories!

Beavers were discussed briefly on the radio yesterday, not with much attention to their ecosystem services, but still in a mostly charming way. I thought you’d be interested in this report from WXPR Morning Edition.

A Glimpse into the Life of a Beaver

Different animals have different strategies for surviving the winter. In this week’s Wildlife Matters, the Masked Biologist gives us a glimpse under the ice to examine the habits of the beaver.


Ohh it was such an adventure to go to Safari West again and see the wildlife and talk to families about beavers and watch meteors from the deck and sleep with the sounds of exotic animals all around you. It was sobering to talk with Marie Martinez about their harrowing escape in the fire and how much business has rebounded in the year following it. Then humbling to receive another generous donation from the Safari West Foundation to support our work – splendid also to drive up past the wineries and sip a glass of Trefethen to celebrate Jon’s birthday.

But honestly, it’s nice to be home too.

This morning there’s an interview with Marcus Smith on BYU radio which I had thought of as only a campus thing, but turns out is actually a much larger deal. it also airs on Sirius which gives it a national audience. The producer originally contacted me after my article on the Center for Humans and Nature blog and I’m hopeful we’ll be able to talk about the value urban beavers can bring to the landscape.

BYU Radio is a talk radio station run by Brigham Young University in Provo, Utah. Operating at Sirius XM channel 143[1] (and in northern Utah on 89.1 MHz HD-2), it is known on-air as BYU Radio. The station features entertaining and informational talk programming,. Marcus Smith serves as radio services manager for BYU Broadcasting, where he oversees both BYU Radio and Classical 89. His most prominent public role, however, is as host of Thinking Aloud,

Meanwhile there’s plenty of outstanding business to tidy up. Especially this article which caught my eye last week and was sent by a couple of friends on the day it appeared in both the Atlantic and National Geographic.

Most Marine Mammals Are Missing One Mysterious Gene

Alarmingly, the adaptation may leave them more vulnerable to pesticides running into the sea.

Millions of years ago, ancient land-dwelling mammals returned to the sea. Their bodies became streamlined for swimming, articulated fingers turned into flippers and fins, hypnotic songs slowly filled the oceans—and, somewhere during the evolutionary process, the newly evolving marine mammals lost a particular gene called Paraoxonase 1, or PON1.

Normally, that story would be intriguing enough on its own. But in a strange twist of fate, PON1 also provides a crucial defense against a particularly nasty class of pesticides called organophosphates. PON1 obliterates pesticide byproducts in blood plasma, so terrestrial mammals with normal PON1 levels—including humans—can effectively deal with exposure.

Still commonly used in agriculture and frequently washed into the sea, organophosphates inhibit the central nervous system, causing paralysis and permanent brain damage. And so far, there are no signs that our marine kin have evolved a mechanism to defend themselves against these toxins in place of PON1.

You’re probably thinking, gosh that’s sad for whales and manatees but what does it have to do with beavers?

She and Clark are mulling over a different scenario, derived from a clue that comes from expression patterns within pinnipeds. Unlike sirenians and cetaceans, not all pinniped species studied have lost PON1 function. Instead, only the deepest diving—such as the Weddell seal—no longer have functioning PON1. The walrus and others that aren’t so inclined to visit the abyss still retain PON1. So, it could be that the gene’s deleted activity has something to do with the oxidative stress involved in diving, although that idea will need further testing.

In the shorter term, Clark and his colleagues are planning on sequencing beavers, muskrats, capybaras, and other aquatic and semi-aquatic critters.

“We need some species or populations that have lost PON1, and some that haven’t, so we can see what environmental factors differ between these species,” Meyer says.

For now, though, agricultural runoff tainting waters from Florida to California to Australia could be rich in pesticides that manatees, dolphins, and whales have no natural means to combat—and Clark and others suspect it could be playing a role in the multiple unusual mortality events plaguing the U.S. Southeast.

How deep is the abyss? I’m not sure whether it would apply to beavers, but they sure spend a great of time underwater, (very cold water), and that must had triggered some adaptions. The great irony of course is that every day beavers are working to build their organic filters that can reduce the toxins that flow to their brethren in the sea.

While theoretically exposing themselves to it more and more.

Moving mud: Glenn Hori

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