A fish-minded friend posted a great image on facebook yesterday and I thought it just needed a little tweaking. I couldn’t resist for obvious reasons. What do you think now?
Category: Beavers and salmon
So yesterday morning I received an action alert regarding EPIC’s plan to sue WS for trapping beaver in salmon habitat in California. The Western Environmental Law Center is assisting, just like they did in Oregon. Remember, this happened in Oregon at the beginning of this year. As a result WS agreed to issue a ‘moratorium’ on beaver trapping while their fish biologists decided how to respond. (In Washington there are already rules that keep them out of salmon streams). Wildlife services in Oregon ultimately decided not to decide, and still isn’t trapping beaver in salmon streams in Oregon.
I was sure California would follow suit, and surprised it took this long. Of course there are lots of ways to kill beavers besides APHIS, so why does this matter? This matters because it pushes the topic into the public discourse and drives home the point to everyone that beavers matter for salmon. If enough federal agencies are forced to address the importance of beavers to salmon, it’s not crazy to think that it ultimately could matter to where CDFW decides to grant depredation permits in the first place.
11 months later it has now happened in california. If you haven’t read the Letters of Intent to sue, you really should. Worth A Dam got together yesterday and donated 500 to the action. If you want to donate too you can donate through their website or by check to this address,
EPIC
145 G St., Ste. A
Arcata, CA 95521

To support WELC click below which will take you to their support page.CLICK TO DONATE
Ben Goldfarb is already talking to his editors about getting a california article published on the topic. So stay tuned. On the news this morning, and I bet more will follow. This is about to get very interesting.
Busy beavers create salmon habitat in Kitsap
Beavers are busy throughout the soggy gully. Tidy stacks of gnawed sticks divert the flow of water in places, creating sprawling ponds. The stream banks are littered with fallen trees, and the trunks of still-standing cedars have been chewed nearly in half.
“We get tons of calls from people saying there’s a beaver dam and they’re concerned about the fish,” state Department of Fish and Wildlife habitat biologist Brittany Gordon said.
While dams can, in some instances, impede fish, Gordon said the rodents do more to help than hinder salmon.
And hey, you know those beavers don’t cost our taxpayers any money. So that’s a plus.
Structures engineered by beavers create complex habitat for fish and other wildlife by slowing water flow, funneling water into deep pools and fast-moving side channels, and connecting isolated wetlands. Such diverse habitat is especially critical for juvenile coho salmon, which will spend a year in freshwater before migrating into the ocean.
“They need places to hide, places to eat and places to get big,” Gordon said. “they need ponds and slower-moving areas.”
When there’s enough water in creeks for salmon to spawn, the returning fish are adept at getting over and around beaver dams, as they have for time immemorial. A series of small dams can make it easier for salmon to splash upstream by holding standing water.
Time immemorial. Read that. Will you just READ THAT. It’s on the friggin news.
Gordon said dams do sometimes impede fish during very dry periods and when they are built up against human infrastructure like culverts. Even when streams are low, it’s a bad idea to bust up dams, Suquamish Tribe biologist Jon Oleyar said.
Notching a dam during spawning season can send a sudden “pulse” of water downstream, giving salmon a false signal that it’s time to move upstream. Water levels will drop above the busted dam, potentially stranding fish.
Listen up Michigan and Wisconsin and DFO’s in British Columbia. We’re talking to you. Stop messing with beaver dams. Just stop it.
Gordon said the Department of Fish and Wildlife advocates keeping dams in place whenever possible.
“The habitat benefits that dams provide outweigh any temporary barriers,” she said.
Can we carve that in stone somewhere? Or maybe make it into a tattoo to put on the foreheads of every one everywhere? The article does go out to outline specific instance where a permit is given to notch a beaver dam in some rare conditions. But mostly it says DON’T DO IT.
Okay, I’m going to swear now. Brace yourselves. The situation just demands it. Ready?
Guess who decided pick up Ben Goldfarb’s biographic article? The would be the fucking Atlantic, Baby. Ohh yeah.
The Re-beavering of the American West
How was your thankful day? Ours was excellent and in the middle Ben Goldfarb dropped a hard hitting new beaver article on the world, which had such amazing web graphics I was green with envy for a while. I’m almost over it, so let’s enjoy without resentment. The designs of biographic and the academy of sciences are so new and complicated I can’t even share them on this site, so DEFINITELY click on the link this time and go see for your self.
They Will Build It
Although not Indigenous themselves, Alves and Bailey relocate beavers under the auspices of the Tulalip Tribes, a sovereign nation with nearly 5,000 members. This week they’ve set their traps in the Puget Sound suburb of Marysville—half an hour north of Seattle if you leave before daybreak, an eternity at rush hour. Across the street from the Marysville Public Library waits their Silverado pickup, its right two wheels perched on the curb. Alves and Bailey, foreheads damp with sweat, set the beaver down and lower the tailgate. Morning traffic roars past, drivers craning their necks.
“Good?” he laughs. “What good do they do? They’re always clogging up culverts and being a pain in the ass. You’re lucky you got to him before I did.” Before I can craft a response, he snaps up a crushed water bottle and strolls off.
The sentiment that Castor canadensis is little more than a tree-felling, water-stealing, property-flooding pest is a common one. In 2017, trappers in Washington State killed 1,700 “nuisance” beavers, nearly 20 times more than were relocated alive. In neighboring Oregon, the herbivorous rodents are classified as predators, logic and biology notwithstanding. California considers them a “detrimental species.” Last year alone, the U.S. Department of Agriculture eliminated more than 23,000 conflict-causing beavers nationwide.
Running countercurrent to this carnage is another trend: the rise of the Beaver Believer. Across North America, many scientists and land managers are discovering that, far from being forces of destruction, beavers can serve as agents of water conservation, habitat creation, and stream restoration. In Maryland, ecologists are promoting beaver-built wetlands to filter out agricultural pollutants and improve water quality in Chesapeake Bay. In North Carolina, biologists are building beaver-like dams to enhance wet meadows for endangered butterflies. In England, conservationists have reintroduced the Eurasian beaver (Castor fiber) in hopes that their pond complexes will attenuate destructive floods. And in Washington, where a century of habitat loss has devastated salmon, the Tulalip Tribes are strategically dispatching beavers to support the fish so integral to their history and culture.
Back at the truck, I recount my exchange with the beaver-abhorring walker. Alves laughs. She has heard such slander before, and has a rebuttal at the ready.
“I would have asked him if he likes fresh water and salmon.”
You can see right away you’re going to like this article. It’s a great day-after read so I’d gather a second cup of coffee and settle in. Ben is taking us on an journey and you know that’s always somewhere you want to go.
That beavers benefit salmon is, in some quarters, a provocative claim. Many biologists historically regarded beaver dams as stream-choking barriers to fish passage. In the 1970s, Washington, Oregon, and California even passed laws mandating the removal of in-stream wood, beaver dams included. More recently, a 2009 proposal funded by the Atlantic Salmon Conservation Foundation suggested eradicating beavers from 10 river systems on Prince Edward Island and employing trappers to enforce “beaver free zones” in others.
The notion of purging beaver dams to allow salmon to pass, however, doesn’t stand up to scientific scrutiny. One 2016 study documented individual salmonids traversing more than 200 beaver dams on their way to spawn in Oregon streams, suggesting that fish have little trouble negotiating the obstacles. Far from harming salmon, in fact, beavers create indispensable fish nurseries. By filling up ponds and digging canals, beavers engineer the deep pools, lazy side channels, and sluggish backwaters that baby salmon need to conserve energy and evade predators like great blue herons. Today, the National Marine Fisheries Service considers “encouraging formation of beaver dams” vital for recovering Oregon’s endangered coho populations.
“Beavers create complex habitat and enhance local biological diversity in a way that’s really unique,” says Michael Pollock, an ecosystems analyst at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration who’s among the beaver movement’s grandfathers. “They do a much better job of managing these systems than we do.”
Yes they do. Because we get distracted. Beavers don’t. They work like their very lives depend upon these ponds. Which, as it happens, they do. They aren’t working for a paycheck. They’re working to survive.
The white colonists who overran Puget Sound did not share that respect. On January 22, 1855, Isaac Stevens, governor of the new Washington Territory, and dozens of tribal chiefs signed the Treaty of Point Elliott, an agreement that forced many of the Sound’s Native people onto the 22,000-acre Tulalip Reservation. While a judge later called the treaties “unfair, unjust, ungenerous, and illegal,” they did have a redeeming feature, permanently preserving tribal members’ rights to fish at their “usual and accustomed” places. Although the provision was seldom honored—Native fishermen were arrested and harassed, sometimes violently, by their white counterparts—a federal court finally intervened on the tribes’ behalf in 1974, granting Native people half the annual harvest.
Yet the victory was, in some ways, a hollow one. The Puget Sound’s salmon were in freefall, the victims of dams, overfishing, and the Seattle area’s explosive growth. Thousands of acres of marsh had been paved over, hundreds of embayments wiped out. Beaches had been bulwarked, lowland forests demolished. What use was having your right to fish confirmed by the courts if there were no fish to catch? “We’d lost so much natural water storage,” says Terry Williams, the Tulalip’s treaty rights commissioner. “We needed to come up with plans for longer-term watershed recovery, to have natural approaches that allow ecosystems to restore themselves.”
This is a nice way to tell a long story. And if you’re like me you’ll be interested in the human angle of this. The woman to the left of salmon guru Dr. Michael Pollock is his long term girlfriend attorney tribal lawyer enjoying homemade enchiladas at our rental in Santa Barbara during the salmonid conference. Around the table clockwise are Sherry Guzzi, Mike Callahan and Mary Obrien. Because I know these little human details matter to us groundlings.
While expanded ponds are beavers’ most visible hydrologic impact, their ability to recharge groundwater might be an even greater contribution. At the Tulalip’s relocation sites, Ben Dittbrenner has found that for every cubic meter (264 gallons) of surface water beavers impound, another 2.5 cubic meters (660 gallons) sinks into the earth. As that water trickles through the soil, it cools off, eventually reemerging to mingle with streamflows downriver. Elsewhere, such hyporheic exchange between surface- and groundwater keeps streams hydrated later into the dry season, turning seasonal creeks perennial. Dittbrenner’s research suggests that beaver-facilitated cooling and mixing also reduces water temperatures by more than 2 degrees Celsius (about 3.5 degrees Fahrenheit), a huge boon for heat-sensitive salmon and trout.
Although beavers won’t singlehandedly save us from climate change, such findings suggest they might be able to help our stressed water supplies adapt to a warmer future. “By 2100, we’re expecting to see snowpack, which is basically our water storage reservoir, disappear throughout a lot of the Cascades,” Dittbrenner says. “I’m curious whether beavers could make up an appreciable storage component of that lost snowpack.”
The trick to making beavers make a difference is to let them stay around, or encourage them to stay around. Folks do that by planting willow, by not killing them, and by installing BDAs.
So how do you get beavers to cooperate? One option: Give them a leg up. After touring Mahoney, we jounce up yet another endless string of dirt roads to yet another remote tributary, this one shielded from the road by a verdant screen of maple and Devil’s club. The Tulalip had installed beavers here a year ago, with disheartening results. “They just kind of waddled off, never to be seen again,” Bailey says.
To entice the next colony to stay, Bailey and Alves have decided to attempt a new tactic—human-built walls of wooden posts and sticks known as “beaver dam analogues.” The idea behind beaver dam analogues, or BDAs, is simple: In situations where suboptimal habitat discourages beavers from settling down, a human-assisted starter kit can persuade them to stay put and build dams of their own. In one Oregon stream where scientists built more than 120 beaver dam analogues, beaver activity increased eightfold—and juvenile steelhead trout survival spiked by more than 50 percent. Little wonder that BDAs are now among the American West’s hottest stream restoration techniques, deployed to enhance wet meadows for greater sage-grouse in Wyoming, remediate mining waste in Montana, and improve fish habitat in Northern California.
Thanks in large measure to the Tulalip’s example, tribal-led beaver restoration in Washington will soon take another leap forward. Among the volunteers at the beaver dam analogue installation is Erik White, wildlife manager with the Cowlitz Tribe. The Cowlitz’s southwest Washington territory encompasses the Lewis River, which in turn is home to bull trout, a cold-loving fish imperiled by climate change.
“A lot of projections show that 80 percent of bull trout habitat in the Lewis River basin is going to disappear in the next 25 years because of increasing water temperatures,” White says during a break in our post-pounding. Inspired by the Tulalip, he and the Cowlitz Tribe have launched a beaver relocation project of their own, and plan to begin moving the animals to the Gifford Pinchot National Forest in the spring of 2019. “We’ve got less and less snowpack every year,” White adds. “Beavers could be a way to spread flows out into a more natural hydrograph.”
Yes they could. And you know what works even better than moving beavers to a new location and carrying them in cages into remote spaces where you have to drive stakes into the soil just to talk them into to sticking around?
Letting them stay where they choose and dealing responsibly with whatever challenges they cause so you can benefit from them for years to come.
Just sayin’.
Another day of unbreatheable air for us while rescue workers in Paradise sift through the unimaginable looking for victims of the camp fire. There are 1000 people still missing and we know what that means. In the mean time there are beaver stories that merit our attention. It’s winter in many parts of the US that aren’t currently on fire. And that’s never good news for beavers.
Traps poised for sharp-toothed wanderers
Beavers are being trapped along the Alaska Highway across from the Meadow Lakes Golf Club as a precaution, says conservation officer David Bakica.
The Department of Highways and Public Works (DPW) is afraid the buildup of water behind the dam the beavers have created could push against the gravel road bed and compromise its strength, Bakica explained recently.
The water is already inside the right-of-way, he pointed out.
The devices installed a couple of years ago at the mouth of the highway culvert to prevent the beavers from damming the culvert is working well, Bakica told the Star. The beavers have, however, decided to block the creek upstream from the culvert, within the highway right-of-way, he said.
So the culvert protection you used a couple years ago is working, but the beavers have dammed upstream and rather that build on the success of a couple years ago and install a flow device, you are choosing to kill them in winter.
As it was explained to him by Highway staff, when water sits against a roadbed, every time a vehicle passes over it, the roadbed acts as sponge, pulling in water and heightening the risk of failure, he said.
To date, five have been trapped, though they’re still not certain if all the beavers have been removed, Bakica said Thursday.
Waiting for ice cover not only increases the safety aspect, but it’s also easier to target the entrances and exits of the beaver lodge, he explained.
DPW wants to pull down the dam, but to do so while the beavers are still in there would be inhumane, as the animals would eventually freeze to death without water or become easy prey, he said.
In other words DPW thinks beaver live IN the dam because DPW is almost always stupid.
Bakica said relocating beavers really isn’t feasible in most cases. It’s costly, and can simply mean moving a problem from one area to another, he pointed out.
DPW’s Doris Wurfbaum said the intent is to break down the dam this winter so that the water is free-flowing come spring.
I’m going to assume that the fact that you installed culvert protection 2 years ago at all means that public pressure cared about these beavers and forced your hand. Hey killing after the freeze has another benefit of keeping the beaver-lovers away so they won’t complain too much!
You know there’s another way to do this, right?

Castor canadensis
Eating willow
Martinez, CA by Suzi Eszterhas
We need to remember that beaver stupid still exists everywhere and its not all hearts and Ben’s book out there. I was stunned to see this complaint whine its way across my news feed the other day.
Salmon Runs in the Columbia River system are being systematically ruined by the pseudo science ecologist/ environmentalists who are incharge.
If it was not for the pseudo science of ecology we could have infinitely more fish in northwest rivers and beyond. The environmentalists actually are the real cause of fish declines.
Wow. Ecology is a pseudo-science and environmentalists cause fish decline. The mind boggles. The jaw drops.
The Indian tribes controlled the salmon at these points of difficult uphill cascades passage in the gorge for several thousand years. The river was much more polluted than it is today when salmon runs were much larger. The Indian populations along the Columbia river were higher per square mile concentrated along the river than anywhere else in north America at the time in pre Columbian times. Beavers had everything dammed and were so numerous the river was fouled by Beaver feces and from the Indian populations along the rivers and streams. Those nutrients fed the salmon runs.
Got that? The rivers used to be more polluted because of all the beaver poop. And all that poop fed the salmon. So now that there is less pollution there are less salmon. Because of the stupid ecologists.
In some ways today the rivers are too clean for fish to thrive as much as they can and fish hatcheries can also be placed further down stream to more tidal areas of the river system like in the Willamette river itself right downtown. There is horrible missed opportunity in developing the ‘resource’ and worst of all the fisheries selected the best salmon for the hatchery fish and the eco environmental flakes designate those as unnatural fish which is helping to destroy river and ocean survival traits of various species. The truth is absolutely not allowed . Ensured are stupid jobs for idiot people and the salmon and the economic value of these salmon is suffering as a result
If we were to substitute the word pollution for the words ‘nutrient-rich’ I could almost agree. Of course you can’t conflate what beaver do to rivers with what industrial or chemical companies do to rivers. There is zero comparison. The author is onto something though about lots of beavers resulting in lots of salmon, but he misunderstands the role that ecologists want to play in restoring rivers. Correlation isn’t causation. Just because they showed up when the salmon population started to fall apart doesn’t mean they caused it. Just like going to the hospital isn’t the cause of death.
I posted a comment in response and surprisingly he approved it and its still there. I’m not sure what that means, but I’m going to assume its a good sign. At least anyone else that visits the sight can see it.