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

Category: Who’s Killing Beavers Now?


“The Badger State” has decided to update its beaver policy. See in the 80’s they counted a beaver population of 200,000 and did some research that found that removing beaver dams from streams was the single best thing Wisconsin could do for its trout, so they’ve been doing so at such a great rate that there are only about 80,000 beavers left in the state. Is that too few, they wonder? Did we do TOO good a job? Mind you, they’re review of the policy isn’t prompted by any new reading of the research, or comprehension of the trickle down effect of fewer beavers on wetland ecology – but because (this is a quote, I’m not kidding)

“Certain user groups are concerned that the recreational opportunity provided by beaver is not what they’d like to see,”

“User Groups” as in TRAPPERS. There aren’t enough beaver to enjoyably kill. Maybe we should change our regulations to encourage a few more so that our sporty sportsmen have fewer empty snares. They are busily having meetings with the public to get input about attitudes towards beavers and soothe the ruffled feathers – er, scales – of the Trout Unlimited folk who are certain the beaver mean harm to trout.

Steve Avelallemant, of Rhinelander, is the fisheries supervisor for the DNR’s Northern Region, and he admitted that beaver dams can be a problem, especially on trout streams in northern Wisconsin.

“They (beaver and trout) just cannot exist together for a host of reasons,” said Avelallemant, who helped shape the state’s original beaver plan. “Out West, beavers are a good thing for trout streams. In Wisconsin, not so much.

Beaver and trout just can’t exist together! And since trout are non-negotiable, beavers must be limited! Never mind that up until they were eradicated before the 1800’s the state used to have millions more beaver. Interestingly, before we eliminated the local natives they had lived off plentiful trout streams for 2000 years and never complained of the shortage. Never mind history. Never mind about all that “fancy-pants” research that says beavers are good for trout. This is WISCONSIN. Our streams are different. Our trout are different. We have our OWN research. Just look.

Well, this looks interesting. Go get some coffee. That’s a pretty long study period. Let’s take a look at what it says, shall we?

Okay, no skimming allowed. you HAVE to read this. Beaver dams raise the water temperature, and ruin channels and bring in riff-raff fish that eat up all the insects AND attract wildlife that eat up all the trout. Wow. And most of the research cited is from the Eisenhower era. So we know it must be true.

The study goes on to review several different methods of stream restoration and to compare these methods by region around the state. Marinette county seems to be the segment designated as the no-beaver zone and USDA kindly removed all the dams (and beavers) in these areas. Then the measures were taken again after the streams had time to get used to their new no-beaverness. Guess what! The beaverless streams did better!

I know I’M excited! Don’t I look excited? I was so excited I wrote them a four page paper in response, which if you’re the kind of person that cares  you can read here. In the meantime I will tell you that I got very interested in this particular “region” which was the only part of the study devoted to beaver killing and showing stellar results. Since I’ve read beaver research in the post-Eisenhower period, I was very curious about their findings.  I hunted around the internet looking for possible confounding variables – and found that the nearby Menominee River was the proud home of the Ansul chemical company that made Sufur Dioxide  and was sued for releasing Arsenic into the water for around 50 years. Around that time of this study the EPA busily was forcing them to clean up the ground water and build protective berms over the poisonous sediment. Hmm.

Could THAT have anything to do with trout health ya think?

So while I was busy smacking my forehead and reliving the plot of Silkwood, Rick went hunting for data on trout and beaver. He found this lovely restocking guide from the Vermont Fish & Wildlife conservation group. See Vermont’s worried about its native trout too, so they’re encouraging watershed groups to put in some baby ones (called fry) to keep the streams going. They have some GREAT advice about how to do it. Check it out.

So apparently if you live in  opposite ends of the country in Washington or Vermont beaver dams are good for trout. But if you have the misfortune to live in Wisconsin they’re just AWFUL. So awful in fact that only scientific papers from 50 years ago are courageous enough to trumpet their disaster. DNR has a lovely little survey asking for public input on beavers, with searching, unbiased questions like to “how badly do beavers ruin your fishing season? very badly  – not sure – or only slightly badly”  And “on a scale of 1-5 how much do you dislike beavers when they viciously chew down your trees and flood your property”. Not a push-poll in any way, they are respected scientists! Perhaps a few readers of this website will give that survey the careful responses it deserves.

How does California feel about beaver dams and trout or salmon? Well Brock Dolman sent this picture yesterday of the fourth annual release of 170 adult Coho into Salmon Creek Watershed in Sonoma County which he made sure to photograph along side a beaver puppet to make his point.

Could Wisconsin possibly maintain its stubborn position in the face of all this data to the contrary? You know badgers are famous for not giving up even losing battles. Reportedly, their skeletons are sometime found with their jaws still locked together in combat. I guess they don’t call it the “Badger” state for nothing.

Oh and Happy Solstice, by the way! Since today’s another no burn day you can’t have a fire all night to keep up your spirits on the longest night of the year, but light a candle anyway and dream about new possibilities for beavers coming soon!


“Late late yestre’en I saw the new moon
Wi’ the auld moon in her arm,
And I fear, I fear, my dear master,
That we will come to harm.”
Sir Patrick Spens: Traditional Scottish

Sadly, I did not spring from bed at 5:30 to see the Total Lunar Eclipse at the beaver dam. I can offer no excuses for my indolence save these: As cool as it might be to photograph the eclipse over the dam there is no possible place to achieve that angle. And my bed was very cozy, which (given the fact that December is turning out to be a Spare-the-Air MONTH) happens to be the only place in our entire home that IS. I imagine it was very mystical, and that the beavers did not notice it at all.

Father of local fishing guide pleads not guilty

Michael P. Duby, who has a long list of charges levied against him in Alaska, was handed a federal indictment earlier this year for unlawfully selling migratory birds and bird parts and bear hide on eBay. That case is still pending. He was also charged and sentenced this year with illegally hunting in Montana in 2008 and 2009 with his father and a friend, Jeffrey C. Fritz, 42, of Washington. A Gallatin County, Mont., district judge sentenced him to 20 years in prison, with 20 years suspended, after he pleaded no contest in April. The Bozeman (Mont.) Daily Chronicle reported he had been “unable to admit” that they killed 19 antelope and numerous other game animals in Gallatin County without valid licenses, since the federal charges are still pending. The judge had also sentenced him to pay $15,500 in fines and restitution, and banned him from hunting, trapping, fishing or assisting in such activities in Montana for the rest of his life. Frenzel said that bans him from such activities in Alaska as well, according to Alaska state law.

Did someone say “steward”? Mr. Duby was certainly no Steward and exercised no responsibility towards wildlife in a any way. Apparently it was a family affair with father, son and brothers all involved.

Charges against nine other people, including Michael P. Duby’s brothers, have poured out one by one since the younger Duby’s federal indictment in June of this year. Most of the charges have been levied by the Attorney General’s Office of Special Prosecutions and Appeals.  Implicated in the most recent string of charges were Benjamin Olson, 24, and Blake B. Coombs, 27. On Thursday, Olson entered a not guilty plea though his lawyer John Leque for killing and taking a beaver with a firearm on Admiralty Island in 2009. The charges are non-criminal, strict liability offenses that cannot result in jail time, only a fine.

(Got that? It’s not a crime to shoot a beaver, but you aren’t allowed to sell bird parts on ebay. Just so we’re clear.)

Charging documents filed by Assistant Attorney General Andrew Peterson on Oct. 2 stated Olson was hunting for brown bears on Admiralty Island near the mouth of Bear Creek in Game Management Unit 4 on April 30, 2009, with Michael P. Duby. Olson said Duby asked him to shoot a beaver they saw on the beach, and that he did. The document states Olson admitted to shooting the beaver, which photos taken by Duby confirm. Duby skinned the beaver and later sent the hide off to be tanned, the criminal information states. Peterson stated the Alaska Administrative Code regulates the methods and means of taking fur bearers and specifically prohibits the taking of beaver with a firearm on Admiralty Island. State law also prohibits possession of game that is possessed or transported by a person “who knows or should have known” the animal was taken in violation of a regulation, the charges say.

Who got that coat I wonder? Mr. Duby and his associates sound like excellent representatives of the hunting lobby. I can only say I’m very relieved he committed his atrocities against multiple species because we all know nothing happens to you for just  killing beavers.

Empire records reveal the younger Duby, Michael P. Duby, pleaded no contest in 2003 to charges of taking a brown bear in a closed area, hunting for brown bear without a guide, unsworn falsification, unlawful possession of a black bear, and false statements on three license applications. In 1999, he took a black bear under a false resident license.

To be honest, this is one case where I’m not sure there’s that much difference between the criminals and the prosecution. Alaska is not known for its onerous compassion for wildlife. Case in point? This is my very favorite part of the article

Troopers also observed a whole duck being used as bait. Alaska law prohibits waterfowl from being used as bait unless breast meat is removed, Peterson wrote.


*Let it be said that the phrase “Catfish are jumpin'” is almost certainly misleading since catfish are bottom feeders and probably aren’t jumpin’ anywhere any time soon. You can find references on fishing forums to sightings of an occasional Catfish leap but it is very rare. I can only think that they are using the term ‘jumpin’ metaphorically meaning they’re getting ready to be caught….Or, less charitably, that they are big liars.

Or maybe how many fingers it has…or whether there actually IS a right hand at all. Remember the beaver-dragonfly dilemma of Upton Massachusetts? They wanted the dams gone and the beavers dead but the ponds maintained to preserve the rare dragonfly. I heard from Mike Callahan that he had been out to present to the commission and they were half in favor of hiring him and half against. I guess they both got their way because this mornings article makes as much sense as any series of opposite contradictions I’ve ever not-read.

Upton commission decides to lower water level in war on local beavers

Conservation Commission members said last night they will give a beaver control specialist the go-ahead to lower the water level on the 30-acre bog by a foot over the next two weeks, 6 inches per week.

Michael Callahan of Beaver Solutions in Southampton will install a $1,280 pond leveler, a pipe system that pumps water out while keeping beavers away, over the next two weeks, but that is only a short-term solution, Conservation Commissioner Marcella Stasa said.

“Once the level is down, we have to trap all the beavers, because their inclination is to bring the level up to where it was,” she said.

Where to begin? I was excited at the beginning of this article but my hopes were well and truly dashed by the end. Seems one of the commissioners is a former trapper, which, well why shouldn’t he be on the conservation commission? Things that are dead are conserved, right? – well, preserved?  After they finish paying Mike for getting in the near-freezing water and installing the pipe the former trapper has volunteered to pick them off one by one.

Commissioner Tom Jango has volunteered to trap the beavers free of charge, commission Chairwoman Christine Scott said.

Mind you, that quote is from the chair herself, which means the deep confusion in this committee runs from top to bottom. Are they keeping the beavers? Killing the beavers? Draining the pond? Not draining the pond? No one knows, certainly not the reporter who is not nearly as curious about this whole zen cohen as you might expect. Don’t you love how the flow device installation is a short-term solution but trapping is the real answer? I guess Upton thinks these are the LAST BEAVERS and once they kill off these castor-dinosaurs there will never be any others. Who has the heart to tell them?

The gnarled old trapper. The bright young scientist. The peacemaker who won’t take sides. I can’t help thinking that the commission meeting must look something like this.



"Trapping is not about money, Neil Olson of Bethel said. "The day it turns into work. I quit. I just love trapping." Daryn Slover/Sun Journal


Well-known Bethel trapper is one of only five left in the state

Daren Slover: Sun Journal

Olson started trapping as a kid with his father, something Olson is seeing less and less of. “Kids have so many more choices to choose from now. So many more opportunities,” said Olson, the third base coach for his grandson’s baseball team, the Southern Maine Black Flies.”Kids are getting so far removed from nature,” worries Olson.

Olson is doing the best he can to keep kids interested. “My best days trapping are when my grandsons go with me. Trapping teaches kids how to work. Teaches them responsibility,” Olson said. “When you leave a trap, you leave a responsibility out there. The next day you have to go take care of that trap.”

Olson has kept a handwritten daily record of his harvest since 1973. He has trapped 10,600 beaver, more than 3,000 red fox and 1,400 coyotes.

“Trapping is not about money, Olson said. “The day it turns into work. I quit. I just love trapping.

10,600 beaver in 39 years? That’s 271 beaver a year or about a family a week. Gosh, what else can I possibly say?


Patricia Randolph’s Madravenspeak: Rather than slaughtering beaver, we should protect this builder of wetlands

American Indians called beavers the “sacred center” because they create the cradle of life that supports biodiversity, rivaling the tropical rainforests. When beavers were almost exterminated by 1900 for the beaver hat fad, most wetlands were destroyed with them. Now, in some parts of the country, beavers survive at 10 percent of their numbers before Europeans settled here, but not in Wisconsin.

The DNR promotes beaver genocide with unlimited trapping. Trappers sell dead beavers for $13 each. In 2008, the Department of Natural Resources estimated that there were 66,800 beavers in the entire state. During the 2008-09 winter, trappers reported killing 37,425 beavers, and in 2009-10, killed another 31,049, totaling 68,474. The DNR calls this regulated trapping. They cannot call it responsible science.

Thirteen dollars for a dead beaver! That’s quite a bargain. This article from the heart of beaver-killin’ country  in Wisconsin was sent by our new friend from Georgia. Its  heart is in the very best place but its science needs a little bit of work. Hang with us a little while, Patricia and we’ll set you up with everything you need to know. The funniest part of the article was the section about the Trout Unlimited Chair asking for folks to vote to help eradicate beaver.

Kim McCarthy, chairman of Trout Unlimited Wisconsin, posted a letter and DNR beaver survey to the membership on their website that explains beaver destruction. He urges members to respond to the survey “to let the department know that we feel strongly about continuing to remove beaver from trout waters.”

See if we can keep the beavers away and keep draining the trout numbers by removing free trout-producing  dams they’ll be more need for fisheries where they can grow their own with good american tax dollars. And if you think its unlikely that DNR relies on fish hatcheries to pay their salaries, then I invite you to do a random search for employee by subject. There is one wildlife biologist in the entire department that is supposed to be an expert on beavers. There are 20 such experts on trout including two for PR.

The author goes on to discuss the cruelty of trapping and the alternatives of flow devices, but if I were her I’d go straight for the pocket book. How much does the average wisconsinite pay each year for fishery maintenance and reintroduction, while the state is avidly killing the furry engineers that would do the work better, every day and for free.

This wholesale cruelty to beavers and destruction of our most valuable and diverse ecosystems defies all science and is baffling — unless you understand the DNR. Eighty years of killing-license funding has biased the agency to an obsession with destroying our wildlife and the vital natural systems they create.

A solution urgently needed is to legislate general public funding in lieu of killing-license bias. Fair participation of all citizens would create a vibrant Wisconsin, enriched with the beauty of living wildlife as the “sacred center” of wild native nature.

Go read the whole thing. Thanks Patricia for picking up the beaver gauntlet in WI. We’ll be happy to provide you with support and ammunition!

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