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

Category: Beavers


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Look what dropped last night. I will adapt a permanent link for the website but I thought you’d want to check it outright now. It goes state by state with the best and brightest ideas.

Guess what state isn’t mentioned?

Beaver Management Planning: A Review of Existing Plans and Programs With Recommended Best Management Practices

Beavers provide many ecological benefits, from building drought and wildfire resiliency to acting as a natural disturbance regime on the landscape. While traditionally managed by states as a furbearer species, effective beaver management can happen at any jurisdiction and has the potential to also support and steward watershed health and biodiversity through education, coexistence measures, relocation, and when necessary, trapping or lethal removal.

This report strives to inform beaver conservation and management processes by providing approachable and realistic examples that achieve desired management outcomes while simultaneously elevating watershed restoration via human-beaver conflict resolution and education. This report can be a resource at any stage of the plan or program development process, from plan development to enacting, growing, or strengthening existing beaver management plans or programs.

To download the full report click here.


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From a popular spiritual occultist in 1922: One  might say he knew as much about beavers as RFK knows about vaccines.

“We must say to ourselves, the beaver is an extremely stupid, phlegmatic animal! It is stupid and phlegmatic to the highest degree. Wonderful. But where does it spend the summer? It stays in the ground in its solitary burrow, allowing heat and light that comes into the burrow to penetrate its body, so that it actually absorbs all the summer sunlight and warmth. When this absorption is completed in the fall, the beaver begins to look for other beavers, and together they become clever. It employs a cleverness that it does not possess as a single animal. Now, suddenly, as they gather together, the beavers become clever. Naturally, as single animals they could never construct all those beaver villages. The first step of choosing a suitable site is already clever.

This clearly illustrates what I pointed out last time: the cleverness that is in a creature must first be gathered, just as water is collected in pitchers. What does the beaver do while as a single animal it lives like a hermit in its summer house? The beaver gathers sunlight and the sun’s warmth for itself—or so we say, because all we can perceive is the sun’s light and warmth. In truth, the beaver gathers its intelligence. Along with sunlight and warmth, intelligence streams from the cosmos down upon the earth, and the beaver gathers it for itself; now the beaver has it, and it builds. With the beaver you can see in reality what I recently presented to you as a picture.

Something else now becomes comprehensible: the beaver’s tail. Compare it with what I said about the dog’s tail, the dog’s tail being its organ of pleasure and therefore the soul organ of the dog. The dog wags its tail when it is happy. In the beaver’s case it is so that within its tail, which the animal does not use as a tool but which is formed most ingeniously, the beaver has its accumulated intelligence. With it the animal directs itself. This means that the beaver is really directed by the sun’s warmth and light. They are contained in the tail and have become intelligence. This is really the communal brain of this beaver colony.”

RUDOLF STEINER

10 January 1922

Health and Illness II, GA 348

  1. The Power of Intelligence as the Effect of the Sun—Beaver Lodges and Wasps’ Nests

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What a great use of citizen science!

Community-Engaged Beaver Research & Monitoring

September 2427

Join us in the field this autumn as we launch a new, community-powered beaver monitoring project in the Malheur National Forest!

Difficulty level: Moderate (walking on uneven terrain and in water, bending, field data entry)

Itinerary: Volunteers can sign up for one or multiple days. Carpooling from Bend will be available for multi-day participants, or you can meet us on-site in the Malheur National Forest.

Tasks: Volunteers will join trained staff to walk stream segments, identify and record beaver sign (lodges, dams, chews, slides), document habitat features using standardized protocols, help input data using a tablet. This monitoring effort was developed with the US Forest Service and Oregon Department of Forestry, and your contributions will directly inform statewide beaver and watershed management.

What you’ll need: A positive attitude, a strong work ethic, and a collaborative mindset. Plan to bring clothes and food to keep you comfortable throughout the day, as well as camping equipment if you aim to camp.

We’ll provide survey tools, training, and waders if needed!

About the Project: For over a century, beavers in Oregon were treated as pests, rarely studied or protected. However, beavers are now recognized as a wildlife species whose ecological role must be considered in management decisions. However, we still lack basic data on where beavers are, how they use their habitat, and how their populations are changing. This project aims to change that. We’ll be surveying over 100 stream reaches in Eastern Oregon; filling critical knowledge gaps while building public participation in wildlife conservation.

Why Join? This is a unique opportunity to: see active beaver habitat, learn how to identify subtle (and sometimes dramatic) signs of beaver activity, contribute to science-based conservation in real time and build friendships and stewardship skills on public lands.

RSVP to Reserve Your Spot! We’re aiming for 4 participants per day, so grab a friend, pick a date, and come experience the power of community science in action.

What a fantastic to monitor your beaver populations! No satellites or drones just boots on the ground, You’ve only got a week left to sign up. You know that guy you like in biology class? Ask him to join you and see if you can spend saturday together walking streams. He might look great in waders too.

You never know.

 


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It’s my birthday today and as I have been officially out of the hospital for a fortnight and spent the last 20 years of my life saving beavers in one way or another I cannot help but believe that this article appeared just in time to celebrate my 60th. Thank you Rob!

How Mutualism Between Humans and Beavers Can Boost Our Ecosystems (and Our Happiness)

“For making our lives better, we might allow the beavers simply to live.”

I have been walking, nearly daily, past the lodge of beavers who have begun to asynchronously collaborate with a group of engineers. In this case, the engineers did not reshape logs that had been carved by a beaver. Instead, they shaped a river and then let the beavers respond.

BE STILL MY HEART! Beaver appreciation from North Carolina? URBAN beaver appreciation from North Carolina? This is the best present a girl could ever receive!

A number of years ago, the stream was partially lifted up from beneath cement and restored. Like many stream restorations, this one attempted to make the stream more natural while also dealing with the realities of the human-built environment through which it moved. This process, led by a group of engineers, engendered a much more natural stream, and yet, as is often the case with engineered streams and rivers, one that was relatively straight, with few opportunities to meander or slow down. Modernity is ill suited to the natural peregrinations of streams and rivers.

Urban streams, even once restored, suffer a number of ailments intrinsic to their circumstances and surroundings. Urban streams accumulate the waste of cities—runoff of pesticides, herbicides, oil, and whatever else. They also become “flashy.” When it rains, all of the water that falls on the cement of the city pours, ultimately, into the stream. This causes the stream to become, quite suddenly, fast and deep. Then, after the rains, the stream becomes slower and shallower again.

Sounds exactly like Martinez.

In addition, because the runoff from rain is often heated by the cement over which it runs (the urban heat island effect), it comes into the stream hot. Such was the case with Rocky Branch. As a result, although there were more wild animals able to live on and in it than there had been before the restoration, there were still many fewer than would have been found in the creek before the city was superimposed around and atop its watershed. The animal species that persist are those with the capacity to cling tightly to rocks and tolerate extreme heat. In seventeen years of walking down this stream, I experienced relatively few surprising natural history moments. No herons. No turtles. No frogs. Few fish. Then a pair of beavers moved in.

These were not beavers in the abstract sense, not representatives of a species, but instead two specific beavers, a pair. Unlike many other beavers, these specific beavers were willing to dam a flashy urban stream. Doing so is difficult; such dams are often washed out in each new big storm. But unlike most beavers, these beavers were able to do so relatively successfully. We could ask why the beavers moved in just then, in that particular year. Perhaps it was because the trees along the restored creek had grown back enough to provide the material the beavers needed to build a dam. Perhaps not. What we do know is where the beavers in North Carolina came from, a few states north.

European colonists in America killed beavers primarily for their furs and for their scent glands, which were (and are) used in perfumes.Picture someone draped in beaver fur, smelling of beaver. The enthusiastic desire for the aesthetic trappings of beaverness led to the extinction of beavers from many parts of what had become, by then, the United States. The word “extinct” is a little deceptive, in that it doesn’t have an active form. The beavers did not “go extinct,” but instead were rather actively extinguished. After beavers were extinguished in North Carolina in 1897, they needed to be reintroduced. The beavers were shipped from Pennsylvania in 1937. NC State’s beavers were likely descendants of that successful reintroduction and rewilding of our state, of beaver begets beavers beget still more beavers. That rewilding led to this beaver act of resistance.

As an esteemed professor of Applied Ecology you should know. You are well prepared for beaver appreciation. Smart. I was much less prepared as a child psychologist. What did I know about streams or beavers?

Never mind. They taught me what I needed to know,

Over the past two years, I have had the luxury of visiting the beavers’ ponded wetland in person, which I’ve done again and again. Through these visits, I have tallied a growing list of species living in the wetland above the dam. At first, the wetland was sedate. Then mallard ducks appeared. Some Canada geese came and went. Eventually, a great blue heron materialized, stalking the water for fish. Also, sometimes, a belted kingfisher. These birds bespoke the arrival of fish. Most recently, I’ve begun to regularly spot grackles, some blackbirds, green frogs (and their tadpoles), and a turtle. The turtle is large and old and must have walked from some farther water toward this new and righteous, riotous place.

My visits to these wetlands are often social. I socialize with the species the beavers have gathered around them. Sometimes I see a human friend, such as Quentin Read, when I’m walking past. Quentin has spotted a barred owl above the dam (for which I now watch), and, in the winter, an eastern phoebe, and, in the spring, an American redstart. Recently, I spotted a white-tailed deer, which looked out at me from between some weeds before bending slowly but purposefully down to drink.

Unwittingly, the beavers and the engineers worked together to produce something much richer than what either could have done without the other. Before the work of the engineers, the creek might not have been slowed by a beaver dam. At least in parts, it was too fast, too flashy, and too circumscribed by humans. The engineers facilitated the return of the beavers. Without the beavers, the engineers had been unable to create a habitat for the many species that love and live in slower water. The beavers facilitated the return of a biologically diverse ecosystem. The beavers and the engineers collaborated asynchronously. Like many collaborations, this one has been imperfect, a halting dance. The engineers did not create a stream that was easy for beavers to live in, and yet it was a collaboration all the same.

But maybe this relationship was something more than an asynchronous collaboration.

I am in love with this article and the simple familiarity of someone visiting a beaver pond over time and seeing its dramatic changes.

When NC State professor Nils Peterson and his students studied the effects of birding on student happiness and stress, the students walked along Rocky Branch. They walked past the beaver dam and the beaver pond. They saw the birds that the beavers had recruited to the landscape. This reduced their stress and appears to have also made them happier. How much of a role did the pair of beavers play in this?

One might argue that there is a kind of mutualism between the beavers and our campus. But if that were the case, there would need to be some sort of benefit to the beavers from the humans on campus. Historically, humans have certainly not benefited beavers. Hundreds of millions of beavers have been killed in the United States by humans to make furs or perfume or because of the “nuisance” of the floods that their dams cause. In that way, humans seem among the least beneficial species to beavers. We are predators or parasites on their existence. A sword of Damocles hangs over the beavers—our sword.

When I was a kid and unclogging the culvert, my job was sometimes complemented by another form of beaver control. When there were “too many beavers,” a group of families would hire a trapper, someone like Woody, to come in and “remove” some of the beavers. It is likely, if the Rocky Branch beaver dam becomes too effective, and spills water over the paved trail along the river, that the city will trap and kill the beavers. In light of this potential, the implicit mutualism is sobering. For making our lives better, we might allow the beavers simply to live.

This is the same sort of mutualism in which we are engaged with millions of the species on which we depend for our well-being, species that benefit us and that benefit from us when we, with our Earth-shaping power, allow them to go on doing so, whether that means the species that pollinate our crops, the species that clean our drinking water, or the species that devour our pests. The great hope as we move forward is that we can imagine and create a world in which even more of the species that benefit us thrive, that we benefit ourselves by benefiting them. In the meantime, the beavers on Rocky Branch are still there, tending to their pond. I visit them nearly every day, and when I do, more often than not, I see other people there too. We stand side by side as though admiring a work of art, the city’s gray canvas slathered with the green and muddy sublime.

Excerpted from The Call of the Honeyguide: What Science Tells Us about How to Live Well with the Rest of Life by Rob Dunn. Copyright © 2025. Available from Basic Books, an imprint of Hachette Book Group, Inc.

I have already written Dr. Dunn and thanked him profusely for this present. You can believe I’m buying the book. We all need to stop every morning and smell the roses, notice the birds, and pay attention to the beavers.

BEAVER FESTIVAL XVII

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