I just got word from Mary Obrien about Utah’s new beaver-based water quality website. Check out the new tools and the way they rely on volunteers to monitor the health of their streams. I love seeing beaver science taught on a policy level, but the website looks a little sparse to me. No good photos of beavers and zero reference to Worth A Dam!
Beavers are an important part of aquatic ecosystems in Utah. As “ecosystem engineers” they help restore streams, clean the water, and create habitat for other wildlife.
Scientists at Utah State University need your help in identifying where beavers are located in Utah. Use the fun and easy iPhone or iPad app the next time you see signs of a beaver.
Water Quality – Beaver dams filter excess nutrients and pollution, which improves water quality. Beaver dams also reduce stream channel scouring and erosion of stream banks and decrease sediment loading in lakes and streams.
Hydrology – Beaver dams slow water currents, increasing deposition of sediment and organic material. This stores both water and sediment behind the dam in the beaver pond.
Plants and Animals – The wetlands created by beaver dams provide habitat for plants, which provide food and cover for many types of animals. Beaver ponds help support high diversity and density of bird species. The variety and density of aquatic macroinvertebrates (water bugs) and fish have both been shown to increase in the presence of beaver dams. Beaver dams create ideal habitats for amphibians such as frogs, salamanders, and toads.
Well that’s a good start anyway – (beaver benefits are obviously too myriad to list on a single page, but I like how this is beginning!) There are some great videos on the site teaching volunteers to do basic and not-so-basic water tests, like this one on measuring Dissolved Oxygen.
Want to try monitoring beaver activity yourself? Click here to down load the app.
I just found out that Mary isn’t going to be joining us in Santa Barbara and am so disappointed! Something to do with Idaho and long-horned sheep. The beaver-steelhead conversation will miss your input, Mary. And I will personally miss your steely resolve! Just in case you forgot who Mary is on the beaver who’s who list, here’s a reminder from NPR.
I thought today we’d talk about the very most important thing beavers do in creeks. Sure they raise the water table and filter toxins and increase fish and mammals and birds. But THIS is how it all starts and is an essential action by beavers that makes the quintessential difference.
Beavers don’t have access to mortar so they constantly use what’s on hand to do the job of holding their dams and lodges together. They do this by scraping mud from the pond floor and plopping it where ever its needed. And they do this all the time. We’ve seen very young beavers learning how to do this – starting with a big ball of mud from so far away that by the time they reach their destination it’s a watery teaspoon.
In addition to needing mortar to hold everything together, they also lack bulldozers to dig trenches and canals. So often times beavers will do that work by hand – joining two bodies of water, making a canal to drag trees or even digging a passage to their food cache in freezing climes. Beavers are always moving and removing mud from the bottom of the pond.
The result of all this earthwork is that the floor of beaver ponds tend to look like the surface of the moon (or an english muffin). Nooks and crannies and different elevations everywhere. In fact Dr. Glynnis Hood did some research on this fact and measured pond height with a GPS unit across the water. She found very different elevations across the entire pond. And she found something even more interesting.
It turned out that the differing depths had differing occupants, meaning the biodiversity of the invertebrates changed depending on floor elevation. Some bugs lived in deeper parts of the pond and some in shallow parts, and some in newly dug and some in old channels.
Why does this matter? Because the diversity of bugs sets the table for the diversity of things that eat bugs. (Fish, amphibians, turtles, birds). And the as the population of things that eat bugs grows, it sets the table for the things that in turn, eat them! So more fish and more kinds of fish mean more fish eaters. Which means more otters, mink and heron at the beaver pond. See how important those bugs are?
Dr. Hood recorded and cataloged these differences and presented her findings at the 2011 beaver conference. She and a colleague published this initial paper on the issue. (Another one is in review).
This is the kind of paper that should get way more attention than it will, because it outlines the secret alchemy by which beavers change dirt into gold. I wanted to make sure you knew how it all happened from the ground up. Here’s the abstract and you can read the entire paper here:
Over a 3-year period, including a year of drought, we demonstrate how beavers physically altered isolated shallow-water wetlands in Miquelon Lake Provincial Park, Canada, which then influenced aquatic invertebrates diversity and abundance of functional feeding groups and taxa. Digging channels by beavers extended aquatic habitats over 200 m into the upland zone and created unique aquatic habitats, which became hot-spots for predaceous aquatic invertebrates. Some taxa (e.g., Gerridae and Gyrinidae) were found exclusively in beaver ponds, while Culicidae were primarily in wetlands without beavers. Amphipoda were strongly associated with beaver ponds in drought and postdrought years. During extreme drought in 2009, species richness, diversity and abundance declined dramatically, but recovered quickly in 2010. Although species richness was associated with wetland area, increased niche availability through active maintenance of wetlands by beavers played an important role in aquatic invertebrate diversity and distribution. Understanding the role of common, but seldom surveyed within-wetland habitats in boreal wetlands expands our ability to understand aquatic biodiversity, the importance of habitat heterogeneity and the role of other taxa in species assemblages.
So the next time you see beavers playing in the mud remember that there is no single thing they do that’s more important and you’re lucky to see it with their own eyes!
However, it appears the excavation of beaver channels and their regular use could provide important within-wetland habitats for some aquatic invertebrates.Beaver channels in particular were an important influence in the assemblage of functional feeding groups and served as potential “hunting hot-spots” for various predators. As such,actively intained beaver channels contribute a unique niche that is not found in wetlands lacking beavers. Dominance of predators in activelymaintained beaver channels also suggests that regular activity of beavers in these channels increases the importance of this habitat, not just the existence of the channel itself.
Today’s lovely donation hasn’t actually arrived yet but I’ve been assured it will and I can’t wait. It’s a print of a pen and ink drawing called ‘beaver town’ by Cynthia Robbins Safarik. You have to see it for yourself to grasp the whimsical detail in its entirety. I can’t wait to add this to our silent auction! Don’t you think it would look great as a huge billboard at the entrance to Martinez? Thanks Cynthia!
In some circles, beavers have long been considered pests that damage trees, clog up culverts, and build dams that inhibit or alter the natural flow of waterways. But, to two University of Wyoming researchers, the crafty critters are viewed as natural allies that actually can help keep riparian systems healthy in the short and long term.
Results of a recent study of the Pole Mountain Recreation Area in the Medicine Bow National Forest reveal that beavers can be helpful managers of ecological and hydrological systems.
“The goal of this project was to better understand how beavers impact riparian systems and gain an understanding for how managers might be able to use beavers to enact desired habitat/hydrology management strategies,” says Matthew Hayes, a spatial analyst with the Wyoming Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research Unit at UW.
NO KIDDING! Next thing you know they’ll be telling us that the sun is hot, water is wet, and children are smaller than adults! I can’t understand why everyone needs to prove facts for themselves. Isn’t science based on the idea that the results can be applied to other settings? Yes, beavers are good for fish and birds in Montana and Washington and Alaska, but that might not be true in Pennsylvania so we better do another study. ARGH! Never mind, at least they got the right answers.
The study determined that, when beaver numbers increase in a habitat and trapping of the animal stops, willow counts improve while aspen and conifer numbers decrease. Beavers forage on aspen and use it to build dams.
As a result of the beavers’ action, trout, amphibian, songbird and moose habitat is increased, and foraging for winter ungulate (hooved animals such as deer, elk and moose) improves. This is because, when beavers build dams, the local water table rises.
More water becomes available and accessible to plants which, in turn, increases the width of the riparian system and provides more food for animals and aquatic life. The increased water table can be crucial to these species, especially if rainfall levels are limited in arid systems like Wyoming.
Beaver ponds store water from snowmelt and rainfall runoff events, and slowly release water over time as damming slows water movement. Beavers provide optimal brook trout habitat in southeastern Wyoming and other places in the West, and can be viewed positively by sportsmen, Miller says.
Ya’ don’t say.
Last week Howie Kurtz at Fur Bearer Defender Radio asked for an interview about beavers and drought. I gamely accepted, and it’s posted this morning as the second half of this broadcast. Unfortunately he VERY MADDENINGLY refers to us twice as GIVE a dam. HRMPH! (Worth Worth Worth!) But it’s not a bad interview so you might enjoy it. Click to go to the FBD page where you can listen.
This mornings donation to the silent auction comes to us from Linda at Meadow Valley Lavender. She’s nearby in Byron CA and knows about our beavers first hand. The 2 sachets are each made from 100% cotton fabrics. Each bag is approx. 4″ by 4″ before being filled with dried lavender. The listing is for 2 sachets….one with maple leafs and one with a beaver motif. Thanks Linda!
שנים עשר חודשShneim asar chodesh – Twelve monthsDon PerrymanDec 1 1928 – February 24, 2013
Take the time to watch this very nice report about why it might be a good idea to reintroduce beavers in England and benefit from their water management skills. It’s well worth your click.
Obviously beavers have a significant role to play in water management and when the state of California declared drought in 2014 I thought someone should mention this fact. I wrote a letter to the Secretary of Natural Resources, John Laird about the topic. He happened to grow up in Benicia so I thought he might be familiar with the Martinez Beaver story. When I came home from the hospital there was a letter waiting for me from Dr. Eric Loft of the Wildlife Branch of the California Department of Fish and Wildlife who was asked to respond to my letter.
Attached is an pdf letter response to your letter to the Secretary. You might keep in touch with our Fisheries program staff who are evaluating the utility of beaver
That’s nearly my favorite paragraph. I love that we’ve been ‘heard of’ and made a ripple on the surface of the hard waters of Fish and Wildlife. I’m very happy to think that anybody in Sacramento was forced to sit at their computer and write about beavers for half an hour. And that anyone thought about the issue at all.
Oh yes it will! And it’s sold OUT. So you can expect 50 of these letters next quarter. The Scott River watershed is the place where Fish and Wildlife actually installed a flow device, and you know it is the first part of California that will get beaver smart. I’m glad that he knows to mention this. He goes on to say that beavers are also icky.
Why can’t you require folks try solutions before they kill beavers? And why can’t the state provide an incentive of some kind for living with beavers on your land? How about an environmental tax credit? He goes on to say I exaggerate how many beavers are killed because they only issue a few hundred depredation permits a year. I pointed out that those permits are per incident – not per beaver, so a single permit could take out as many as 10 beavers, or who ever lives in the family. Which adds up to thousands – not hundreds.
Do you think I will follow up and remain part of the discussion? Go ahead, guess. It’s very nice to have a response and contacts for the future, but they are going to need 100 letters like mine to take this seriously. Let’s all do what we can!
Today’s lovely donation to the silent auction comes from Primrose Prints In Norwich, UK. The funny thing is that Jon’s best friend in all the world lives in Norwich, and we are very familiar with the town. They donated a 1935 photograph of two beavers in the stream and generally offer only vintage original prints. Here is one from Grey Owl’s text. Thanks so much Primrose Prints!
A few years ago I read an article about Mike Settell getting a grant from Audubon to do a local beaver count – because beavers have such an impact on bird life. I immediately tracked him down and invited him to the beaver conference where we were able to get him a presentation time so he could talk about his work. Last year Mike installed his first pond leveler’s using Mike Callahan’s DVDs. Now there’s a great article about his work.
About 10 feet onto the creek, he pulls some frozen brush and snow away to reveal that he is standing on top of a large beaver dam. Further examination of the area shows a large pipe protruding off the top of the dam, with a steady flow of clear, cold water spilling out downstream. He then points towards the top of a wire cage bulging above the snow that is covering the pond, like the top of a sunken ship poking through the Arctic ice shelf.
“The Pond Leveler allows the water from the pond to easily flow past the dam and lower the pond level while maintaining some water in the pond,” he explains. “The cage prevents beavers from plugging the pipe and blocking the water flow completely. If a beaver has a stick in his mouth, he’s not going to pass through the cage and plug the pipe.”
According to Settell, flooding roads is among the main reasons beavers are trapped or killed in a stream.
“What myself and others are demonstrating are ways to keep the benefits of beavers without having to kill the beavers,” says Settell, pointing to the healthy willow stand. “We’ve also found that these devices are very cost-effective to reduce localized flooding.”
Hurray for Mike! Taking on Idaho with his bare hands! It’s getting to the point that we have at least one beaver advocate in every state, and many more in some. Can the tipping place be far behind?
“The solution in the old days would be just to destroy the dams and get rid of the entire colony of beavers,” he says, pointing towards the expanse of Rapid Creek. “FEMA has already designated this area a flood zone, so beaver or no beaver, an area like this will flood. It’s just a question of when. What we are trying to do is to retain the beaver pond’s ability to create enhanced habitat and reduce the effects of peak flooding.”
Oh you mean like we did in Martinez 6+ years ago? Yep, our flow device has been doing its job since 2008, and doesn’t show any signs of giving up. Our beavers have been doing a bit of work on both dams and you should go check them out if you can. It’s good to see flow devices going into other creeks!
This morning’s donation comes from Eagle Optics which is a supply side haven for wildlife lovers everywhere. They offer a life time warranty and the best prices on everything they sell. I first learned about them when I was involved with the group watching the San Francisco Peregrines on the PGE building. I asked a trusted biologist about buying Jon a spotting scope for his birthday, and she pointed me straight to what I needed at Eagle. For the festival Eagle Optics graciously donated a 8×25 monocular which is a great way to augment your bird and wildlife watching. It requires less visual control than binoculars so is great for kids and is so small you can slip it into your pocket easily when lugging binoculars isn’t an option. Thanks Eagle Optics for your support! I know your donation will be appreciated.