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

Category: In the News


The beaver friend who went to med school at North Western has been closely following the fate of the Illinois Lincoln Park beaver and now connected with a current med student who also happens to be a beaver fan. She recently took this photo and put it on wikipedia to highlight the plight of the urban beaver.

Along with the judiciously chosen quote.

Few sightings of wild animals in Lincoln Park have caused as much excitement as when a beaver was spotted swimming across the middle of North Pond one winter day. Being a creature more associated with wilderness streams and rivers a beaver inside the city limits was unusual indeed.
— Scott Holingue, Tales from an Urban Wilderness, 1994

The prescription for those beavers is obviously “take two physicians and call me in the morning.” I’m hoping for good things for the Lincoln Park Beavers.

From the ‘worst of times category’ I offer this recent news report about the resurgence of the use of Castoreum in French perfume. (Not for the faint of heart)


Civil War tonight. Beavers Vs. Ducks.Winner goes to the Rosebowl. Even a pleb like me can tell that’s a big deal. This is one day out of 365 that you will be surrounded by cheerful beaver-believers. Enjoy! Don’t forget to wear orange!


One thing I know:
the only ones among you who will be really happy
are those who will have sought and found
how to serve.
Albert Schweitzer

 

 

Photos: Cheryl Reynolds

I got an email yesterday morning from Jennifer Brennan of Allied Waste. She’s the beaver supporter that has helped us for two years with trash cans at the festivals. Seems she was watching the weather get cooler and thinking compassionately about what it would be like to be homeless as the days get more unpleasant. She went rummaging through her house and found some blankets she would like to donate for the homeless, and she wants to get her coworkers to contribute.

Why did she email me? Because she wants to give these supplies specifically as a thank you for “keeping an eye on the beavers.”And she hoped I could connect her with our creek regulars to make sure that the most beaver benevolent get the bulk of her donation.

It is true that some of our most regular faces at the dam site are people without a home to go to. I am always surprised how much beaver information they have picked up over the years, and how, by and large, they have been protective. (Maybe they can relate because Martinez hasn’t exactly been thrilled about their presence either!) I think Jennifer’s idea is a great way to encourage further protection, and a truly compassionate act that makes a lot of sense.

She will work on her employees and get back to me. If you’d like to add anything to the contribution (like sleeping bags or jackets) let me know and we’ll coordinate.

My second story of generosity came at the end of the day, when I was attending the John Muir Association Board Meeting. Turns out one of our local NPS rangers, Ralph Bell, is in Samoa doing crisis work through the National Park site there. The park had several rangers go missing after the tsunami last week, and has been involved in the rescue and grief work efforts as well.

As a grad student I was peripherally involved with supporting the CalTrans workers who were doing the horrific front-lines work of dealing with our own earthquake disaster nearly 20 years ago. Often Caltrans was the first on the scene, and these were some grisly scenes. I know its tough, draining and exhausting work, and part of what makes it bearable is the comfort and support of the people who are doing it with you.

So thanks Ralph and NPS for helping samoan victims recover and restart their lives. Our beaver friend from New Zealand, William Huges-Games, just wrote that it feels like a war zone in that part of the world right now. New Zealand has gotten part of that weird orange dust from Australia, a lot of random earthquakes, and a tsunami warning after nearby Samoa’s troubles. They are kind of holding their breath to see what might happen next. As we creep closer to October 17th, we can completely relate to a terrifying and dislocating earth-rumbling event, and we are grateful there are people like Ralph and Jennifer to help out.


More From our Foreign Correspondent: Alex Hiller

Susanne Horne Max Planke Molecular Ecology

Criminal Intent on beaver fossils:

How can you be sure the injured beaver from the road shoulder is not a stranger in the night but legally belongs to its geographical habitat? – Just show a tissue sample to Susanne Horn at Max-Planck-Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology in Leipzig, Germany and get its DNA analyzed.

In her lecture she mentioned a DNA probe of an injured beaver recognizing it as member of the inherent Eurasian beaver species Castor fiber and not of the North American species Castor canadensis it was suspected to be according to the untypical color of its anal gland secretion. DNA research was done on the data basis taken from dozens of  tooth and bone samples of ancient beavers throughout Europe.

Beaver Populations can be distinguished even locally by the genetic  DNA sequences. Extensive hunt in the 19th century had led to the extirpation of beaver in most parts of Europe except for a few relict populations thus providing a bottleneck in the genetic diversity.

According to the Symposium`s student award winner of the 2nd price, Susanne Horn, “ancient DNA can provide information on the indigenous beavers of a certain area. These results reflecting the history of this species, can now be taken into account by maintenance projects, when planning the relocation of beavers.

Speaking of anal gland secretion (AGS) the 1st price of the student’s award was won by students from Telemark University College, Bo, Norway, on investigation “whether information about age and territory ownership (social status) is coded in the AGS of male Euroasian beavers” ( c.fiber ). Experimental scent mounts in a field study using a free ranging population in Telemark, Norway, as well as chemical analysis confirmed the preliminary suggestions:  The older son of a male intruder appeared to pose a greater threat to resident beavers than the younger son and the intruder itself, suggesting “that dominant beavers carry a `territory owner`badge making them perceived as less a threat than beavers without a territory. ( Helga Veronika Tinnesand, Susan Jojola, Frank Rosell )

Regarding beaver territory the participants of the Symposium were shown the findings at a prehistorical beaver site and its suggestions on the development of the beaver species:

Excavations at an ancient peat bog on utmost northern Canadian Ellesmere Island disclosed in its permafrost ground well preserved bones, sculls, claws and teeth of prehistorical beavers as well as hundreds of sizzled sticks with teeth marks at age of 3 to 5 millions of years ago  (in short = mya ) just before Ice Age. Natalia Rybczynski of Canadian Museum of Nature, Ottawa, who led the excavations, did research on the form follows function relationship regarding ( 1 ) swimming, ( 2 ) grooming claw and ( 3 ) woodcutting .

Rybcynski`s findings to ( 1 ) were, that the stream-line body , its modified webbed hind feet  and modified tail developed 23 mya with its tail as a “propulsive structure” while swimming for getting thrust. The specific form of a flattened tail developed only 5 to 10 mya whereas the ancient grooming claws ( 2 ) had presumably developed 30 to 35 mya and could be distinguished easily by their specific shape different from regular claws at hands and feet throughout millions of years. Woodcutting behavior ( 3 ) could be proved by investigations in National Zoo of Washington, DC: Video analysis of beaver teeth in action cutting wood gave evidence that beaver make use only of one incisor in adjacent position at one side of their jaws, that means beaver gnaw sidewards providing a mean cut width of 60 % of Incisor width. Exactly the same pattern was analyzed on the sizzled sticks of 3 to 5 mya from Ellesmere Island.  As a result wood-cutting behavior in beavers is presumed to have developed 23 mya. What still remains to be unsolved according to Rybczinski is the development of dam-building behavior of beavers.

Sticking to the teeth of beaver fossils, Dr. Clara Stefen, Curator of Mammals at Senckenberg Museum of Natural History , Dresden, Germany, presented her research on length to width ratios of upper and lower molars of beaver sculls to determine the evolutionary progress.

Best

Alex Hiller

DONATE

TREE PROTECTION

BAY AREA PODCAST

Our story told around the county

Beaver Interactive: Click to view

LASSIE INVENTS BDA

URBAN BEAVERS

LASSIE AND BEAVERS

Ten Years

The Beaver Cheat Sheet

Restoration

RANGER RICK

Ranger rick

The meeting that started it all

Past Reports

January 2025
M T W T F S S
 12345
6789101112
13141516171819
20212223242526
2728293031  

Story By Year

close

Share the beaver gospel!