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

Category: Why We Care


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Toward An Executive Order Protecting Beaver on Federally Managed Public Lands

By Jack Humphrey Rewilding Earth

An interview with Suzanne Fouty and Adam Bronstein

 

 

 

Suzanne Fouty has been exploring the issues of water and the return of wolves in the West for over 30 years, the contributions made by beaver to ecosystems for over 25 years, and the synergy between beavers and wolves in restoring stream systems for over 10 years.

Her work on wolves began in 1990 at Yosemite Institute where she gave weekly presentations to students on the pending return of wolves to the West and some of the social questions in play related to livestock grazing and ranching on public lands and wolves.

She worked for the Forest Service in eastern Oregon as a hydrologist and soils specialist for almost 16 years before retiring in 2018. Since retiring she has been deeply involved in five recent efforts to close federally-managed public lands in Oregon to beaver trapping and hunting as a proactive response to climate change and biodiversity loss.

Suzanne was included in the PBS Nature episode “Leave it to Beavers” and featured in the film “The Beaver Believers.” Her writing and presentations have been primarily for the general public to share how beavers and wolves contribute to preparing communities for climate change via stream and wetland restoration, and the social and political obstacles getting in the way of those contributions.

 

Adam Bronstein is the director for Oregon and Nevada with Western Watersheds Project, a non-profit conservation organization working to protect and restore public lands and wildlife throughout the West. He is the host of Wilderness Podcast and also serves as board president of the Gallatin Yellowstone Wilderness Alliance in Bozeman, Montana, working to protect the remaining wilderness-quality lands of the Custer-Gallatin National Forest.

 

Topics

  • History of Beaver trapping and hunting on public lands
  • The requested executive order to close federally managed lands to beaver hunting and trapping
  • Drought and flood management with Beavers on the landscape
  • Beavers and their role as a keystone species

Extra Credit

 

Below are some posters that you can post on your favorite social media sites to let more people know about the petition and why it’s important to treat us as a partner and not as a product or problem! 

 

 

FYI: There’s a recent techy research article here: Beaver pond identification from multi-temporal and multi-sourced remote sensing data. Also, rumor has it that Heidi will be back posting soon. YAY!

 

Bob       


Today’s guest post is from Ottawa beaver observer, Sylvie Sabourin. I know you’ll appreciate its heartfelt concern.

They say actions speak louder than words. For the beaver family that lived along the Great Trail, words were not even a concept, but actions showing trust certainly were. They trusted me. They trusted probably most humans, at least the ones who did not seem to pose a threat. And it is the story of that trust that ought to be told, rather than the one of the irreparable acts that broke it.

Sylvie Sabourin

As the lodge was built and channels were dug into the muddy bottom of a stream, as mud was applied to channel the water, and cattails dragged into the lodge, as I stood there silent, day after day, sometimes just only for a few minutes, trust grew. The family of beavers was going on with its business, often smelling the human scent hanging in the air, making eye contact, ultimately learning there was nothing to fear from the human standing there. The adults deepened the channels, rerouted them, brought mud on the banks, rearranged branches on the lodge, cementing them with more mud. They grazed on the new grass growing on the muddy flats they created and chewed on birch branches but a few meters from me. They brought many leafy meals for the two generations of kits waiting to feed on them.

Under my eyes, the kits tried to dig and collect the mud, pulled small twigs, swam around. They explored the habitat and every day ventured a little bit further or did a little bit more to help upkeep the channels. They came close to where I was, as curious of me as I was of them, trusting I was no threat. Over time, I was afforded rare glimpses of the “secret life” of beavers.

Sylvie Sabourin

One day, a grooming session between one adult and a young was starting as I arrived. They looked at me standing there, only a few meters away, and kept grooming each other until they were done. Another day, one of the smaller young ones in a playful mood went and swam around the huge adult who was montionless, resting maybe after hard word. It circled it, nudged it, swam right under its nose. Like all young mammals would to get the attention of a parent and play a little.

Another day, one of the adults set off on a small trail they had made heading to a grove of trees. It stopped, looked back, waited for the other adult to follow. Mom and Dad were going to fetch dinner, I thought. Indeed, they shortly came back with branches for their young. I gingerly, quietly, almost apologetically, went into that birch grove from the opposite end of it that was accessible on foot.

As Idiscovered a whole new side of the beaver’s habitat, I knew I was now truly in their territory. In my heart I gave thanks for being there, apologized for the intrusion, and slowly and lightly tread around, careful not to leave a mark, looking at all these felled trees and the chewing work with both awe and a deep humbling feeling. And among all the fully or partially cut trees, there was this birch, just felled, with bright autumn leaves still rustling in the breeze. Looking around and figuring the beavers would not show up, I decided to leave. “No, wait. Just one more minute. Just in case,” thought I. And from behind the cover of the freshly fallen foliage, a few seconds later I saw it. The larger beaver was walking right toward me, probably not seeing me at first, not smelling me since the wind was contrary. It stopped, chewed a branch at the far end of the tree, looked up at me, smelled the air and, unfazed, proceeded to get closer to me. As I was standing there, my heart missed a beat. Silly questions descended on me at once: are beavers aggressive on land? What do I do if it gets closer? Barely voiced in my mind already dismissed in the aura of trust and perfect serenity floating around.

Sylvie Sabourin

The beaver was the biggest of the clan, the male probably. The biggest I have ever seen. I stood still and opened myself to that encounter. It came even closer, started chewing on a branch, merely a meter from me. In awe, I slowly raised my camera and took some photographs. The beaver stopped, looked up at me, made eye contact, smelled my presence… and resumed chewing. After cutting the branch, and dislodging it with an astonishing brute force, it proceeded to drag it toward the water about fifty meters away, where its kits were waiting for supper. Thanking silently and profusely Mother Nature for the privilege she had given me, I left the grove as I had come in, still in awe over what had just happened there: that was TRUST. Raw. Beautiful. Wordless. Unadulterated trust.

I so deeply wish this story of glimpses of the life for beavers had a beautiful ending, as beautiful as the trust that family of extraordinary creatures put in me all these months.

Sylvie Sabourin

Unfortunately, suffice to say reeling with the shame of belonging to the same species than whomever did it, that the whole six of them, three generations of healthy beavers, were “disappeared” in the following days.

Sylvie Sabourin

And ever since, it has been gnawing at me… that feeling of not having been able to prevent their fate, the feeling of broken trust, not by my actions, but by the mere belonging to the same species that did it.

So, in their memory, and in the memory of that beautiful trust they put in me, that other creature of Nature that I am, I just wanted to share these encounters and photographs.

I owe them that much, since I was powerless to save their life…

Sylvie Sabourin

Thank you Sylvie, and never doubt that you and other watchers like you are far less powerless than you think.

 


Oscar Wilde said famously, “There is only one thing worse than being talked about, and that is NOT being talked about”, I’m sure he knows all about what it’s like to read a thesis that analyzes their life in granular detail. Too bad we can’t talk about it over a beer. I’m sure it would help settle my head.

Last night I got a copy of the second draft of Zane’s thesis about the Odyssey of the Martinez Beavers. His oral defense will be May 17. So that means it’s pretty much a done deal. For it he conducted 24 interviews of locals involved with the case, including our city council, reviewed documents and video and news articles. Eventually it will be published and I can quote freely from it but for now let me just say how very WEIRD it is to read a thesis about your life. All the quotes from participants were coded but I mostly can tell who everyone was. Which is also weird

ON THE ACCEPTANCE OF URBAN BEAVERS IN

MARTINEZ, CALIFORNIA

By

Zane Eddy

A Thesis Presented to The Faculty of Humboldt State University
In Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree
Master of Science in Natural Resources: Environmental Science & Management

I can’t tell whether its more like going to your own wake OR hearing closing arguments at your prosecution.

As a woman who survived my own oral defense I can tell you this is pretty much a done deal. The proposal orals were grueling with all kinds of changes and suggestions. But the final orals were really ceremonial. My committee was so relaxed that one member breast fed her infant during the review. Even the more stringent member confined himself to recalculating my statistics on his watch. Having been totally blindsided by the proposal firestorm I came armed with every article and argument but I needn’t have bothered.

It was like graduation day and high tea rolled into one.

Happy Graduation day, Zane.

I have blocked off the code until I hear from Zane it can be actually shared, but  this should give you an ample idea of why my saturday was weird.


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When I first joined the John Muir Association there a handsome, slender well spoken great grandson of John Muir served as well, Michael, was an impressive  member. Having lived with multiple sclerosis since he was 15, he knew how dramatic its impact could be and how it could separate people from being in nature and feeling their own power. He started the nonprofit Access Adventure using the strength and motility of powerful horses to bring the disabled back into the world. He remains an inspiration to everyone that meets him, and I treasured those days he worked with us.

Yesterday I saw on facebook that his home and sanctuary in Vacaville/fairfield burned to the ground. He and his horses got to safety, but there was nothing left of the home and retreat he had built from the ground up. All the  carriages and personal treasures, all the paddocks and fields, embers and ashes, I heard from a fellow board member that he is understandably devastated. I can’t imagine what it is like to lose the world you built in a moment.

To see a World in a Grain of Sand
Slip away to something dire
Hold Infinity in the palm of your hand 
And Eternity in a fire
 

The fire yesterday ravaged more and more places and people we care about. The air is heavy with smoke, ash, and bitter dreams. You can taste it even indoors  There are going to be a million stories like Michael’s. The town of Vacaville, the very home that little rescued beaver lived in, burned out of control. The freeway was closed because of all the smoke, and who knows whether that beavers family even survived. Fire doesn’t play favorites. The homes of heroes burn along side the homes of villains.

Like cancer, multiple sclerosis, and even lace we get fire whether we deserve it or not.

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It’s a dire time. With dire things happening everywhere you are unfortunate enough to look. In addition to the police horrors and the recent spike in infections there was a fire Wednesday night in Suisun that burned the home of our friends at the  Wildlife Center, Several residents didn’t survive that fire, although others were freed by volunteers and the firemen.

Fire that killed wildlife, devastated homes in Suisun was arson, officials said

Blackened debris and soot-covered marshland defined the Suisun Wildlife Center Thursday, where a massive wildfire the day before had damaged outbuildings and taken the lives of three resident raptors and four gray squirrels being readied for release.

Thanks to the actions of amazing volunteers and firefighters, Executive Director Monique Liguori said, the center’s other animals and the main building were saved.

“We’re hurt but we’re grateful,” she said. “It could have been so much worse.”

Maybe its the stress of everything else, but the thought to me of a captured owl dying in a fireand unable to get away to protect itself was just heartbreaking.I wanted to help if there was any way I could. Monique Liguori is the director and lifeblood of the center. She bravely was one of our first ‘legitimate’ displays at the beaver festival and has joined us ever year since 2009 I think. When I reached out to convey my horror and support she said that lots of the center had been saved and that they would rebuild. The mayor of Suisun even started a Go Fund me page for the effort.

Just three volunteers were at the wildlife center when danger presented itself, and they swiftly worked to evacuate the animals. Many went home with the volunteers, while firefighters opened the outdoor cages and encouraged the creatures to leave.

Kaiu the one-eyed coyote hid in his house, where he was later found safe and sound.

But Griffin and Gwen the Great Horned Owls perished, the flames boring holes into their enclosures. Four gray squirrels also died, their enclosure a pile of rubble behind the owl house.

“I raised them from babies,” Liguori said of the squirrels, who were in the pre-release stage.

I know you’d want to contribute. Click here to go to the GOFUNDME started by the mayor.

Oh and here’s your reward for kindness. Photographed last night by Rusty Cohn of Napa. Two kits, one much larger but both siblings starting their explorations together.

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