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

FLASH FLOODS AND RODENTS


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The horrors of Texas have been making me remember this passage:

In her 2008 book, Finding Beauty in a Broken World, author Terry Tempest Williams writes about her two-week stint with prairie dog researchers:

“In 1950, government agents proposed to get rid of prairie dogs on some parts of the Navajo Reservation in order to protect the roots of sparse desert grasses and thereby maintain some marginal grazing for sheep. The Navajo elders objected, insisting, ‘If you kill all the prairie dogs, there will be no one to cry for the rain.’ The amused officials assured the Navajo that there was no correlation between rain and prairie dogs and carried out their plan.

The outcome was surprising only to the federal officials. The desert near Chilchinbito, Arizona, became a virtual wasteland. Without the ground-turning process of the burrowing animals, the soil became solidly packed, unable to accept rain. Hard pan.

The result: fierce runoff whenever it rained. What little vegetation remained was carried away by flash floods and a legacy of erosion.”

BEAVER FESTIVAL XVII

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