How beaver-connected am I? I’ll tell you how connected. I was sitting home minding my business yesterday when I got an excited email from the former governor’s former water advisor that there was an article about beavers in this month’s Estuary Newsletter, and THEN the author of the article, Lisa Owens Viani wrote me that her article had been published!
Because it’s not what you know about beavers, its who you know. Am I right?
Beaver dams may offer wildfire protection to western watersheds
in addition to providing better-known benefits such as groundwater recharge, wetland and habitat creation, and riparian restoration. A new study by California State University Channel Islands professor Emily Fairfax analyzed satellite-derived vegetation indices of riparian areas and beaver dams mapped via Google Earth. At the same time, Fairfax analyzed data for large (over 30,000 acre) wildfires that had occurred between 2000 and 2018 in California, Wyoming, Colorado, Idaho, and Oregon, and compared the fate of beaver-dammed areas to areas without dams. Fairfax found that riparian corridors within 100 meters of beaver ponds were buffered from wildfires. “In all of them, the beaver ponds made it through the fire and stayed much greener. The beaver-dammed riparian zones were functioning differently,” says Fairfax. While the riparian areas without beaver dams eventually recovered on their own, she says, vegetation in the areas with dams stayed green and did not go through the amount of habitat destruction the other areas did. Fairfax was surprised by the amount of beaver damming and wet meadow development she found in her study. “Those colonies have probably been there for hundreds of years, making it through wildfires. There’s not a chance they haven’t burned in the last 200 years.” With drought and wildfire increasing in the West, she says, this latest finding is yet another reason to welcome beavers back to Bay Area waterways. As if we NEEDED another reason to welcome them back! Wonderful! Emily’s excellent research is leaping to the head of the pack, and not a moment too soon because at this rate by the time we’re done sheltering in place it will be another fire season. Thanks Emily and Lisa for helping beavers spread the word. We shouldn’t be at all surprised. Only a somber and dignified researcher could produce a doctoral dissertation of this caliber. [wonderplugin_video iframe=”https://youtu.be/Qed6ubPoGrE” lightbox=0 lightboxsize=1 lightboxwidth=960 lightboxheight=540 autoopen=0 autoopendelay=0 autoclose=0 lightboxtitle=”” lightboxgroup=”” lightboxshownavigation=0 showimage=”” lightboxoptions=”” videowidth=400 videoheight=300 keepaspectratio=1 autoplay=0 loop=0 videocss=”position:relative;display:block;background-color:#000;overflow:hidden;max-width:100%;margin:0 auto;” playbutton=”https://www.martinezbeavers.org/wordpress/wp-content/plugins/wonderplugin-video-embed/engine/playvideo-64-64-0.png”] |
2 comments on “GOODNESS GRACIOUS, GREAT BEAVERS OF FIRE!”
Allen Lebovitz
April 17, 2020 at 8:46 amThat’s excellent work, thanks for sharing. I’ve been working on similar research, and there is precious little data still to support the argument that beaver improve wildfire resilience. Great to have another piece of the puzzle to work with. It would be great to hear more about Emily’s research.
heidi08
April 17, 2020 at 9:17 amAgreed! Keep us posted on your work, Allen!