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

PARKS CANADA RESEARCH SCIENTIST IS SAVING SALMON FROM BEAVERS


This may be the funniest headline I’ve ever come across and had the displeasure of reading. All the stereotypes are firmly represented in the article, it’s an fairly tightly written piece of disinformation, someone should be very proud. I thought you’d appreciate the reminder that our work is not yet completed. In my younger days I once wrote protecting salmon from beavers is like protecting banks from money. It’s like protecting Whole Foods from Vegetarians, or protecting Stanford from bequeaths or protecting Steve Young from footballs.”

I truly used to be even more sarcastic than I am now.

Ecologist concerned beaver dam on Langley creek bad for salmon

A Langley man is hoping that a little help from a local streamkeeping group can allow salmon to migrate up Walnut Grove’s Munday Creek again, after beavers set up shop with a sizable dam.

Marlow Pellatt lives near the creek, around the area of 96th Avenue and 208th Street, and he only recently noticed that beavers that thrown up a sizable dam, one revealed by the The dam, not far from the culvert where Munday creek runs to the west under 208th Street, stretches around 30 feet or more across the ravine floor.

With water still high from recent rainfall, a small lake of about a quarter acre in size had formed behind the dam.

Pellatt, an ecologist himself, doesn’t begrudge the beavers their habitat. But he worries it will impact the environment of another species that has been slowly returning to Munday Creek – the salmon. He’s concerned they won’t be able to make it over the dam to get to their spawning grounds farther up the river.

You know some days I wake up and think, gosh people have gotten so smart about beavers, there’s hardly anything left for me to do. I mean I can’t make fun of anyone for being hopelessly wrong anymore. My skills at mocking have whittled down in atrophy

And then something like this comes along and reminds me why I get up in the morning.

Last year, the Yorkson Watershed Enhancement Society announced that coho and chum salmon had returned to Munday Creek in record numbers, thanks to the gradual replacement of old culverts along the watercourse. The fish had made it as far inland as 88th Avenue, and there were also small jacks or trout spotted by Yorkson Watershed volunteers.

Over the summer of 2020, the Township of Langley replaced five culverts on the creek. The old ones had been so badly blocked that salmon could only get upstream when water was so high that it overflowed the culverts and the salmon could go around them.

Salmon-friendly culverts and bridges have been going into creeks in the Walnut Grove area since about 2004.

“In a perfect world there would be predators, more creeks with salmon, and less human impact,” Pellatt said. “In our world we sometimes have to intervene to help out the species we have impacted. We improved the culverts last year and the salmon run was better than it had been for decades. This year a beaver dam has reversed much of this work.”

A beaver? A beaver? A lone beaver? Like the lone ranger who just rides the range looking for some salmon’s lives to ruin? You must be a BRILLIANT ecologist. Fully worthy of the title since you don’t know that beaver families work together AND that their ponds make crucial habitat for juvenile salmonids. You know, places that don’t dry up or freeze.

Pellatt spent several days trying to find help from Langley Township, the DFO, and other agencies, but said it was the Yorkson Watershed society that has stepped in.

They were planning to work with Pellatt to make a couple of gaps in the dam, where the fish can get through.

Holes where the fish can get in and the water can get OUT so that all those baby salmon freeze. That sounds like a good idea right? I’m afraid it’s worse than we thought. Dr. Pellatt isn’t just an ecologist, he works in the office of the CHIEF ecologist research scientist at Parks Canada which means that his fears and opinions, such as they are, carry a LOT of weight. Here he is talking about eel grass and climate change.

Now I’m suddenly understanding why Judy of Port Moody had such a hard time working with the salmon folks in BC. Looks like we have some work to do. I’ll start simple.

 

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