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

Tag: Beavers and Kokanee salmon



A beaver carries twigs to its lodge along Taylor Creek near Lake Tahoe on Thursday, October 4, 2012. The state Dept. of Forestry has been tearing down beaver dams in the Lake Tahoe area to ease passage for coho salmon. Beavers use such dams to store food for winter, so their destruction puts the beavers' future in peril.


Sure we might have worked two solid years researching the nativity of beavers in the sierras, and sure Rick bought every historical volume from Aubrey to Zeiner but even though the papers were published with almost no challenges, and even through the editors at fish and game thanked us personally for our hard work, they might easily have gone unnoticed by everyone in the scientific community who isn’t a regular reader of this website. No one might have known. If a beaver-chewed tree falls in the forest and no one hears it – well, you know how it goes.

What we needed was some massive regional event, pitting beaver nativity against a large scale federal agency. Highlighting in stark profile the issue that beavers were once native in all the places where they’re now routinely killed. We needed a local advocate, some fantastic spokeswoman to sound sincere but intelligent, a white-hat who knows better. We needed a vocal non-believer, and maybe someone salt-of-the-earthy like a farmer or a trout fisherman. But where are we going to get a money shot like that? What are the odds that such a  tempest in a tea pot will boil over just when we need it? Sure we could hire actors to stage this whole drama hope some news crews picked it up, but that takes cash and production value. And where are we possibly going to find actors to play the crazy federal nay-sayers, to say that beavers aren’t native over 1000 feet? No one could pull that line off believably.

Sometimes all your prayers are answered.

LAKE TAHOE – To Sherry Guzzi, the beaver dam on Taylor Creek was more than a watery jungle of sticks and branches. In that snarl of debris, she saw hope for a species long regarded as non-native in the Sierra but which new research claims has occupied the range for centuries and is key to ecosystem health. Late last month, her hope was extinguished when the U.S. Forest Service tore down the dam to protect a tourist facility celebrating a non-native species: kokanee salmon.

“They are doing all this to showcase an introduced species,” said Guzzi, co-founder of the Sierra Wildlife Coalition, a local environmental group. “It’s a little nuts, isn’t it?” The Forest Service, which is holding its 23rd Kokanee Salmon Festival this weekend, defended the action. But spokeswoman Cheva Heck said the agency hopes to make its facilities and festival more beaver-friendly in the future.

And that, ladies and gentlemen, is the best setup for announcing beaver research that you will ever have. To remind you, Sherry Guzzi and Mary Long are the women who were trying to save the beavers in Kings Beach a few years back. Worth A Dam gave them a scholarship and they founded the Sierra Wildlife Coalition and have been working installing flowdevices all over the sierras. Now the stage is set, bring in the scientist.

What’s happening here is more than a flap over a furry, flat-tailed rodent with a penchant for gnawing down trees and damming up streams. It is part of a wider controversy over the role of beaver in nature and their provenance – native, non-native or both? – in the Sierra Nevada.

“A beaver can go 10 kilometers by land or 50 kilometers by water in a day. What would keep them out of the Sierra?” said Richard Lanman, a historical ecologist from Los Altos and co-author of two new studies concluding beaver occupied the range long before settlers arrived.

“Every mountain range from northern Mexico to the Arctic tundra, from the Atlantic to the Pacific” had beaver, Lanman said. “And they were supposedly never native to the Sierra? This makes no sense.”Lanman and his colleagues also write that beavers help “fish abundance and diversity in the Sierra Nevada” and their dams “reduce (the) discharge of nitrogen, phosphorus and sediment loads into fragile w” ater bodies such as Lake Tahoe.”“!

Rick Lanman historical ecologist! Sometimes referred to on this website as our friend “Wikipedia Rick”. He became interested in the nativity issue for the very local reason that he purchased his home from an 80 year-old gentleman who said that he used to be able to ‘fly-fish’ in the stream behind his house all year round. Of course that stream was now ephemeral and Rick wondered if beavers might have something to do with it, but was of course assured by the authorities that they ‘weren’t native there’.

Rick wrote me years ago and we got chatting about beavers and where they belonged. I met a USFS hydrologist at the Flyway Festival who was interested in proving beavers were native in the sierras because they were useful for meadow creation. He introduced me to Chuck James the archeologist who had carbon tested the dam in Plumas county, and a cluster of us started work on the research.

“They have a right to be here,” said Heidi Perryman, founder of Worth A Dam, a beaver conservation group in Martinez. “There is a way to manage their difficult behavior. And there is a reason why you should bother to do it.”

“Killing them is an extreme response to managing their behavior,” she added. “It’s like shooting all the cars that speed. It would work, but at what cost?”

Perryman is one of the researchers whose articles in California Fish and Game, a peer-reviewed scientific journal, challenge the long-held view that beaver did not inhabit the Sierra above 1,000 feet on the west slope.

Some of the most persuasive evidence in the articles comes from a beaver dam found buried along a creek in Plumas County. Samples sent to a laboratory for radio-carbon dating showed the structure was built at the dawn of the Middle Ages, around A.D. 580, and used and reused until around 1850.

Did anyone else just hear a crescendo? What a delicious lead-in to a scientific paper that would otherwise only be dustily published in a journal nobody ever heard of!  Fantastic writing by Knudson, who wrote the USDA articles published earlier. If Galileo had just had a good reporter working on his side, maybe that whole helio-centrism thing might have gone better for him.

In recent days, the Taylor Creek beavers have been busy with matters of their own – gnawing down more aspen and willows to repair the dam the Forest Service tore down. By Thursday, the dam had been rebuilt. But when Guzzi returned to the site Friday, she said it had been destroyed again.

“On some level, (the Forest Service) must realize how ludicrous a situation this is,” said Guzzi. “It’s so counterproductive. They are wasting tax dollars and harassing an animal that is good for the lake and its clarity.”

And that is as good as a button as you are ever going to get out of a beaver article in the northern hemisphere. Great work Sherry! And great work Rick! Great work Thomas Knudson for seeing the forest for the beaver-chewed trees and working the recent publication into your story! It was January 24, 2010 (‘Don’t cause a Nativity Scene) when I first posted about this issue and just the next month met the hydrologist from USFS at the Flyway Festival, tracked down Chuck’s phone number, and had a thrilling phone call that became a ride on the tail of a leaping dragon from there. Not a bad result for two years of effort.


A Beaver Who’s who from out meeting this year at the Occidental Arts and Exology Center: Sherry Guzzi second row second from the left, Rick Lanman, tallest man in baseball cap on the right, to his right Chuck James the archeologist who carbon tested the dam. back row left – me!

Also in that picture (and not in the article but hugely important to the process) are Brock Dolman (center) Mary Long (beside Sherry) Lisa Owens Viani (beside Mary) and Eli Asarian (one ‘s’) who did the watershed figure for the article. Every other person not mentioned you can be sure you’re hear about soon.

All in all a great delivery for a pretty timely message. Go, team California, go!

And late breaking news: the California Department of Fish and Game will soon be called the California Department of Fish and Wildlife! That calls for a celebration!


So Taylor Creek in Tahoe is celebrating its non-native kokanee salmon festival this weekend by ripping out some beaver dams to “PROTECT THE SALMON”. Apparently they ripped out one that the beavers rebuilt overnight. (You see its getting cold in the sierras and that pond is their very important food pantry so mom and dad and the whole family worked all night to fix it so that they wouldn’t starve in the frozen winter.) Never mind. Our stalwart forest stewards ripped it out AGAIN after the photographer left.

Look at the unscalable heights of that dam! Those wheel-chair bound Kokanees surely couldn’t contend with that mammoth structure! They aren’t rabbits for Chrissake! it’s not like the two species co-evolved and thrive together naturally. It’s not like salmon pass dams typically in high flows anyway when the dam is already flooded. And it’s’ not like there’s a peer-reviewed scientific paper in this issue of fish and game proving once and for all that beaver are NATIVE to the sierras! Well- okay maybe there is.

But they made a sign! And took the time to draw a mouse with a hotpad  and everything! Ahh, that’s adorable! Every expense must have been spared to pull together that breath taking artistic rendition to explain your strivings. Obviously their resources are stretched to the bone, what with ripping out dams, lying to the press and drawing on cocktail napkins. All these beavers won’t kill themselves! I thought I’d help them out. How’s this?

Speaking of beavers and making sense, our local family has shifted again back to the bank lodge near the footbridge. last night we saw Dad first, coming out from the bank before 6:30. Mom followed before 7:00 and took some willow back into the lodge. It had been more than a week since I was at the dam, and I was a little worried about Jr who usually always came out first. Why was mom bringing food in the lodge? Was he sick? Unable to feed himself?

At 7:15 junior swam proudly out to get some branches. Dad followed him down stream and stayed by his side until he was back in the lodge. Not sure why they suddenly decided he needs a chaperone but maybe he got into some mischief during the week that we don’t know about. He was obviously alive and well now, and very supervised, so we were relieved and headed home. Here’s a shot of Dad, who no longer seems as massive but easy to spot by his unique hair do:

 

Oh and according to our stats, 347 of you read this website yesterday, and only 51 of you watched this video, which I think is a very small percentage considering junior had such a hard week. Let’s try that again and see if we can get him the recognition he clearly deserves.


Well the publication of our articles on the historic prevalence of beavers could not have come at a better time, because it’s beaver dam removal season in the Sierras. The dams are ripped out on Taylor creek because  ‘the non-native beaver dams’ allegedly interfere with the passage of the kokanee salmon in the area, (which were also introduced, by the way). The Kakonee festival is this weekend and Ted Guzzi of the Sierra wildlife coalition was on hand to talk to the reporter Thomas Knudson (Sacramento Bee – remember the USDA fiasco reporter) who has taken an interest in this story. Ted was showing around a photographer from the Bee. The story will run on Sunday’s front page , and it throws the entire beaver nativity issue into the crosshairs because folks have been defending their annual atrocities by saying beavers aren’t native since before Eisenhower was president. We have already had a few amusing letters of outrage which I am not at liberty to discuss but suffice it to say that the Sierra Wildlife Coalition is now the frontlines of the battle and we in war torn Martinez are watching the action while sitting comfy in the back row.

Nice.

Oh and here’s another reason to value beaver ponds, thanks to our apparently-not-so-mortal-enemies-after-all over at this South Carolina Hunter site

Beaver Ponds and Ducks

If there was ever the perfect recipe for small water duck hunting it is found with our friend the beaver. A match made in proverbial heaven. When beavers dam creeks they flood large amounts of crop fields and or woods. This provides the perfect habitat for the beaver and for all types of waterfowl. The flooded timber will quickly succumb to the flood waters and the trees will die. This allows for cavity nesting birds to carve out homes in these dead trees. The edges of the flooded timber will provide ample food, and the typically shallow water allows for the perfect recipe for aquatic vegetation to grow and provide quality food for mallards, widgeons, gadwalls, and others. These cavities and surrounding mast producing trees draw wood ducks, like ants to a picnic. Beaver cause an estimated $22 million dollars of damage in South Carolina annually. There is little doubt this large rodent is a menace. But for the water fowler, the beaver is perhaps his best friend.

Wow….what can one say to that but…um thanks?


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