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

Tag: Beavers


How’s this for a delightful beaver read? You can thank the good folk at North Coast Land Trust in Oregon for this article. Check out this spring’s newsletter that features our hero. It’s quite a testimonial. They must have heard Michael Pollock’s talk at the Oregon beaver conference because they are clear and dramatic disciples! I’m thinking the reporter deserves a little thank you note as well. Enjoy!


Monday, May 24, 2010

5/21/2010 1:12:00 PM

Beaver colony gets its teeth into restoration work

By CASSANDRA PROFITA
The Daily Astorian

SEASIDE – A colony of beavers is hard at work building dams up to 100 feet long in Seaside’s Thompson Creek.

The creek is home to one of the largest runs of coho salmon on the North Coast, but it’s floodplain has been choked out by invasive plants.

Much to the delight of leaders at the North Coast Land Conservancy, which owns 80 acres on either side of the creek, the beavers have engineered a way to use invasive plant material to fight further invasion while simultaneously restoring the floodplain and creating juvenile fish habitat.

The beavers moved in and started restoring the creek before the land trust even got a chance to invite them, said NCLC Director Katie Voelke.

“Beavers are like nature’s engineers,” said Voelke. On Thompson Creek, they’ve designed a way to restore wetlands and juvenile fish habitat at a fraction of the cost of a human-engineered restoration project.

NCLC is inviting the public to celebrate beavers and their positive effects on the natural landscape from 10 a.m. to noon Saturday.

Thompson Creek cuts through the 31-lot Thompson Falls Estates subdivision, which was designed to preserve connections between existing streams, tributaries and ponds. The area is living proof that people and beavers can coexist, Voelke said.

Beavers have used invasive blackberry and Scotch broom around Thompson Creek to build dams that are drowning out invasive reed canary grass and clearing the land for native plant growth.

Beaver dams decrease the flow of water in the creek, creating pools where juvenile fish can rest and feed and allowing the creek to spill out into the flood plain and recreate natural wetlands.

The beavers are building dams to secure food for their colony, said Doug Cottam, district biologist with Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife. But the fringe benefits help fish and other wildlife including elk, who graze on the herbaceous plants in the habitat the dams create.

Cottam is involved with the state’s Beaver Work Group, a diverse team that helps find solutions to conflicts between people and beavers – particularly on salmon-bearing streams. Common problems between beavers and people arise when beavers eat people’s plants or crops or when they cause flooding problems. The work group is currently designing a system of relocating beavers from areas where they are unwanted to areas where they are needed.

“From a biologist’s standpoint, they’re considered a keystone species,” he said. “They play a key role in the stream aquatic environment. They provide very valuable habitat for a variety of fish and wildlife species. They create an environment where vegetation of all kinds grows and insects flourish – they provide an incredible amount of food for other species.”

On Saturday from NCLC will explain how the industrious beavers are restoring an entire ecosystem, one dam at a time. To get to the site, follow Lewis & Clark Road east from U.S. Highway 101 in Seaside for a half-mile to Nygaard Road. A map is available at (www.nclctrust.org/event_beavers2010)

Because the event happens to be during NCLC’s invasive Scotch broom removal Broom Buster week, volunteers will be on the property removing the invasives from 9 a.m. and 3 p.m. To join in that effort, bring gloves and loppers, and pack a lunch.


This has been quite a week for beaver advocacy. Dad beaver made an important tree removal decision so mom has been hanging around eating the remaining branches. She’s coming out around 7:45 so its a very civilized time for beaver viewing. Taryn of Wisconsin writes that there was a town meeting last night with a lot of good feeling and an engineer stepped forward to volunteer his services to protect the culvert and keep the beavers. I also got three confirmations this week for our musical lineup for the beaver festival!

On Wednesday I got a package from Mike Callahan of Beaver Solutions containing an early copy of his soon-to-be-released beaver management DVD. Of course you now I dropped everything and got out the popcorn for a preview. I was so pleased and impressed at how clear and understandable he makes this work. Every part of the process is explained in a step-by-step, easy to understand, how-to video. And guess whose lovely beavers frolic in the background!

My footage of the Martinez Beavers is sprinkled throughout the first chapter – Mom coming over the secondary dam and our 2008 yearlings working at repairs. Ahhh what a treat to see them put to such good, beaver-saving use! An impressive testimonial section at the end is filled with burly, public-works-types, saying how they were doubtful at first but now they are grateful it saves them such time and money! At the end is a reference section with other documents about beavers and beaver management, including the ‘what good are beavers’ we collaborated on.

Truly it was a thrilling and affirming moment to see that this work will get easily done by beaver advocates for generations. The package also contained a generous donation to Worth A Dam which I will surely find good use for. All in all it was like one of those graduation moments where you sniff at your child growing up, remember all the late nights and know in your heart how importantly they’re going to contribute. I have it on very best authority that Worth A Dam will get a few copies for auction at the festival, so you can share the moment.

Yesterday I received a lovely thank you note from powerhouse Diane Burgess of Friends of Marsh Creek Watershed for the talk I did there last Thursday. Truly the very best friends beavers could have. Monday I will be giving the same presentation to the Environmental Alliance at the John Muir House and Tuesday our artist Frogard Butler will be helping me tell the beaver story to St. Catherine’s preschoolers. “Once upon a time there was a mommy beaver and a daddy beaver and they looked and looked for just the right place to make a home for their family” Ahhh, that’s going to be fun.

Always an adventure, up on beaver creek!




(With apologies to Eddie Cantor.) I just can’t think of any better musical number to announce the results of the Parks, Marina, Recreation & Library Commission meeting last night. They were reviewing the final request for the Third Annual Beaver Festival this August 7th to be held in the still nameless (but destined-to-be-called Beaver Park) in downtown Martinez. The commission took a brief look at the application, spoke in glowing terms about the tile wall and the events popularity, and gave a unanimous thumbs up! The whole thing took about 10 minutes.

Later that night I got an email from Shell that the festival will receive a sponsorship of 500 dollars from the oil company. All in all it was a wildly positive beaver day, and it needed a big, big hollywood theme song.


You all remember how way back when Skip Lisle came to Martinez and basically saved our beavers? Well lets just say we returned the favor this weekend!  I caught a report from the town of Thetford, Vermont – about 60 miles from Skip’s front door. It said that those pesky beavers were damming under a culvert and threatening a road. Recently there had been a decision to stop cleaning the culvert and kill the beavers.

Some residents of a Vermont town are upset with a decision by local officials to try to kill beavers who keep rebuilding a dam that threatens a local road.Every day, workers in Thetford remove the dam that is rebuilt every night near a culvert on the Godfrey Road.The select board voted 4-1 this week to trap and kill the beavers, since town officials says they can’t legally move live beavers and release them elsewhere.

Actually the news story did mention a ‘beaver deceiver’ saying that the city knew about the solution and had sagely decided to kill the beavers first and install the culvert protection later in July. (A decision surely destined for our WTF beaver files). Of course that kind of forward thinking deserved a letter. Or twenty. I wrote the station, the chair of the conservancy, and the select board for Thetford, which is like the city council in an East coasty ‘autonomous collective’ kinda way.

Beaver Deceiver inventor lives 62 miles from town of Thetford

Listening to Jackie Bender’s report of the troubled culvert in thetford is like hearing someone in silicon valley complain that they couldn’t turn on their computer. Skip Lisle is the inventor of the Beaver Deceiver and lives an hour away. There is absolutely no reason to kill beavers now and then make improvements later. The female beaver is likely pregnant, and I can’t imagine a less humane decision. Culverts can be soundly and cheaply protected, and beavers make incredible improvements to wildlife, habitat and water quality.

Mr Lisle can be reached here (I gave his contact info). There is no reason for a major news outlet to not report on responsible solutions and irresponsible failure.

Heidi Perryman, Ph.D. President & Founder: “Worth A Dam”

You never know what kind of ripples a letter might stir in the right hands. I got a series of very interesting responses. The most exciting from the news station, which, from the general manager, to the station manager, to the programming manager, down to the reporter, was interested in this story. They were smart enough to see how this was going to play in the cheap seats and kitchen tables and knew that it wasn’t going to go away. Unlike the select board, which was probably hoping for eactly that. I was notified that they were contacting Skip for an interview yesterday. Here’s the more cheerful report.

Thetford, VA

One option proposed by locals is a Beaver Deceiver.

A Beaver Deceiver is a special fence built outward from a culvert. The fencing prevents the beavers from getting to the culvert, but still allows fish to move through it, city officials said.The idea is that the fence forces the beaver far enough away from the culvert that the animal apparently decides the effort to dam the stream is no longer worth it.A special meeting is scheduled for Tuesday at 7 p.m. for town officials to talk to the community about the beavers.

Aww shucks. Consider it Martinez’s way of paying a debt that we remember every November and every rainy season. Hope you get some good press outta this Skip, and I hope a hundred directors of public works watch the news and learn that beaver problems are manageable.

 


Day 1 of the flyway festival was amazing in almost every way, with fantastic connections between beavers, birds, salmon, and natural history. If you can’t remember what birds and beavers have in common look here. Details of the day will follow, but I thought I’d get you in the mood with some adorable footage of mom and dad trying to keep the young’ins in the lodge.

I started the day off with a note from Leonard Houston of the State of the Beaver Conference. He said the event was an incredible success, and thought that it seemed a good idea to announce our next beaver festival to everyone in the room! Which he did.

Why Beavers Are Worth A Dam” Sunday at 1:30. Wish me luck!

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