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

Tag: Brock Dolman


Are you a Beaver Believer? (Click to play mp3)

Susan Allen Report from  Open Range on Aginfo.net. Did you go listen? You really should. It’s one of those fairytale good news reports that are nearly too good to be true. Thanks for the beaverly advice, Susan! We were actually contacted this week by a local rancher who wants to know how to get beavers on his property. I had to explain that California doesn’t allow relocation ‘officially’ like other states. We have a long ways to go before we learn what Washington, Oregon, Colorado, Idaho and New Mexico already know.

Well, yesterday’s Estuary Conference was a good start. Apparently Brock’s beaver-salmon lecture was standing room only and well received. I’m thrilled that he’s willing to keep plugging away at an issue that seems to be picking up steam. The more folk who know what beavers can do for us, and what we can do to keep beavers, the closer we’ll be to a working watershed again.

Last night Cheryl sent an alert that a New Jersey Patch article had released a story about Animal Control offering a new guidelines binder (I assume with a page that says “Don’t shoot beavers in a public park like an neanderthal” or some such thing). Funny thing is that they ran it with Cheryl’s photo attributed to THEIR photographer! I wrote the editor in a proprietary huff and she apologized for the ‘accident’ and changed the attribution. Being that it wasn’t just ‘shown’ but specifically down loaded and reposted on their website I not sure how ‘accidental ‘it was, but its fixed now and I’m happy to help New Jersey see beavers better.

Oh and a final thought about yesterday’s Paleo-beaver discovery: apparently the animals haven’t changed much in all that time. (Why mess with success?) And their place on this planet proceeds any variation of human life by about 5 million years. Just sayin’.



Guess what the Bureau of Land Management found in Eastern Oregon? A pair of fossilized beaver teeth from the rattlesnake nation that are at least 7 million years old! That beats the first beaver record in the US by a couple million years, and the earliest record we have of Castor Canadensis separating from Castor Fiber.

The tooth-worthy occasion has made all the media stops, causing frantic editors to scurry through stock footage for photos of actual beaver and unknowingly pull up nutria. Like here, or here. (I of course set them straight and pointed them to pictures of ACTUAL BEAVERS but a leopard doesn’t often change its spots and I don’t know if they’ll correct them.) Still it’s an exciting time in beaver history! And you can bet it will be the topic of conversation at the university watercooler for a while.


Games of the North American Indians


Beaver teeth were used by natives for a host of things because they were so durable: arrows, knives, axes and dice to name a few! Hardly any self respecting native woman on the pacific northwest would turn down a game of beaver teeth.  So its not surprising that they would be around and in use for a few generations….or 7 million years.

As of this morning I have received this article from 5 beaver friendly sources and three strangers. Let’s just see how the day unfolds, shall we?

In the mean time beaver friend Brock Dolman is presenting today at the estuary conference on the key relationship between beavers and Coho. He passed along this slide which he will include in his talk, I thought you’d appreciate seeing it.

For myself, I cannot help but think that this grand fossil discovery is a Karmic birthday present. Maybe ancient beavers didn’t want me to feel old by comparison?


State of the Salmonids

Restoring Coho Salmon in the Klamath River,
One Beaver At A Time

by Will Harling, Executive Director, of Mid Klamath Watershed Council

Recent studies from Washington and Oregon by NOAA scientist Michael Pollock and others are further defining the intimate relationship between beaver, beaver ponds, and coho smolt production. A recent multi-year study being prepared for publication by the Karuk Tribe, Yurok Tribe, Larry Lestelle, and others, on the ecology of coho in the Klamath River identifies the lack of low-velocity habitats, primarily during winter flood events, as a major potential limiting factor to coho distribution and abundance3. Further studies are needed to relate the loss of beaver and associated habitats to the loss of coho in the Klamath River, but based on other studies, it appears that beaver ponds would provide much needed overwintering and summer rearing habitat for juvenile coho.

Get your Sunday morning coffee and pastry-of-choice to curl up with Will’s delightful account of the relationship between beavers and salmon. His friend Brock Dolman nudged the article our way, and I have been sending it to everyone I can think of. The Klamath is a much-guarded river that has active stewards from headwaters to mouth. It is also the site of some truly MASSIVE historic beaver trapping in California.

Beaver are slowly coming back to the Klamath, recovering from intense trapping that began in the mid-1800’s and continued for nearly a century after, until beavers were almost extinct. In 1850 alone, famed frontiersman and trapper Stephen Meek and his party reportedly trapped 1800 beaver out of Scott Valley, which at the time was called Beaver Valley. The last beavers in Scott Valley were trapped out by Frank C. Jordan in the winter of 1929-1930 on Marlahan Slough1.

1800 beavers. Ugh. My favorite part of the article details the plan between the Mid Klamath Watershed Council (MKWC) and various tribes to create an engineered log jam in a section of the stream that would divert water and create a great wintering space for salmonids –  no doubt filling out forms and applying for grants and getting property owner permission…

This spring, MKWC proposed a project near the mouth of Boise Creek, a tributary to the Klamath near Orleans on property owned by the Coates Vineyard and Winery, that would have used an engineered log jam to re-route the creek around a bedrock cascade barrier at the mouth through a series of existing ponds maintained by several families of beavers (Figure 1). However, before the project could be implemented, beavers constructed a five foot tall dam across the creek at the exact location of the proposed log jam, diverting a portion of Boise Creek through their ponds, and into the Klamath River at a location that provides adult and juvenile fish access. MKWC and Karuk Tribe biologists have observed thousands of juvenile chinook and coho utilizing these ponds through the summer, and moving through the ponds into Boise Creek above the barrier! This fall and winter, we will see if the beavers have also effectively redesigned the creek to allow for adult spawning chinook and coho salmon to access more than three miles of high quality spawning habitat above the barrier.

Sometimes nature knows best. And sometimes she needs a helping hand….

Seiad Creek provides an example of what can be accomplished on larger tributaries, such as the Scott River (once called Beaver River) which has also been degraded through channelization, dewatering, beaver extirpation, and upslope management. Innovative research by Michael Pollock and others on a small tributary to the John Day River in eastern Oregon is demonstrating how degraded stream and riparian habitat can be restored by working with beavers to aggrade streams, connect off-channel habitats, restore groundwater and increase stream sinuosity. At a presentation in Whitethorn organized by Tasha McKee from the Sanctuary Forest this past September, Dr. Pollock showed how wood posts pounded into an incised stream channel at key locations allowed beavers to recolonize sections of the stream and create stable dams that would otherwise be washed out during high flows, resulting in increased off-channel habitat, decreased erosion, and aggradation of the stream channel.

Wood posts to help prevent washouts! Be still my heart! (Shhh, don’t tell our beavers, they’ll be jealous.) It’s all I can do as it is  to keep from bringing a sandbag or two during the rains.)

The restoration of threatened coho salmon popolations in the Klamath River system may be intricately tied to enhanced beaver populations and restoration projects that mimic the positive benefits of beaver dams. Educating the public about the critical role of beaver in restoring coho salmon populations in the Klamath River and other coho salmon streams in Northwest California may also help to decrease take of beaver as a nuisance species and allow them to reclaim their role as an ecological process shaping our streams and valleys.

I love everything about that paragraph except the word ‘mimic’. I have very little patience for killing off beavers and then using bulldozers to do “pretend beaver works” in our streams. From a Cost-benefit analysis perspective alone its ridiculous. And from a beaver-advocate perspective it’s sacriledge.  Anyway, this is a beautiful article. Read the whole thing and pass it along.  In the meantime I am happy to announce that I bought my plane ticket for Oregon yesterday for the State of the Beaver Conference. I will fly to Eugene and get a lift down from Mike Callahan of Beaver Solutions who will be coming from Massachusetts via Portland. Assuming the hotel has Wifi I will continue to endeavor to bring you the very best in developing beaver news, discoveries,  and gossip.

Mother Beaver Carries Mud --- Photo: Cheryl Reynolds



It’s official, the partial schedule for the 2011 State of the Beaver conference is out and I couldn’t be happier. I present just after Sherri Tippie and before Mike Callahan, which if you think about it, is a pretty nice beaver-loving sandwich. Yesterday I introduced Brock Dolman to Leonoard Houston who organizes the conference and now he’ll be presenting on watersheds as well. Brock was so enjoying my lyrics to the ‘beaver and the salmon should be friends’ that he wants to find some eco-singers to do it at the salmon conference cabaret, which made me very proud. I also introduced him to Tom Rusert of Sonoma Birding where I’ll be doing a beaver talk in February. Their recent Mt. Lion talk had 250 attendees! Tom was interested in maybe doing one on the beaver salmon relationship, so I suggested he talk to Brock and they’re getting together to chat next week. Small beaver world.

Of course I asked Brock if the beavers get a ‘finders fee’? And he assured me that he was “fee-ling” out multiple property owners in the region to find volunteers for a beaver re-introduction project, which is the best kind of fee!

Anyway, since I introduced myself to Susan,  Susan to Tom, and Tom to Brock, I’m thinking of starting my own ecological escort service.  I even made this comercial for GQ yesterday!


Beaver friend Brock Dolman wrote yesterday about the finishing touches to the schedule for the salmonid restoration conference 2011 in San Luis Obispo.

I just wanted to let you all know that our ‘Pro-Beaver is Pro-Salmon’ perspective will get a bunch of myth dispelling boosts at next spring’s Salmonid Restoration Federation Conference in San Luis Obispo 2011!  Dr. Michael Pollock will bestow his abundant research-based beaver basics as the keynote speaker for Conference!!!  Fellow Beaver-Booster Paul Jenkin of Surfrider Foundation will inspire us with the exciting vision for the removal of Matilija Dam and Ventura River Recovery!! Paul, like many of us, is clear that “not all dams are not created equally”!!

Afflicted with an unrelenting case of Beaver-Fever – I will be facilitating a day long ‘Sustainable Water Conservation’ workshop, with a roofwater hands-on project and for the morning have lined up for the speakers portion a few of our Castor-Compadres:  Rick Lanman – Beaver-Buddy extraordinaire with his very informative historical distribution information on the pre & post contact occurrence beaver in CA!  Mattolian Beaver-Booster Tasha McKee will be talking about her work with Beaver mimicry efforts in engineering beaver ponds until the real deal can be re-introduced into the Mattole Watershed!

So Cal Steelhead Super-Star – Matt Stoecker will inspire us with Dam removal efforts in the Santa Maria & Sisquoc Watershed and reinforce his observations that where he has observed beavers he has generally observed greater numbers & larger endangered Southern Steelhead!!

This is my favorite part….

Bit by Bit and Bite by Bite – Down come the Trees of Beaver Fallacies …Limb-by-Limb and Whim-by-Whim shall Castor and Coho be comrades again!!??

Thanks Brock (and Rogers & Hammerstein)  for inspiring this….

The salmon and the beaver should be friends
Oh, the beaver and the salmon should be friends
One thing likes to eat a tree, the other likes to swim to sea
But that’s no reason why they cain’t be friends.
Waterbody folks should stick together
Waterbody folks should all be pals
Beavers dance with the salmon’s daughter
Salmon dance with the beaver gals!

I’d like to say a word for the salmon
He swims from little creek out to the ocean
He bumps among the foam, then he jumps to get back home.
I can’t imagine where he gets the notion!
The salmon is essential to the water
He feeds at sea and brings back all its glory
Makes food for other things with the nutrients he brings
And all our fishermen can tell the story!

But the salmon and the beaver should be friends
Oh, the salmon and the beaver should be friends
One thing brings the sea to shore, the other makes the water store
But that’s no reason why they cain’t be friends.
Waterbody folks should stick together
Waterbody folks should all be pals
Salmon dance with the beavers daughters
Beavers dance with the salmon’s gals!

People always worry about beaver
Will dams they build cause flooding when its wetter?
Could all these dams prevent fish from getting where they went
But once we understand we all know better!
The beaver builds without a plan or rebar
His dam makes ponds that all the critters share
In summer and in snow, salmon have a place to go
And everybody hungry gathers there!

Waterbody folks should stick together
Waterbody folks should all be pals
Beavers dance with the salmon’s daughters
Salmon dance with the beaver’s gals!


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