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

Tag: Discovery News


Jennifer Viegas is the science blogger for the Discovery News website. I can no longer remember how we crossed paths but as she lives in the city she certainly heard something about the Martinez Beaver bruhaha. I joined facebook primarily to have contact with her, since she was too famous at the time to email. I sent her the article from Wildcare and she liked the idea of beaver fatherhood as a story angle. Yesterday she wrote that she had pitched the idea to her higherups and gotten permission for a beaver-related post. Could I provide some photos and  quotes for the story?

Of course I could. This morning I was rewarded with some beautiful writing and great beaverpress! Go read the whole thing and like it on facebook if you’re so inclined! I will correct proudly that the first photo is MINE not Cheryl’s and is in fact a screen grab from video I shot that night….other than that there is only one part that’s wrong, and that is that we never saw dad work on the lodge. That was always mom’s domain. All in all a perfect way to start off father’s day weekend.

Beaver dads are often among the best in the animal kingdom, but one beaver widower who lost his long-time mate merits special attention.  “Dad,” who lives in a Martinez, Calif. beaver colony, was suddenly left with three young kits to care for when his devoted partner died of an infection. They had previously raised 12 other kits together.

Heidi Perryman, president and founder of Worth a Dam, told Discovery News, “We were worried about their (the three kits’) safety. Would Dad be able to provide for them and could he care for them as well as she did? Would they learn everything they needed to know without a mother?

Go read the whole thing! It’s well worth your time, and Jennifer was even kind enough to post my dad video (set to the tear-inducing vocals of Charlie Hayden) which has me very, very pleased. I also like how it implies mom’s tail scar was some kind of special uber-design, rather than the healing mark of an old injury. There’s a children’s book in there somewhere: beaver embarrassed about scar, scar turns out to be the thing that everybody recognizes and loves about the beaver, and that beaver goes on to save countless other beavers. The moral is that you shouldn’t be afraid of what makes you different, because its what makes you special and unique! Are you with me?

When Mom was alive, Dad never received much onlooker attention because Mom was such a crowd favorite. She had a distinctively patterned tail that made her easily identifiable.

Dad may not have such natural tail bling, but he’s now drawing fans in California. His family seems to think he’s pretty amazing too.

Cheryl sent this excellent (though uncomfortable) looking photo this am from her visit to the secondary dam. The green Heron had just caught a mouthful that expert Peter Moyle at UC Davis identified as a nice native fish: the Prickly Sculpin. Ow! That’s got to be the  breakfast of very careful champions!


Green Heron eating Prickly Sculpin - Photo Cheryl Reynolds



How Beavers Helped to Build America

Once abundant and widespread, beavers helped to forge the ground under our feet, making water safe to drink and the land an oasis for life. Yesterday’s update from the Discovery News blog was as good as we’re likely to see in this year or the next. It reviews the newly published research by some folks at Colorado State who have been using Ground Penetrating Radar to identify the effects of beaver dams on the substrata for the last 4300 years.

For the study, Wohl and colleagues Natalie Kramer and Dennis Harry used both ground-penetrating radar and near-surface seismic refraction to detect beaver-induced sedimentation.

My my my. The article is written by Jennifer Viegas who has been a benignly distant observer of the Martinez Beaver story for years. (I guess at one time we were fairly difficult to ignore).

The study determined that beavers contributed 30-50 percent of post-glacial sediments in the target area. “I think it very likely that our results are not unique to the Beaver Meadows study site, but also apply to other regions with relatively low rates of sediment yield to valley bottoms,” Wohl said.

She explained that beaver dams interrupt the flow of a stream, creating a backwater effect of reduced velocity. Sediment deposits in the backwater zone of the beaver pond, with this material remaining “in storage” until river erosion may mobilize it and carry it downstream.

The process is beneficial to humans, she continued, because “wet meadows associated with beaver dams have higher habitat and species diversity for plants, insects and other invertebrates, amphibians, reptiles, birds and mammals — pretty much all forms of life.”

Can I get an Amen? Astute readers of this blog will already know immediately where my mind headed the moment I read this article: If historic beaver dams can be identified from above ground in Colorado why not in the Sierras? Why not use GPR to prove what we’ve been struggling to document with painstaking ethnographic & archival research?

(Odd aside. I stumbled into GPR during the great sheetpile panic of 2008 when I was unsuccessfully imploring the city council they didn’t need to stick steel plates through the beavers’ living room. I suggested that they use GPR to find those alleged “tunnels” and make sure there was actually any problem in the first place. I even raised a few eyebrows when I suggested that they take a lesson from family court and if the study FOUND holes the city could pay for the radar, and if there WERE NO HOLES the property owner could pay. Of course you all know how that worked out.)

Never mind. This is an EXCELLENT article. Go read the whole thing. My very favorite paragraph  comes at the end, and it kept me grinning for much of the day.

Due to intense beaver hunting, habitat destruction, pollution and other problems, the beaver population has plummeted by the millions in recent decades. Since beavers can impact human activities, their presence in areas remains controversial. Conservation groups such as Worth a Dam in Martinez, California, however, work hard to maintain beaver dams through responsible stewardship and to educate the public about the many benefits associated with beavers.

Thank you Jennifer for dropping our name at the end of such a bountiful list of beaver beatitudes! And thank you University of Colorado for showing us the beaver foundation beneath our feet! Next time you hear folks talking about our “Founding Fathers”, spare a thought for those Founding Beavers who laid rich soil across the united states, shaped our waterways and were trapped and made into hats as a thank you.

Maybe we can do better?

 

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