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

Tag: Protecting trees from Beavers


Press Photo by Betsy Simon Dickinson resident Bradley Robertson surveys a tree in Jaycee Park on Friday, where beavers are blamed for damage to some of the trees.

“I was walking along the river two weeks ago when I noticed the trees and reported it to the person at the front desk at parks and recreation,” said Dickinson resident Bradley Robertson. “They said someone else had called before and that fencing would go up, but fencing isn’t going to be enough. They need to trap the beavers and set them loose somewhere else.

Clearly one of the limiting factors of maintaining a beaver website is plot variation. There isn’t any. Beavers build dams and cities get upset. Let’s call that Example A. Beavers block culverts and cities get upset. Let’s call that Example B. Beavers Chew trees and cities get upset.

Let’s call that example ‘C – for CHEW.

Residents and users of the area along Heart River near Jaycee Park are concerned that beavers may chew down all of the park’s trees if the Dickinson Parks and Recreation doesn’t step in.

“There’s not much I can do about it. They won’t let me shoot in the city limits,” he said. “And that it’s not my responsibility anyway. It’s the park board’s responsibility.”

“I’ve reported it to our staff operation manager, who will check it out and wrap with chain link, and we’ll contact the city forester to see if they will be salvageable,” he said.

Chain link? To give it that prison-yard look? I don’t suppose you’ll leave any space for the tree to grow? With their chain link tourniquets those trees should all be dead in NO time!

Maybe I should keep form letters for the three predictable solutions. I’ve been writing them all individually but why bother? They all require exactly the same advice. Get that man who wants to help but can’t “use his gun in the city” and put a paintbrush in his hand. Take some latex paint that matches the color of the bark and toss in some mason sand – (about 5 oz per quart of paint). Stir it up right before painting about three feet up the trunk on all sides. Voila! The gritty texture will discourage chewing and your trees will be safe. You’ll need to repeat it in about two years but visually it will look much less ‘penal’ than chain link.

If the trees are not salvageable, Kramer said they would be taken down but didn’t know how soon the issue would be resolved.  He said it has been two or three years since a trapper was called to the area around Jaycee’s Park and the baseball field.

“The thing is we can’t chain link or wire mesh around every tree,” he said. “Obviously, one of these trees is probably past the point of being salvageable, but we have some years where we go without any issues. It’s not like it is a problem we see coming. Typically, we don’t see activity until after the damage is done.”

Sigh. Example C – corollary 1. Don’t rush to take the trees out that the beavers cut down. The roots will still prevent erosion for a good long time – and depending on the species they’ll provide energy for the tree to recover its ‘root/shoot ratio’ by stimulating a natural coppicing effect when shoots grow back. Maybe you could put a little park sign to explain it to visitors. I know you’re in North Dakota but look what your next door neighbor is teaching today in Montana:

Home / News / Montana & Regional / Montana & Regional Montana tribes hold annual honoring of Flathead River Story Discussion Video Image (3) By VINCE DEVLIN of the Missoulian | Posted: Tuesday, May 8, 2012 9:30 pm | No Comments Posted Font Size: Default font size Larger font size buy this photo TOM BAUER/Missoulian Tim Ryan explains to fifth-graders from Ronan Middle School how a fish trap was made and used at the Confederated Salish and Kootenai Tribes’ annual River Honoring on Tuesday. The event brings hundreds of fourth- and fifth-graders to the lower Flathead River for two days of education.

When beavers take down willow trees to construct their dams and lodges, Ryan said, what is left eventually sprouts the fairly thin shoots that are the perfect material for fish traps.

Longer shoots were used to make the cone-like enclosure, while short ones were shaved into sharp points on one end and bound to the opening at an angle. Fish could enter unscathed, but would run into the sharp points if they tried to exit.

“Every time I do one, I thank the beaver for helping make my ribs for the fish trap,” Ryan said.

Well, I’m glad we had this little chat. Just remember example C – corollary 2: beaver chewed trees create ideal nesting habitat for migratory and songbirds. You like those things, right?

That’s why Kramer looks to users of and residents around the city’s parks to be additional eyes and ears for him and his staff.

Fair enough. Can we be the brains too?


Beavers felling trees at Liberty Twp. park

I will be the first to admit that this website has not always been kind to Ohio.  What with  the horrific tale of the grandma clubbing Bambi  with the garden shovel,  – and then (grrr) tigers – it’s a state that has occasionally provoked my most prodigious wildlife scorn. BUT this story could set a new trend for the region. Seems some smart beavers took up residence right behind a wildlife professor’s home and when beaver started eating trees in the park he nudged the city to consider humane methods of protection.

Township officials and residents worry that the fallen trees may cause erosion along Gregory Creek. Over the last four to six weeks at least 30 trees – possibly as many as 50 – have been cut down by the beavers.

The animals use their teeth to gnaw around, and eventually cut through, trees until they fall, said Rick Jasper, an assistant wildlife management supervisor for the Ohio Department of Natural Resource’s District 5 office. The beavers cut through the tree’s bark to the inner green, which contains minerals and nutrients.

Naturalist Chuck Holliday and resident Dave Lintner, whose property abuts the park entrance, have also found evidence of a dam being built in the creek.

“I’ve seen a beaver twice in the last two weeks when it’s almost dark,” Lintner said. “Based on the amount of activity and damage I’ve seen… there’s probably a pair.”

To try to prevent the beavers from felling any more trees, Holliday and Lintner are asking township residents to join them Saturday at the entrance to Cherokee Park, 4616 Watoga Drive. From 9 a.m. to noon they plan to put two-foot high chicken wire around the base of the trees to keep the beavers from gnawing them.

Well done, gentleman! This is Dr. Charles Holliday’s website, an animal physiologist who teaches at Lafayette College in near by PA where he’s been publishing recently on cicada predators. Nice work getting the  town involved and protecting the trees without a shotgun! But pssssssst….here’s some beaver physiology for you….chicken wire would only be a good solution if beavers were the size of chickens. And while 2 feet of the stuff may keep away….hmm…badgers ….its not going to help against beavers. Especially once you get two feet of snow on top of it!

Let’s used galvanized fencing wire OR let’s paint trunks with mason sand up to the height pf 4 feet above the expected  snow line, okay? Check here or here or here for directions. You may be surprised to know that sometimes city officials allow this stuff to be ‘done wrong’ so that they can justify trapping later when it predictably doesn’t work. But it’s possible I’m a cynic.


I never heard of that kind of tree before? HackberryCeltus Occententails. What’s it related too? Looks like its a kind of elm. Any common names I might be more familiar with? Oh, of course.

BEAVERWOOD

Oh and did you notice last night’s full moon by the way?  You know what the farmer’s almanac calls it, right?



This bit of urban brutality was taken from  the dashcam of the Bridgeville Police in Pennsylvania. No I’m not kidding, in today’s post-911 world even beavers can expect the surveillance of Big Brother in their more private moments.

The local Patch Reports:

“There’s some big beavers down there,” Bridgeville Councilman Jason Sarasnick said.

Several trees have been damaged in the park in the past week, which is located next to Chartiers Creek across from the Bursca Business Park in South Fayette. The beavers caused so much damage to one tree that it fell and another tree had to be removed.

“We don’t have any issues with dams yet,” Bridgeville police Chief Chad King said. “But I drove down there the other day and there are at least a half-dozen trees he’s chewed on, if not more. He’s chewed just about every one.”

One of the critters was seen over the weekend by a Bridgeville police officer on patrol in the park. The police car’s dashboard camera recorded the critter chewing on the trunk of a tree shortly before midnight Sunday.

Borough officials contacted the Pennsylvania Game Commission, but were told that the animals could not be trapped until late December because they’re protected.

Ohh who doesn’t remember waiting impatiently as a child for that late December morning when Santa Clause said it was finally time to kill beavers! Peeking around the doorway in your footy pajamas to see if there were heavy bodies in the conibear under the tree! Fortunately in the meantime EVERY EFFORT is being made to protect these majestic cottonwoods.

In an effort to deter the beavers from inflicting more damage, borough workers wrapped black roofing paper around some of the trunks near the ground.

Wow, Black Roofing Paper! This borough really doesn’t mess around! You know how beavers feel about BLACK! And they hate paper almost as much as they hate what it’s made from! This plan should definitely work! And plus when it rains I bet the paper will add a really interesting dimension to Chartiers Park!

Obviously the fine civic minds in Bridgeville have this all wrapped up (ahem) but just in case I’ll write he mayor, the parks department and the them know about real solutions.




Photo: Cheryl Reynolds



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