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

Tag: Salmonid Restoration Conference


BirdWord: Beaver dams help birds’ habitats

BirdWordsBeaverDam_14245812_ver1.0_640_480

SHASTA COUNTY, California – Special to the Record Searchlight Last October found the Sacramento River dropping lower and lower. The slough along Redding’s Cascade Park dropped to ankle-deep water. The ducks were gone. But wait, despite low Keswick Dam releases, residents along the slough noticed the water level begin to rise.

 Puzzled, they followed the slough down to Cascade Park and discovered an amazing beaver dam more than 50 feet in length and 3 feet high, constructed of tree limbs and branches, twigs, grass and mud. Its height gradually increased to 4 or 5 feet. The dam survived December’s downpours and, even after our dry January, continues to hold water in a pond that extends over a quarter mile. The pond is well appreciated. Birds, like all creatures, need the right habitat. The Cascade beaver pond is creating a winter home for mallards, wigeons and other dabbling ducks. The dabblers are those who tilt bottoms-up to browse for pondweed, snails and underwater insects.

 Along the pool’s edge, an egret patrols in its sharp-eyed hunt for fish, frogs,or just about any animal it can gulp down its long white neck. A steel-blue kingfisher rattles over the pond, taking advantage of the still water to spot its prey. Even a Barrow’s goldeneye, a diving duck typically found in the deeper river, has found a place to rest in the quiet pond.

This article is very good, but that picture is an all-time favorite. It says the message better than words ever could. Yes, beaver dams save water, and yes birds and fish and frogs rely on the water they save, and yes, sometimes people are smart enough to co-exist with beavers by using long-term solutions instead of just trapping.

Shasta county is closer to getting the message than most.

Of course saving water isn’t the only way beavers help birds. Zack & Rosen found that beaver chewing of trees created a natural coppicing of those trees that made more dense and bushy habitat creating ideal conditions for the nesting of migratory and songbirds. Their research showed that as the number of beavers go up, the numbers of birds go up too.

coppice color FDespite this vital relationship, would you believe that beavers are routinely trapped out because they are said to be a threat to birds? Hmm…people will lie about anything to get there way I guess. Once I heard that beavers were killed at a Contra Costa reservoir to protect the “red-legged frogs”.

No. Seriously.

Capture6And while we’re listing off the things beavers are good for, we have to talk about salmon and trout. They’re in a class of fish called salmonids, and the Salmonid Restoration Federation Conference is next week. I will be presenting on beavers at the urban stream workshop on wednesday and this is my very last weekend to get everything ready. I can’t believe it’s already here. It feels like I just got back from Oregon. Go Beavers! The workshop is sold out apparently. I’m at the end of the day after Trout Unlimited and before Lake Tahoe.

Capture

A Case of Beaver-assisted Restoration in an Urban Stream
Heidi Perryman, PhD, President & Founder: Worth A Dam
beaverpD

Lots of great news this morning, the most exciting of which is that Worth A Dam and the Martinez Beavers will be on the KQED science blog tomorrow morning, and I couldn’t be happier that they have decided to feature what happens when you decide to live with beavers, not just when you relocate them! Stay tuned for a link tomorrow.

The schedule for the Salmonid Restoration Federation conference is out and I see that my two presentations are on the first day and the last day which means that beavers will be the Alpha and the Omega of this year’s discussions and also means I have to take 5 days off work and spend a grueling week in Santa Barbara. Go beavers!

Finally, this story from the Czech ministry may be the funnest beaver report ever. Apparently the newest plan to get people to appreciating nature includes a big request for funds to – well go read it yourself.

Environment Ministry ends year with beaver underwear

The list of items the ministry wants to buy for this money sounds a bit like a well-known song The Twelve Days of Christmas: six thousand pens, crayons, bags, umbrellas and stickers, two hundred cufflinks and scarves. And the item that has got many riled up is the order for one thousand pieces of underwear with a picture of a beaver on women’s knickers.

 Jaromír Bláha, photo: archive of Hnutí DuhaJaromír Bláha, photo: archive of Hnutí Duha Critics have noted not only the inappropriate connotations of the images, but also the unlikely promotional value of the items. The outgoing Environment Minister Tomáš Podivínský is convinced of the opposite, with the news server Lidovky.cz quoting him as saying that this is a way to make the media talk about the environment and that it will help people realize that we have to continuously care for our beavers.

calvin-and-hobbes-laugh

Yes, Jaromir, yes we certainly do.


 

Today is the opening of the Salmonid Restoration Conference in San Luis Obispo.  Fresh from Yosemite State Parks Conference,  Michael Pollock will be the keynote speaker talking about the role beaver dams play in salmon populations, and tireless historical prevalence researcher Rick Lanman will be presenting about where beavers actually belong. The final day of the conference will see a beaver band of advocacy with water wizard Brock Dolman once again emphasizing the good they do. Today they were supposed to start out with a field trip to the Arroyo Grande River to see some actual beaver dams, but apparently they are inaccessible at the moment. Never mind, I’m sure they had some excellent scouting anyway.

I just read through the ominously named ‘beaver management’ plan for the Arroyo Grande Creek Channel Waterway Management Program that Rick sent last night. It was completed by Waterways Consulting Inc in 2010. It outlines several ostensibly good things beavers do for streams then astonishingly mentions that “With regard to aquatic habitat, anecdotal evidence suggests that the beaver dams may enhance rearing habitat for juvenile steelhead by creating deeper pools with complex cover habitat around flooded willows.”

Anecdotal? Anecdotal? Gulp. Have fun listening to the ‘anecdotes’ of your keynote speaker.

It is true that the good news may be slow to get around, but Pollock’s seminal paper was published 6 years before this report was written. Isn’t a cursory literature review standard in any scientific paper?  Or did you just hear about the work from someone at coffee and never bother to actually look it up for yourself? (I guess that could be anecdotal.) It’s not just beavers. Checking the bibliography I see that everything regarding wildlife is at least 10-20 years old.  Based on the savvy reading of the literature  it goes on to say that beavers will bring in too much silt and destroy the riparian border and should be selectively euthanized to manage the stream. Of course they should! (Why do people insist on using that word? One assumes the beavers aren’t in any pain?)

I hope principal scientist Mr. Dvorsky is sitting in the front row for Dr. Pollock’s presentation. And I hope he likes the part about beaver dams and smolt production especially.

It should be an exciting couple of days.

Here’s what Brock wrote about the conference back in December when it was being finalized:

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 still 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!


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!


a


Beaver friend, Brock Dolman of the OAEC (and featured speaker at John Muir Birthday Earth day!) rushed back from Redding to breathlessly describe the electric salmonid restoration conference he helped host which featured some surprisingly familiar faces. A shining star of the event was our new pal Michael Pollock talking about–you guessed it–the relationship between beavers and salmon. I don’t exactly have Brock’s permission to share the email but he didn’t exactly say not to either and I can’t be expected to keep news like this to myself. It’s THAT good!!!

Just back from an amazingly successful Salmonid Restoration Conference, where I moderated a 1/2 day session titled “Instream Flows for Salmonids” which had Michael Pollock as the final speaker. Over 200+ people packed into the room and filled every available space to hear his talk. There had been a lot of buzz being generated leading up to the session about beavers, and so lots of folks came to see & hear!! We then had an impromptu casual lunch time discussion that was open to everyone and over 60+ folks came to that as well!! All across the board there is a feeling of a swelling moment to bring beavers to the forefront of restoration!!!

Wow, think about what that means. There are watershed organizations across California worried about the salmon population. If a third of those tireless advocates became beaver believers we would be sitting on a beaver-boom town!  There really could be beavers in Sonoma and Marin and Los Angelos. We really could see a day when a city or property owner has to pay a “salmon tax” to get a permit to exterminate beavers! My fondest dream is that it becomes more cost effective to live with beavers than to kill them, and the funds for that “tax” go to a public account from which cities and property owners can take out loans to help pay for the installation of flow devices and culvert blockers. Ahhh a girl can dream. You can bet Worth A Dam will be happy to play a part in the process.

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