Don’t you just LOVE that beavers expression? He looks so pleased with himself. Like “Look at me, I’m eating a tree!”. How does he get these shots anyway? We never ever saw our beavers chewing down a tree and not even the homeless reported seeing it at night. They are pretty darn cautious when they do it. I guess he is crazy patient.
Do you think that little square at the top of his mouth is a tooth or a bit of woodchip that got stuck for the moment? It’s awfully big for a top tooth, and there appears to be only one of them? I’m guessing chip. At the bottom you can just see the ridge of his bottom teeth which in beavers are much longer.
I just think if you could show this photo to everyone seeking a depredation permit because beavers chewed their from yard maple, people would think twice about killing the animal for doing something that made him so very happy. And maybe feel proud that the tree they planted brought a beaver such joy!
Maybe if this photo was on a card CDFG could send them the first time they ask, with a caption on the bottom like
Deal another hand at the beaver table, because Maryland’s own Ecotone just entered the game with full pockets. Way back in February the CEO and founder of the group, Scott McGill, joined Mike Callahan and Frances Backhouse on an exciting podcast about beavers saving the Chesapeake. remember?
The North American beaver is a keystone species whose activities promote ecological biodiversity across the landscape. Beaver dams help improve water quality by reducing sediment and nutrient flow to downstream sources, creates wetlands and enhances wildlife habitat.
Beaver activity on private and public property can become a nuisance, impact agricultural activities, flood infrastructure, and impact valuable vegetation. In the past, trapping (killing) was the only available option to mitigate potential beaver problems. By working with researchers and experts from around the US, we are able to offer an ecologically friendly beaver management solution by designing and installing custom flow devices (i.e. beaver deceivers) and culvert exclusion fences, providing a long term cost-effective solution. Ecotone installs flow devices to manage the size of the beaver pond, regulate water levels to desirable levels, and mitigate activity around culverts, while also keeping the dam, and the ecosystem services it provides. By working to co-exist with the beaver we can create a cascade of benefits to water quality and biodiversity. .
INDUSTRY PARTNERSHIP
. Ecotone has partnered with Beaver Institute – a nationally recognized nonprofit organization focused on beaver management and watershed restoration – to bring to market sustainable beaver management solutions that help resolve beaver-human conflicts and maximize the benefits beavers bring to the environment.
It’s wonderful to see the seeds of Mike Callahan’s beaver institute take root and grow into such a healthy enterprise. Beavers everywhere are thanking their lucky stars that Ecotone climbed on board, and Mike decided that being a Physicians Assisstant just wasn’t for him.NO