An excellent new paper out of the journal of Fish and Wildlife.
Abstract
Between prolonged periods of drought, arid regions are increasingly challenged by extreme precipitation events that promote flash floods, debris flows, and mudslides—a phenomenon known as “whiplash weather”. Understanding how beaver wetlands respond to whiplash weather will help inform the development of restoration policies targeting the species as a natural climate solution.
Thus, policies supporting beaver re-colonization—even within highly fragmented and anthropogenically impacted habitats—may confer both riparian resistance and resilience to increasingly erratic climatic conditions
Beaver dams mitigate the impacts of whiplash weather in a fragmented habitat: A Salinas River case study




































