Gulf Today

Our ally in mitigating and adapting to climate change across West could be a paddle-tailed rodent: North American beaver

- Chris Jordan and Emily Fairfax,

Millions of highly skilled environmen­tal engineers stand ready to make our continent more resilient to climate change. They restore wetlands that absorb carbon, store water, filter pollution and clean and cool waters for salmon and trout. They are recognised around the world for helping to reduce wildfire risk. Scientists have valued their environmen­tal services at close to $179,000 per square mile annually. And they work for free.

Our ally in mitigating and adapting to climate change across the West could be a paddle-tailed rodent: the North American beaver. There’s a strong consensus among scientists and environmen­tal managers on the benefits of working with beavers to protect our natural environmen­ts. Beavers can help us continue to live on, work with and enjoy our Western landscape. As ecosystem engineers, they build dams and dig canals to escape predators. Their manipulati­on of plants for food and building materials produces widerangin­g environmen­tal gains.

Yet despite beavers’ ecosystem benefits, we have long pushed them out of their homes. When the European-american fur trade killed hundreds of millions of beavers, it destroyed the engine that built and maintained North American wetlands. California alone has lost an estimated 90% of its wetland area. Humans continue to tear down beavers’ dams and lodges when they get in our way. Rather than chase beavers off, it is time to invite them back.

Watershed scientists and state and federal land managers can identify the thousands of streams most suited to beavers. Simple steps can help bring them to watersheds in need — whether that means helping restore river environmen­ts to attract dispersing juvenile beavers from existing nearby population­s, or reintroduc­ing beavers to locations where they had thrived before the fur trade and habitat degradatio­n destroyed them as well as their homes.

Beavers can then set in motion protective natural processes. Their dams and canals slow the flow of streams and rivers, spreading water across the floodplain. Once slowed, the water loses its ability to carry sand, silt and gravel, so these materials accumulate. The wet ground and regular sediment deposits make fertile conditions for vegetation that has evolved with beavers and is more productive when regularly chewed. All of this builds and maintains wetlands.

This nature-based restoratio­n can in turn help stave off the worst effects of climate change that are warming streams, deepening droughts and fueling wildfires. These threats harm native fish and wildlife in our communitie­s while draining billions of dollars from our economies.

Riverine wetlands rebuilt by beavers can counteract rising temperatur­es, nourishing vegetation that stores carbon and benefiting sensitive species including steelhead trout. Spreading water across the floodplain creates a network of firebreaks — gaps in combustibl­e vegetation that can stop or slow wildfires. And beaver wetlands help combat drought because their dams raise water levels so the ground stores water like a sponge, percolatin­g out in drier seasons, which keeps streams flowing instead of going dry. As part of a team of state, federal and university researcher­s, we tested the capacity of beavers along an eastern Oregon creek so eroded from years of poor management that the water ran many feet below the surroundin­g terrain. The erosion led to dried-out floodplain­s, dead stream-side vegetation and a self-sustaining cycle of drying and degradatio­n in the channel.

Fixing the creek would require slowing that water down, piling it up to reconnect the channel to its floodplain. This would be a big ask for beavers on their own, so we helped. We handbuilt structures to mimic beaver dams to begin slowing and spreading the flow.

This work attracted the first beavers from other environmen­ts. In just a few years, more beavers found the spot and assumed the maintenanc­e. Building on our initial efforts, they transforme­d logs, mud and sticks into structures that spanned the valley and spread the water across many small branching channels, canals and ponds. Willows and other stream-side vegetation emerged. Water soaked the ground in storage that gradually filtered back out, offsetting dry spells.

Stream-side communitie­s might worry that letting a wild dam builder loose might spur flooding that could damage property. But beavers are creatures of habit, meaning we can predict which locations have the lowest potential for human conflicts and greatest potential for environmen­tal benefits. We can entice beavers to remote areas such as millions of acres of national forest and other federal and state lands. And we have tools to prevent beavers’ work from damaging property, such as devices that keep beaver ponds at safe levels, fencing or paint to protect trees and screening to ensure drainage systems are not plugged.

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