* . *
  • About
  • Advertise
  • Privacy & Policy
  • Contact
Saturday, September 13, 2025
Earth-News
  • Home
  • Business
  • Entertainment
    Entertainment Community Fund Launches Program Supporting Entrepreneurs – Playbill

    Entertainment Community Fund Unveils Exciting New Program to Empower Entrepreneurs

    Behind the turntables: DJ Johnny Kage’s story of perseverance – yahoo.com

    Behind the Turntables: DJ Johnny Kage’s Inspiring Journey of Perseverance

    The other WWE star James Gunn wanted for Peacemaker instead of John Cena – yahoo.com

    The WWE Star James Gunn Originally Wanted for Peacemaker Instead of John Cena

    Quinta Brunson, John Stamos Join Entertainment and Technology Summit – Variety

    Quinta Brunson and John Stamos to Headline Thrilling Entertainment and Technology Summit

    ‘Breaking Bad’ star arrested for incident with neighbor. Here’s the latest – PennLive.com

    Breaking Bad’ Star Arrested Following Neighbor Dispute: Latest Updates

    Palmetto Sports & Entertainment to air Columbia Fireflies playoff games – WIS News 10

    Catch Every Thrilling Moment: Palmetto Sports & Entertainment to Broadcast Columbia Fireflies Playoff Games!

  • General
  • Health
  • News

    Cracking the Code: Why China’s Economic Challenges Aren’t Shaking Markets, Unlike America’s” – Bloomberg

    Trump’s Narrow Window to Spread the Truth About Harris

    Trump’s Narrow Window to Spread the Truth About Harris

    Israel-Gaza war live updates: Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh assassinated in Iran, group says

    Israel-Gaza war live updates: Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh assassinated in Iran, group says

    PAP Boss to Niger Delta Youths, Stay Away from the Protest

    PAP Boss to Niger Delta Youths, Stay Away from the Protest

    Court Restricts Protests In Lagos To Freedom, Peace Park

    Court Restricts Protests In Lagos To Freedom, Peace Park

    Fans React to Jazz Jennings’ Inspiring Weight Loss Journey

    Fans React to Jazz Jennings’ Inspiring Weight Loss Journey

    Trending Tags

    • Trump Inauguration
    • United Stated
    • White House
    • Market Stories
    • Election Results
  • Science
  • Sports
  • Technology
    Lincoln Trail College Receives $100,000 Grant from Marathon Petroleum Corporation for Technology Center – wwbl.com

    Lincoln Trail College Lands $100,000 Grant from Marathon Petroleum to Elevate Technology Center

    Aston Martin to integrate Pirelli’s cyber tyre technology in future models – Just Auto

    Aston Martin to Revolutionize Future Models with Pirelli’s Cutting-Edge Cyber Tyre Technology

    Figure Technology’s stock sizzles after IPO, as investors stay hungry for crypto deals – MarketWatch

    Figure Technology’s Stock Skyrockets After IPO Amid Surging Crypto Investor Excitement

    AI is the ‘most transformational technology’ in our lifetime, AMD CEO argues – Fox Business

    AMD CEO Declares AI the Most Transformative Technology of Our Era

    PAR Technology (PAR) Unveils AI-Powered Assistant Enhancing Restaurant Operations and Customer Engagement – simplywall.st

    PAR Technology Unveils AI-Powered Assistant to Revolutionize Restaurant Operations and Boost Customer Engagement

    Lincoln Laboratory technologies win seven R&D 100 Awards for 2025 – MIT News

    Lincoln Laboratory Technologies Secure Seven Prestigious R&D 100 Awards for 2025

    Trending Tags

    • Nintendo Switch
    • CES 2017
    • Playstation 4 Pro
    • Mark Zuckerberg
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Business
  • Entertainment
    Entertainment Community Fund Launches Program Supporting Entrepreneurs – Playbill

    Entertainment Community Fund Unveils Exciting New Program to Empower Entrepreneurs

    Behind the turntables: DJ Johnny Kage’s story of perseverance – yahoo.com

    Behind the Turntables: DJ Johnny Kage’s Inspiring Journey of Perseverance

    The other WWE star James Gunn wanted for Peacemaker instead of John Cena – yahoo.com

    The WWE Star James Gunn Originally Wanted for Peacemaker Instead of John Cena

    Quinta Brunson, John Stamos Join Entertainment and Technology Summit – Variety

    Quinta Brunson and John Stamos to Headline Thrilling Entertainment and Technology Summit

    ‘Breaking Bad’ star arrested for incident with neighbor. Here’s the latest – PennLive.com

    Breaking Bad’ Star Arrested Following Neighbor Dispute: Latest Updates

    Palmetto Sports & Entertainment to air Columbia Fireflies playoff games – WIS News 10

    Catch Every Thrilling Moment: Palmetto Sports & Entertainment to Broadcast Columbia Fireflies Playoff Games!

  • General
  • Health
  • News

    Cracking the Code: Why China’s Economic Challenges Aren’t Shaking Markets, Unlike America’s” – Bloomberg

    Trump’s Narrow Window to Spread the Truth About Harris

    Trump’s Narrow Window to Spread the Truth About Harris

    Israel-Gaza war live updates: Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh assassinated in Iran, group says

    Israel-Gaza war live updates: Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh assassinated in Iran, group says

    PAP Boss to Niger Delta Youths, Stay Away from the Protest

    PAP Boss to Niger Delta Youths, Stay Away from the Protest

    Court Restricts Protests In Lagos To Freedom, Peace Park

    Court Restricts Protests In Lagos To Freedom, Peace Park

    Fans React to Jazz Jennings’ Inspiring Weight Loss Journey

    Fans React to Jazz Jennings’ Inspiring Weight Loss Journey

    Trending Tags

    • Trump Inauguration
    • United Stated
    • White House
    • Market Stories
    • Election Results
  • Science
  • Sports
  • Technology
    Lincoln Trail College Receives $100,000 Grant from Marathon Petroleum Corporation for Technology Center – wwbl.com

    Lincoln Trail College Lands $100,000 Grant from Marathon Petroleum to Elevate Technology Center

    Aston Martin to integrate Pirelli’s cyber tyre technology in future models – Just Auto

    Aston Martin to Revolutionize Future Models with Pirelli’s Cutting-Edge Cyber Tyre Technology

    Figure Technology’s stock sizzles after IPO, as investors stay hungry for crypto deals – MarketWatch

    Figure Technology’s Stock Skyrockets After IPO Amid Surging Crypto Investor Excitement

    AI is the ‘most transformational technology’ in our lifetime, AMD CEO argues – Fox Business

    AMD CEO Declares AI the Most Transformative Technology of Our Era

    PAR Technology (PAR) Unveils AI-Powered Assistant Enhancing Restaurant Operations and Customer Engagement – simplywall.st

    PAR Technology Unveils AI-Powered Assistant to Revolutionize Restaurant Operations and Boost Customer Engagement

    Lincoln Laboratory technologies win seven R&D 100 Awards for 2025 – MIT News

    Lincoln Laboratory Technologies Secure Seven Prestigious R&D 100 Awards for 2025

    Trending Tags

    • Nintendo Switch
    • CES 2017
    • Playstation 4 Pro
    • Mark Zuckerberg
No Result
View All Result
Earth-News
No Result
View All Result
Home Science

Tireless ecosystem engineers or nuisance animals? Beavers’ presence felt in Boise River

July 14, 2023
in Science
Tireless ecosystem engineers or nuisance animals? Beavers’ presence felt in Boise River
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

beaver

North American beaver (Castor canadensis) Credit: Wikipedia.

Some of the trees along the Boise Greenbelt at the southeast end of the city are wrapped at their bases with chicken wire. These are not Christmas trees, and this ornamentation, strung by the city of Boise in conjunction with volunteer groups, is not just for show.

Rather, the mesh is protective, meant to stave off the city’s resident beavers.

The North American beaver, Castor canadensis, is not a subtle species. The animals serve vital purposes, but they also can be so destructive that they have to be relocated.

“If you have a beaver in your system, it’s pretty obvious,” Cory Mosby, Idaho Fish and Game’s furbearer biologist, told the Idaho Statesman in a phone interview. As North America’s largest rodents, beavers “eat a couple pounds of vegetation a day.”

Like most rodents, they need to munch to keep their teeth trimmed, so telltale signs of these hungry herbivores are bite marks and bark stripped off branches, or tree cuttings piled up high enough to dam moving water.

“It’s like they’re hardwired in their brains to dam moving water,” quipped Mosby.

Why the urge to stockpile sticks? They do it to create deeper ponds, so that they can dodge predators like coyotes, mountain lions, wolves, bobcats and bears.

Are there too many of those ponds along the Boise River system and across Idaho this year? Is the beaver population out of control or is it stable? Those can be difficult questions to answer.

Where Idahoans and beavers butt heads

Both Mosby and Nick Kolarik, a Ph.D. student at Boise State University monitoring ecosystem dynamics in wetland habitats, brought up with the Statesman the concept of a “cultural carrying capacity”—meaning the maximum number of a species that can be tolerated—and suggested that this is the crux of the matter for beavers.

“Beavers are kind of chaotic,” said Kolarik. “You don’t really know what they’re going to do.”

To some, “herbeavery” is a perennial nuisance, signs of an unwanted squatter gnawing on their trees and garden goods, and causing irreparable property damage.

Sara Arkle, parks resource superintendent for Boise Parks and Recreation, noted in an email that “beaver activity is a consistent management consideration.” And Roger Phillips, Idaho Fish and Game spokesperson, said in a phone interview that management is all about balance: “There’s no such thing as a good beaver or bad beaver.”

Sometimes a beaver will just try to make a home in the wrong place at the wrong time, officials said, perhaps slowing the flow of water to a farmer’s crops or plugging up a culvert because it seemed like an inviting space to lay down some sticks.

But these semi-aquatic anarchists also play important beneficial roles.

Building tools for climate resilience? Leave it to beavers

The megadrought across the West of the past several years has transformed waterscapes for the drier. In times like these, beavers play crucial roles as savvy ecosystem engineers, building dams that can store precious water, slow the rate at which it leaves the system and enhance the exchange from surface water to groundwater.

In high snowpack years, on the other hand, beavers’ handiwork can create wetland complexes that are helpful in holding back the snowmelt. The natural dams promote a slower release of water, which can mitigate flooding and generally buffer critical riparian landscapes from the harmful effects of climate change.

For instance, in summer 2018, the Sharps Fire burned major portions of the Baugh Creek watershed in Central Idaho, but beaver dam complexes kept parts of the riverscape wet and verdant while unprotected areas burned to ash.

More and more, humans are trying to emulate beaver activity by building Beaver Dam Analogs—low-cost, human-made channel complexity that slow the way water moves through a system.

Kolarik, a scientist involved in related research, said these changes attempt to create favorable conditions for beavers to move in and take over the related geomorphological processes.

These beaver-inspired processes and practices attract numerous stakeholders, often involving a collaborative effort linking nonprofits, government agencies, watershed councils and private citizens. For example, the Sage Grouse Initiative is invested in restoring mesic areas with human-constructed beaver dams, since that’s where sage grouse like to raise chicks.

Ranchers and farmers also stand to benefit from the ecosystem services of beavers, since their strategic rewilding can yield significant additional streamflow annually, according to a report by the USDA.

Estimating Idaho’s beaver populations

Beavers are found statewide, according to Mosby, “in pretty much any perennial water source where there’s food for them,” which are trees such as aspen and willow, and the cottonwoods that line the Boise River.

“There’s not a county in Idaho that does not have beaver in it,” he said.

But beaver population sizes remain unknown. Unlike with elk, mule deer or larger predators that roam the Gem State, beaver trends are tracked indirectly, combining harvest data with anecdotal observations.

Beavers are classified as a furbearer in Idaho. As such, the species is open only to trapping, not hunting.

If you want to trap a furbearer, the requirements are considerable. First, you must get a trapping license and take an education class, which focuses on the ethics and regulations associated with trapping. For instance, you must set your traps a certain way next to the water to avoid catching non-target species, and you must have permission to trap on private lands.

Rusty Kramer, president of the Idaho Trappers Association, said there are more than 2,000 licensed trappers in Idaho in any given year.

These trappers act as citizen scientists, as they are required by Idaho Code to collect data about beavers—and all animals they trap—on a county basis. Metrics such as the number of traps set, how many nights those traps were out on the landscape and how many beavers were caught are used to calculate a metric called catch per unit effort, which serves as a proxy for beaver abundance.

“If it takes more time to catch an animal over the years, that would suggest that the population is decreasing,” Mosby said. “If they’re more abundant, it would be easier to catch them.”

Going by this proxy, Idaho Fish and Game officials say that the beaver population across the state has remained fairly stable for the past 20 to 25 years.

Kramer doesn’t buy it. He claimed unequivocally that “honestly, in the last 20 years, the beaver population has exploded.”

During the 18th century, beavers were getting hunted to the point of extermination. Now, according to Kramer, they have rebounded to the point of overpopulation. His evidence is anecdotal but comes from a lifetime of first-hand experience, he said.

Beavers are “prolific breeders … so in a lot of areas, they’re kicking out last year’s litter, who are constantly moving down stream and relocating, spilling into more areas, and spreading their range farther than ever before,” Kramer told the Statesman.

He said he turned down 10 trapping jobs just in the past month—some offering double the typical wage—from landowners desperate to remove beavers from their property.

The tradition of beaver translocations

Idaho Fish and Game periodically works to translocate nuisance beavers from high-density areas to help smooth out the lumpy distribution of the animals and help slow the flow of water where needed.

Kolarik recalled walking a dog at Silver Lake, in between the Greenbelt and State Street in Boise, and spotting a woman loading a dog crate into the back of an Idaho Fish and Game truck. This was in response to a call about a “nuisance beaver” that was chewing on someone’s ornamental trees. Plans were made to take the animal to the Owyhees in Southwest Idaho.

Idaho is no stranger to beaver translocations, of course. In 1948, beavers were preventing people from building homes in Central Idaho. Idaho Fish and Game trapped 76 nuisance beavers, placed them in quick-release wooden boxes with holes punched in them for air, attached them to parachutes left over from World War II and dropped them into unoccupied wilderness.

Miraculously, all but one unlucky beaver survived.

These days, beavers are carried in dog crates and transported by truck instead of chucked out of airplanes and forced to skydive to their destinations. But still, the tradition of beaver translocation in Idaho endures—for now.

The rise of lethal trapping?

Kramer said he had been removing 25 to 50 problematic beavers every summer from 1999 to 2021, working primarily throughout the eastern and southern parts of the state with the U.S. Forest Service, which buys them to restock in certain areas where they’d be more helpful. But since last year, these requests to relocate beavers have slowed down because the Forest Service is “running out of places to put them,” he said.

“Historically, most of the places in the U.S., when you have beaver problems, is going to be lethal trapping,” Kramer said. “My situation was kind of unique where we’re able to take some beavers alive.”

Increasingly, though, beaver-damage cases that Kramer and other licensed trappers take on involve lethal trapping, he said.

Arkle from Boise Parks and Rec explained in an email that if translocation is unavailable, “our last resort is to (lethally) trap the animals, utilizing a local contractor.”

“That’s a shame because when you do lethal trapping in the summer, their fur has no value. You’re having to just kind of waste the animal,” Kramer said.

2023 Idaho Statesman. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

Citation:
Tireless ecosystem engineers or nuisance animals? Beavers’ presence felt in Boise River (2023, July 13)
retrieved 14 July 2023
from https://phys.org/news/2023-07-tireless-ecosystem-nuisance-animals-beavers.html

This document is subject to copyright. Apart from any fair dealing for the purpose of private study or research, no
part may be reproduced without the written permission. The content is provided for information purposes only.

>>> Read full article>>>
Copyright for syndicated content belongs to the linked Source : Phys.org – https://phys.org/news/2023-07-tireless-ecosystem-nuisance-animals-beavers.html

Tags: ecosystemscienceTireless
Previous Post

Anger builds after controlled burn badly damages California sequoias

Next Post

Scientists knit futuristic eco-building designs using fungal networks

UW-Stevens Point hosts lecture on cannabis culture and research – Stevens Point Journal

UW-Stevens Point hosts lecture on cannabis culture and research – Stevens Point Journal

September 13, 2025
Southern Miss to Host 7th Annual Rayborn Lecture Featuring Renowned Physical Chemist – The University of Southern Mississippi

Southern Miss Welcomes Renowned Physical Chemist for 7th Annual Rayborn Lecture

September 13, 2025
Shreveport couple accused of defrauding Medicaid to fund cosmetic surgery, luxury lifestyle – WAFB

Shreveport Couple Accused of Using Medicaid Fraud to Fund Cosmetic Surgery and Extravagant Lifestyle

September 13, 2025
Lincoln Trail College Receives $100,000 Grant from Marathon Petroleum Corporation for Technology Center – wwbl.com

Lincoln Trail College Lands $100,000 Grant from Marathon Petroleum to Elevate Technology Center

September 13, 2025
Fall sports programs relish — or ignore — early effects of new roster limits – The Cavalier Daily

Fall Sports Programs Embrace or Overlook Early Impact of New Roster Limits

September 13, 2025
Australia approves world-first vaccine to save koalas from chlamydia – AP News

Australia Approves Groundbreaking Vaccine to Protect Koalas from Chlamydia

September 12, 2025
I got a discounted premium economy seat by bidding. It made my 10-hour flight better, but I wouldn’t pay full price for it. – Business Insider

How Bidding for a Discounted Premium Economy Seat Transformed My 10-Hour Flight-But It’s Not Worth Paying Full Price

September 12, 2025
Entertainment Community Fund Launches Program Supporting Entrepreneurs – Playbill

Entertainment Community Fund Unveils Exciting New Program to Empower Entrepreneurs

September 12, 2025
New global collaboration uses UC Davis experts and AI to spot the next pandemic – University of California – Davis Health

Global Collaboration Harnesses UC Davis Experts and AI to Detect the Next Pandemic Early

September 12, 2025
Why pesticides could threaten a MAGA-MAHA political divorce – CNN

Why pesticides could threaten a MAGA-MAHA political divorce – CNN

September 12, 2025

Categories

Archives

September 2025
MTWTFSS
1234567
891011121314
15161718192021
22232425262728
2930 
« Aug    
Earth-News.info

The Earth News is an independent English-language daily published Website from all around the World News

Browse by Category

  • Business (20,132)
  • Ecology (818)
  • Economy (837)
  • Entertainment (21,715)
  • General (17,006)
  • Health (9,880)
  • Lifestyle (852)
  • News (22,149)
  • People (841)
  • Politics (845)
  • Science (16,047)
  • Sports (21,337)
  • Technology (15,819)
  • World (819)

Recent News

UW-Stevens Point hosts lecture on cannabis culture and research – Stevens Point Journal

UW-Stevens Point hosts lecture on cannabis culture and research – Stevens Point Journal

September 13, 2025
Southern Miss to Host 7th Annual Rayborn Lecture Featuring Renowned Physical Chemist – The University of Southern Mississippi

Southern Miss Welcomes Renowned Physical Chemist for 7th Annual Rayborn Lecture

September 13, 2025
  • About
  • Advertise
  • Privacy & Policy
  • Contact

© 2023 earth-news.info

No Result
View All Result

© 2023 earth-news.info

No Result
View All Result

© 2023 earth-news.info

Go to mobile version