Submitted by Kootenay Conservation Program
What well-known animal is quickly becoming a true climate change celebrity?
Think roly-poly body, squat legs, yellowy buckteeth, that pear-shaped profile on the Canadian nickel. Indeed, the lowly beaver may often be disregarded and in some circles despised. But for a landscape facing wildfire, drought or floods, Castor canadensis is a downright superhero — one that scientists and community groups in the Kootenays are turning to for answers.
The Kootenay Connect Priority Places project is following the science. Funded by Environment and Climate Change Canada and managed by the Kootenay Conservation Program (KCP), this seven-year project now has a number of partners working to enhance habitat for species at risk and build resiliency into local landscapes.
One partner is Brenda Herbison, a biologist from Argenta who knows just how big a role beavers play in contributing to an area’s ecological resilience.
“They’ve been shown to completely transform the landscape,” she says, “they’re the best engineers.” Herbison has seen the legacy beavers leave, even long after they’ve vacated a site. She’s now working on a project to enrich beaver habitat in the lower Duncan River valley bottom, an area that has seen a significant drop in beavers over the last decade. “We saw places that once had beaver colonies,” continues Herbison. “Now, no beavers.”
So, what makes beavers so special? Why are those-in-the-know giving beavers nicknames like ‘ecosystem engineers,’ ‘environmental Swiss Army knives’ and ‘Smokey the Beaver’?
“When it comes to water, beavers slow it, spread it, and store it,” writes Dr. Emily Fairfax in a paper on how beaver-dammed areas stay green during wildfires. Fairfax, an ecohydrologist at the California State University Channel Islands, not only has data to prove the benefits of beavers on landscapes, she’s also found creative ways to share her findings. In a stop-motion video, Fairfax shows how one busy little beaver can build climate resiliency. The beaver dams a creek. Creek water slows and is stored in the pond. New channels are built, spreading water throughout the riparian area and floodplain. Birds, amphibians and fish return; the wetland thrives. When a disturbance like wildfire hits, the beaver’s boost of well-dispersed water provides refuge for other wildlife and helps to keep things green.
Green is exactly the colour the Columbia Wetlands Stewardship Partners (CWSP). Despite being designated a wetland of international significance, the Columbia Wetlands face many threats, one of which is water loss due to climate change.
Dr. Suzanne Bayley, president of the CWSP, has seen the transformation beavers can make to wetlands, and respects their work ethic. “I’ll tell you one thing, I’m not as good as a beaver,” she laughs, “they’re out there every night, repairing their dam, not me.”
Bayley has a history with beavers. Her earlier academic work studied how beavers could mitigate the effects of climate in boreal wetlands that experience drought. Her study, published in the journal Biological Conservation, found that sites with beavers had nine times more open water than sites without, and suggested that “the removal of beaver from aquatic systems should be recognized as a wetland disturbance equivalent to in-filling, groundwater withdrawal, and other commonly cited wetland disturbances.” In brief, want to keep a wetland wet? Bring in a beaver.
It’s not always so simple. Not everyone loves the industrious beaver as a neighbour, especially if pastures are being flooded, roadways knocked out, or beneficial trees toppled. But there are solutions. Products such as a device cleverly called the Beaver Deceiver, among other techniques, are being used to encourage landowners to keep beavers within the ecosystem while directing their dam-building attention elsewhere. “The benefit of a beaver often outweighs the impacts,” Bayley says. “More wildlife habitat, increased biodiversity, climate change mitigation, turning something so simple into something complex — these are huge benefits.”
With this in mind, the Columbia Wetlands Stewardship Partners are currently researching the impacts of beaver dams in the Columbia Wetlands complex. Not only are they studying existing dam and lodge sites, they are also creating artificial beaver dams and protecting critical cottonwood stands from beavers using wire mesh.
A few valleys west of the Columbia Wetlands lies the Bonanza Biodiversity Corridor, a 15-km stretch of Inland Temperate Rainforest that connects the Valhalla Range with the Selkirk Mountains. Here, the Slocan Lake Stewardship Society (SLSS), is working to conserve the biodiversity of this small yet ecologically-essential wildlife corridor. Abundant with cottonwood, moistened by swamps, marshes and fens, the meandering floodplain is ideal for beavers. But according to SLSS, there could be more. After completing a three-year habitat assessment, they estimated 45 animals inhabit an area that could support double the number. “The thing to remember about beavers,” says ecologist Ryan Durand, “if food or water is scarce, they’ll move along. At this point, given what we know about our climate, we need more, not less, beavers.”