Native beavers suffer in Tahoe as USFS protects non-native kokanee
By Tom Knudson, Sacramento Bee
To Sherry Guzzi, the beaver dam on Taylor Creek was more than a watery jungle of sticks and branches.
In that snarl of debris, she saw hope for a species long regarded as non-native in the Sierra but which new research claims has occupied the range for centuries and is key to ecosystem health.
Late last month, her hope was extinguished when the U.S. Forest Service tore down the dam to protect a tourist facility celebrating a non-native species: kokanee salmon.
“They are doing all this to showcase an introduced species,” said Guzzi, co-founder of the Sierra Wildlife Coalition, a local environmental group. “It’s a little nuts, isn’t it?”
The Forest Service, which is having its 23rd Kokanee Salmon Festival this weekend, defended the action. But spokeswoman Cheva Heck said the agency hopes to make its facilities and festival more beaver-friendly in the future.
“The Forest Service’s main interest is in promoting native species,” she said. “We are aware that over time our messages are going to need to change.”
What’s happening here is more than a flap over a furry, flat-tailed rodent with a penchant for gnawing down trees and damming up streams. It is part of a wider controversy over the role of beaver in nature and their provenance – native, non-native or both? – in the Sierra Nevada.
“A beaver can go 10 kilometers by land or 50 kilometers by water in a day. What would keep them out of the Sierra?” said Richard Lanman, a historical ecologist from Los Altos and co-author of two new studies concluding beaver occupied the range long before settlers arrived.
“Every mountain range from northern Mexico to the Arctic tundra, from the Atlantic to the Pacific” had beaver, Lanman said. “And they were supposedly never native to the Sierra? This makes no sense.”
Lanman and his colleagues also write that beavers help “fish abundance and diversity in the Sierra Nevada” and their dams “reduce (the) discharge of nitrogen, phosphorus and sediment loads into fragile water bodies such as Lake Tahoe.”
Their papers challenge long-held assumptions and have met with resistance in some quarters.
“I have learned to view beavers with great suspicion,” said Phil Pister, a retired fisheries biologist who believes the animals are not native to the southeast Sierra. “Beavers are remarkable creatures, but only where nature intended them to be.”
The conflict is muddied by a century of dramatic management swings – a story that begins with the near eradication of beaver by 19th century trappers and their subsequent protection from exploitation by the California Legislature in 1911.
One of the most colorful chapters played out in the 1930s and ’40s when the California Department of Fish and Game and the U.S. Forest Service transplanted beaver to the Sierra, in some cases by air.
The idea was to conserve soil and water behind their dams and expand opportunities for trapping. As one Fish and Game publication at the time put it: “California’s busy beavers are being transplanted, sometimes by parachute, to mountain areas where their industry and skills will benefit the state.”
“Beaver dams in the mountains save water for fish, wildlife and agriculture,” it added.
Thriving by the 1980s
By the 1980s, beavers were doing so well that Tahoe National Forest officials launched an effort to remove them – “by transplant or trapping” – north of Truckee, citing damage to trees, wetlands and campgrounds.
“Beaver populations are on the increase,” one 1987 Sierraville Ranger District document reads. “This poses a direct threat to many of our riparian areas.”
Some old beaver dams remain visible today – minus the beaver. “It was like you snapped your fingers. Aliens came and got them. They were just gone,” said Tom Leavell, a cattle rancher who opposed the agency action.
He said beavers and their dams made great fishing on a stream he called Little Creek. “It was the best fishing I’ve ever had,” Leavell said.
“I would take a hundred brook trout a season. And it replenished itself every year.”
Now “you are lucky if you can catch 20 a year,” he said.
Agencies still treat the species harshly.
When beaver flooded a Forest Service campground in Mono County in 2010, for example, the state Department of Fish and Game signed a depredation permit authorizing the agency to kill three animals. A hand-written note on the permit notes that a trapper did just that – taking two males and a female.
Elsewhere, the animals – which back up water behind dams to protect themselves from predators and stockpile an aquatic pantry of nutritious sticks and branches – have been killed for toppling trees and damming culverts and waterways.
“They have a right to be here,” said Heidi Perryman, founder of Worth A Dam, a beaver conservation group in Martinez. “There is a way to manage their difficult behavior. And there is a reason why you should bother to do it.”
“Killing them is an extreme response to managing their behavior,” she added. “It’s like shooting all the cars that speed. It would work, but at what cost?”
Dam dates to Middle Ages
Perryman is one of the researchers whose articles in California Fish and Game, a peer-reviewed scientific journal, challenge the long-held view that beaver did not inhabit the Sierra above 1,000 feet on the west slope.
Some of the most persuasive evidence in the articles comes from a beaver dam found buried along a creek in Plumas County. Samples sent to a laboratory for radio-carbon dating showed the structure was built at the dawn of the Middle Ages, around A.D. 580, and used and reused until around 1850.
“Personally, I think beaver were keystone species that helped form meadows in the Sierra by trapping sediment behind their dams,” said Mike Kossow, a Plumas County fisheries consultant who helped discover the dam.
Researchers turned up other supporting material, too, including historical accounts from famous California mountain man James “Grizzly” Adams and other 19th century fur trappers who reported finding beaver at widespread locations in the Sierra.
The researchers also searched official U.S. Geological Survey place names and found several locations in the Sierra named for ‘Beaver,’ including four Beaver Creeks, one Little Beaver Creek and one Beaver Canyon Creek.
“Either there were a lot of people named Beaver who named those streams after themselves or they named them after beaver,” said Lanman.
The articles have caught the attention of the California Department of Fish and Game, which is re-examining its beaver policies in the Sierra, said Matt Meshiry, an environmental scientist with the department.
“If they are a native component, then we need to examine land use and species management … in terms of maintaining and preserving the ecosystem,” Meshiry said.
Pister, the retired fisheries biologist, is skeptical, saying beaver have harmed golden trout – the California state fish and a native species – in the Eastern Sierra.
“We found beaver dams prevent migration and genetic interchange between populations while silting in the best food-producing and spawning areas,” he said. “Trout would grow larger in beaver ponds, but at a biological price.”
Non-native fish festival
The conflict this fall at Lake Tahoe is not about golden trout but kokanee salmon, a non-native fish introduced to Lake Tahoe in 1944. Every fall, navies of the bright red fish surge up Taylor Creek to spawn.
And on the bank, armies of tourists gather to watch at a 23-year-old Forest Service salmon festival. For many, the highlight is strolling through a streamside corridor offering an aquarium-like view of the fish.
But this year, beavers built a dam not far from the facility, threatening to flood it and a trail. The Sierra Wildlife Coalition urged the Forest Service not to disturb the dam, suggesting a piping system be installed to permit water to flow through the dam, preventing flooding and protecting beaver – or that the level of the pathway be raised.
On Sept. 26, Forest Service crews dismantled the dam instead. The beaver weren’t harmed but Guzzi fears for their future.
“They have to stockpile food for the winter because they don’t hibernate,” she said. “So this is taking away their food. And they could starve.”
“It’s a strange corner for the Forest Service to be backed into because it’s all artificial,” Guzzi added. “It’s a little ironic, to say the least.”
Heck, the Forest Service spokeswoman, acknowledged the subject is challenging.
“There are a lot of complex issues,” she said. “Are you dealing with two non-native species and balancing their needs? Are you balancing a native and a non-native? There has been quite a bit of conversation.”
She also said dismantling the dam was the right decision.
“Essentially, we were hoping we could discourage them (the beaver) from rebuilding in that location while allowing downstream dams to persist.”
“It’s one thing to suggest things. It’s another to be the entity that has to implement solutions,” Heck added. “We have to look at what the maintenance load would be (and) whether it’s actually going to work.”
Also up for discussion is the focus of the popular fall festival on a non-native species.
“It does take some thought about how to shift an event like that,” Heck said. “What would that new theme be? How are we going to talk about both the kokanee and native species?”
In recent days, the Taylor Creek beavers have been busy with matters of their own – gnawing down more aspen and willows to repair the dam the Forest Service tore down.
By Thursday, the dam had been rebuilt. But when Guzzi returned to the site Friday, she said it had been destroyed again.
“On some level, (the Forest Service) must realize how ludicrous a situation this is,” said Guzzi. “It’s so counterproductive. They are wasting tax dollars and harassing an animal that is good for the lake and its clarity.”
Bla,bla,bla.the poor beavers.N
Bla Bla Bla,The non native species.Lets re introduce the Lahontan Cutthroat,bla ,bla bla.Kill all other non native fish.Bla.bla,bla!!So then lets re introduce the Grizzy bear,the Mountain lion,the Elk.All were here before us.Where does it stop.The only invasive species that is doing any real damage are the humans! just let it alone, and see what happens.Mother nature has a way of fixing her problems. with little to no help from man!
I’ve been thinking about this recently. By our calling species endangered, and preserving them through our human methods (these same human methods, might have caused them to become endangered in the first place), are we interfering with the evolutionary process?
Humans in their current form have been on this planet for 200,000 +/- years, meddling in various ways with the environment. Granted there are way more of us now, and we have over run the planet, but who’s to say that it’s correct, and beneficial to preserve one plant or animal? Maybe what would evolve in it’s place would be beautiful, wondrous, helpful. Maybe it would teach us something. I’m sure many evolutionary paths have been passed up already, we have no idea what we have lost.
We also have to realize, that we are evolving too, at least I hope so, as I sure could use some upgraded mental storage capacity, or at least hope my descendants get some ;)
Change can be good!
Well I know one species that makes huge gains by humans not interfering with beavers and their dams……mosquitoes! Just ask the folks that live on the Upper Truckee River in Christmas Valley.
Beavers do a great job for ecosystems and I agree with lanman about them being native to Tahoe. It’s ridiculous to think otherwise. A project is scheduled to move the upper truckee river from elks club downstream in which a new channel will be constructed by man. It’s the former site of sunset ranch. This area is pristine and has some of the best fish habitat in the Tahoe basin. Beavers create seasonal dams and backwater the river and force it to flood more frequently. These animals create so much habitat for all other species and ecosystem function in general. I agree with Jeff… Leave the river alone! All we will do is screw it up and make it harder for nature to heal itself.. Nature has a way…
I can’t wait till beaver season opens. I am hoping to relocate some beaver to my crock pot.
I wonder what the Washoe would say?
Seems to me that breaking down beaver dams is more about ensuring water flow through Taylor Creek – the only remaining filter that keeps Lake Tahoe blue and less about species favoritism – native or not.
Save the beavers! Two beaver stories for you.
Once I was paddeling my canoe around Lily Lake with a couple of friends, stopping ever so often to cast out a lure or try drowning some worms in hopes of catching dinner. A big old beaver came swimming out to us and he was not happy! Slapping his tail on the water and baring his teeth. We reeeled in and paddled off to the other side of the lake. We had invaded his territory and as we moved on I could see him swimming back to his den.
Then some years later some beavers built a dam on Trout Creek which flooded the meadow. Some of the residents who lived by the meadow freaked because they thought their homes would be flooded. So the dam was destroyed and the beavers were either killed or relocated(I’m not sure which).
It seems to me everytime man intervenes with nature things get all screwed up.Leave the animals and our streams alone! Old Long Skiis
We welcome the furry friends over here at our meadow to gnaw down the influx of willows that have overtaken, increased fire danger and taken away the beauty of our stream ever since the cows were removed….Come on over…gnaw away we think you’re “worth a dam”
It’s hard to want to add to the discussion based on what is above but here goes:
– there is a big difference between how management treats a species in a small areas versus over its whole range or a wide area like a state or the whole Sierra
– the activity of wildlife will always periodically conflict with human use, even in a “nature” or recreation area. Bevear activity has definetly degraded the area around Taylor Creek as a fresh water free-flowing stream characterized by cool temeratures and high oxygen levels. In addition they certainly threaten man made structures around the creek. If this was rare habitat for beavers, that might dictate a certain benign approach, but the beaver are not threatened as a species, the values that they threaten are relatively high on a number of different levels, so acting against the changes they represent seems on total – appropriate.
The silly part is removng the dams, which the FS has done for years to no avail. It should be obvious to anyone that the bevear’s reaction will be to cut more trees to repair that dam, which is making the area look like hell, or at least transforming it from a flowing stream zone to a stagnent marsh even in the upstream areas.
This is another example of the FS trying to please everyone and instead pleasing no one. The beavar should just be either trapped and relocated, or unfortunately just trapped and killed.
This shouldn’t be seen as an interspecies war against beaver but just a practical reaction to undesired changes to an important area for wildlife viewing around which expensive facilities have been designed and built. Constantly relocating things like the trail and stream profile chamber are just not practical and the beaver is not a threatened or endangered species. I dont really think most folks can think rationally about this, but one can still hope yes?:)
Can’t the Forest Service put wire around trees they want to preserve and in areas where they don’t want a beaver dam being built. That would encourage the busy guys to work in other areas and stockpile their winter’s food.
To Laurie Brazil,
“Worth a dam”? That cracked me up. Let the beavers do what beavers do. They help the ecosystem big time.
Heck, I don’t trap the cottontails that are in my vegetable garden! I don’t mind sharing my lettuce and carrots with those furry little guys.
Don’t destroy beaver dams! Old long Skiis
I’d like to see the new study being used as “proof” that beavers have existed in the high Sierra Mountains for eons. One study doesn’t make a theory proof.
At least in the Lake Tahoe Basin, one would assume that the steep mountainous terrain and the dry Great Basin would of halted a beaver population from colonizing new territory in the Lake Tahoe Basin by natural dispersion. In addition, the lack of water and predators would of kept them from mitigating.
Of course, native peoples could of introduced beaver into the area, as it is commonly known that the Washoe traded with the peoples of the Central Sacramento Valley for 1000’s of years. Why not introduce wild animals of value into the Lake Tahoe Basin and Truckee River Watershed.
As to the LTBMU’s action to remove the beaver dam threatening the Stream Profile Chamber and the interpretive trail, that seems like a no-brainer; the cost to alter the facilities dramatically would out-weigh the costs of just removing the beaver dam. The beaver advocates should be offering funding to make their alternative happen.
Since beavers are by no means a rare species, and beaver habitat is not lacking in the area, what’s wrong with removing beaver structures and trying to encourage them to set up “shop” someplace else. Maybe the FS could implement some measures to discourage this family of beavers from rebuilding at the problem site, that could be long-term solutions.
But I’d still like to see this “study”.