Ever Fed Wood To A Beaver?

   / Ever Fed Wood To A Beaver? #12  
Beaver took my wife's new willow tree. Just planted it for her about two weeks prior. 1.5" max diameter. Chewed off about six or seven inches off the ground. Wife was upset. I feigned being upset too.

xtn
 
   / Ever Fed Wood To A Beaver?
  • Thread Starter
#13  
My beaver area is far from my house or anything I plant. I could see the aggravation of a beaver flooding a road or taking down your fruit trees.

It is a long process, probably measured in centuries and comings and goings of beaver over time, but I think beavers do 'improve' land, by human standards.

Picture a typical New England drainage stream following the low ground. Probably running on a rock bed all the way. A beaver dam will catch silt and organic matter in that stream which will be deposited in their pond bottom. When that goes on long enough, eventually you end up with rich tillable ground next to a stream where there was none before. From a human stand point, that is an improvement.

From a ecosystem perspective, that pond is a previously non-existent habitat type created by beavers. That means many different plant and tree types will grow, there will be more and different insects and their larva, ducks and other birds, frogs, fish, turtles, snakes and all the things that feed on them. The end result is biological diversity where there was little to begin with.

If and when beavers abandon their ponds, the area slowly drains and dries out as their dams deteriorate to become a fairly level beaver meadow; something that would not naturally occur within a forested area, and yet another habitat type which supports more biological diversity or agriculture.

I would guess that much of the good bottom land along rivers in New England is a result of beaver dams. Natural log blockages would play a role also. The fish and wildlife folks in Maine are seeding some small rivers with partial log blocks/snags to promote native trout reproduction. That would be the river's natural condition before the logging days when dams were built to store enough water to support log drives which scoured the rivers out. Plus the log snags would have been cut out to allow the logs to get down river.

Dave.
 
   / Ever Fed Wood To A Beaver? #14  
Beavers also build into the run-out on a lake, then the rains will breach the earthen levee around it..They sure are some crafty engineers, can build on rock as slick as concrete and raise a pond by 3 feet. That is a lot of water pressure, but i wonder where they carry the rocks and mud for the patches.? We had to use the Fel to tear it out ..
 
   / Ever Fed Wood To A Beaver? #15  
We've had a family 1/4 mile down the road on and off. Every so often someone complains and they live trap them, or somebody shoots one. Trappers are also pretty active around here. I think beavers improve land!

You obviously have not had any timber damaged buy them before. Beavers are the number one cause of timber damage in this state. To the tune of a million plus dollars of stumpage each year!


To the Op im sure they will eat it. You are fine with them as its a low area and nothing in there anyway it sounds like. But imagine them flooding 10 acres of your 10 year old pine trees after chewing down a 1/4 acre of them that you had an establishment cost of $300/acre and had been carring that investment foward for those 10 years. The backed up water kills your trees you loose your $300/acre and 10 years worth of growth. Not every one likes the little devils!
 
   / Ever Fed Wood To A Beaver?
  • Thread Starter
#16  
You obviously have not had any timber damaged buy them before. Beavers are the number one cause of timber damage in this state. To the tune of a million plus dollars of stumpage each year!


To the Op im sure they will eat it. You are fine with them as its a low area and nothing in there anyway it sounds like. But imagine them flooding 10 acres of your 10 year old pine trees after chewing down a 1/4 acre of them that you had an establishment cost of $300/acre and had been carring that investment foward for those 10 years. The backed up water kills your trees you loose your $300/acre and 10 years worth of growth. Not every one likes the little devils!

Nope, I wouldn't like that at all.

There isn't much there of real commercial value. It is all natural regeneration, mixed hard and soft woods. The beech, like all beech around here, is infested with beech bark disease which is eventually fatal and makes the wood worthless due to the rot it causes.

That is why it is a good place to let nature be nature, and that is priceless. :)
Dave.
 
   / Ever Fed Wood To A Beaver? #17  
I would guess that much of the good bottom land along rivers in New England is a result of beaver dams. Natural log blockages would play a role also. The fish and wildlife folks in Maine are seeding some small rivers with partial log blocks/snags to promote native trout reproduction. That would be the river's natural condition before the logging days when dams were built to store enough water to support log drives which scoured the rivers out. Plus the log snags would have been cut out to allow the logs to get down river.

Dave.

Kind of see what you say on the first part. But this last part i left has nothing to do with beavers and all to do with larger older trees naturally falling into a stream/river. Beavers dont place random trees and leave them forever. This is to recreate couse woody debris falling into a stream, which yes beavers can do as well.
 
   / Ever Fed Wood To A Beaver?
  • Thread Starter
#18  
Kind of see what you say on the first part. But this last part i left has nothing to do with beavers and all to do with larger older trees naturally falling into a stream/river. Beavers dont place random trees and leave them forever. This is to recreate couse woody debris falling into a stream, which yes beavers can do as well.

I didn't want to say that all bottom lands are created by beavers, they aren't. Natural log falls contribute too by causing changes in the flow which if continues, results in cutting new bank on one side and silt accumulation on the other. The classic meandering oxbows of a mature river valley - before the Army Corps of Engineers 'fixes' it :laughing:
Dave.
 
   / Ever Fed Wood To A Beaver? #20  
The Bummer was, The beaver cut down all the good trees to sit under while catfishing...The ones closest to the bank, and only gurdled several others.l
 

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