Friday, November 6, 2015

Can Beavers Really Save the World? Scientists Think So



Anything that succeeds in retaining water in a water shed is good. Our problem has been that the original land clearing efforts did not properly take all this into account and the majority of natural wetlands got drained and beavers got evicted or more correctly hunted out.  Many excellent  fields turn out to be former wetlands well nutrified by the action of beavers.


In principal we need to wisely reforest huge areas of present waste lands and all riverine environments.  By that i mean the natural flood zone at least.  Many of those former wetlands are amenable to wetland cropping which is still in its infancy in most of the world.  Think in terms of elderberry orchards are a field of bull rushes to produce a fodder crop several times a year.  These are two that i am well aware of and many others must exist as well. Cranberry bogs really prove the point and blueberries love the same conditions as elderberries.

In the meantime, the beaver is quite able to do most of the heavy engineering although cropping likely needs to be restricted to bull rushes.  They like bushes far too much.

Can beavers really save the world? Scientists think so

By Jack Choros | Geekquinox – Fri, 23 Oct, 2015

https://ca.news.yahoo.com/blogs/geekquinox/can-beavers-really-save-the-world--scientists-think-so-194038933.html

It turns out that beavers and all the pesky dam things they do (get it…dam) in rivers and streams serve a hugely important purpose in helping our planet maintain its delicate and ever important balance.

Scientists at the University of Rhode Island have discovered that their habitats and all the organic matter the critters carry with them along the way can reduce the amount of nitrogen gas found in rivers and streams by as much as 45 per cent.

Why is this important, you ask? Well, although we humans require precious oxygen in order to keep on ticking, 78 per cent of the Earth’s atmosphere is made up of nitrogen. It’s an ultra-thin gas that works in coordination with other gases found on the periodic table of elements to protect our planet and all its ecosystems, and it’s also used by farmers to grow crops.

Here’s the thin: although nitrogen is a necessity in the atmosphere and in agriculture, it actually promotes the growth of algae once too much of the gas finds its way into rivers and lakes. Algae takes nutrients away from other plants and animals that need it. Since three-quarters of the Earth consists of bodies of water, that’s not a manageable long-term side effect.

Now that scientists know the animal featured on our nation’s nickel can work the magic necessary to help keep things balanced, the next challenge becomes figuring out where to get beavers to build their habitats.

At the moment, scientists are looking to solve that problem by building man-made versions that slow down streams and use the same organic materials beavers do. They’ve recreated the effects of these ideas by using empty bottles of soda and filling them with water in order to produce similar circumstances on a smaller scale.

It’s so crazy how the small things humans do to make life more convenient always seem to have an adverse effect on the environment. Yet at the same time with in-depth research and a little bit of creativity, we can find a way to balance out our own negative impact and help the world maintain some sort of equilibrium.


Although the battle against pollution, deforestation, the extinction of animals and all kinds of other environmental issues seems to be never ending, at least we know that beavers help the world go round and we can do something to prevent the growth of that pesky algae.

There’s clearly no better time than now to leave it to beaver!

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