Abundant as beavers are today, it is difficult to believe that once they were on the verge of extinction
By Rob Carrigan, robcarrigan1@gmail.com
Beavers, considered a “keystone” species for their dam building efforts may actually be helping Colorado landowners and others weather recent drought conditions. But how are the beavers faring in the dry conditions?
“Drought does have an impact on
beaver though we haven't heard or seen significant impacts thus far,”
says Randy Hampton, Colorado Parks and Wildlife Public Information
officer.
“In areas where streams dry up,
beaver are known to abandon lodges and dams to find other water sources.
One advantage this past year was that reservoir storage was high and
most larger bodies of water in Colorado were managed to keep minimal
flows,” Hampton says.
“Smaller streams were
impacted but in the case of beaver, they often store up enough water
behind their dams to actually make it through dry periods - as long as
the dry periods are short. We would expect to see larger negative
impacts to beaver if drought persists into next year and beyond.”
The beaver fur trade reached its peak in the Rocky Mountain West sometime between 1830 and 1832.
"At that time, pelts brought trappers an average of $4 to $6 per pound. A resourceful mountain man could trap 400 to 500 pounds per year. By 1840, the price had fallen to $1 or $2 per pound, and depletion of the beaver reduced the average trap to 150 pounds -- hardly worth the the time of ambitious man who could otherwise earn $350 to $500 per year. By 1840, perhaps only 50 to 75 trappers remained in the West, a far cry from 500 to 600 who worked the region in the 1820s," writes Thomas G. Alexander in "Utah, The Right Place."
"During the early years Rocky Mountain bison meat served as the main substance for the the trappers. By the early 1840s, the mountain men and the Indians had annihilated the buffalo in the Rocky Mountains. The trappers also helped reduce the herds of elk, moose and deer. The communities of small fur-bearing animals dwindled the same way . By the early 1840s, the beaver were almost extinct," according to Alexander.
Beaver
expert David M. Armstrong, of the Department of Ecology,
Evolutionary Biology Environmental Studies Program, University Museum of
Natural History, University of Colorado-Boulder, notes that many
mountain ponds, willow thickets and meadows are the works of beavers
over time.
“Beavers are active year-round.
Their ponds provide navigable water beneath the ice. No mammal other
than humans has a great an influence on its surroundings. This is a
`keystone species' in riparian communities; without them the ecosystem
would change dramatically,” Armstrong says in information provided by
the state parks and wildlife department.
And they have a historic role.
“As
abundant as beavers are today, it is difficult to believe that once
they were on the verge of extinction, trapped for their under fur, which
was used to make felt for beaver hats. In the mid-19th century, silk
hats replaced beaver felt as a fashion, and that probably saved the
beaver from extinction. But, before it ended, the beaver trade opened
the mountains of Colorado to European exploration.
The largest rodents native to North America can be greater than three feet in length, and weigh up to 55 pounds.
“It takes a beaver approximately 30 minutes to fell a 5-inch diameter tree,” says Armstrong.
Beaver Breakout Box
Beavers
are fairly well protected from predators by their large size and
aquatic habits. Mink eat some kits, and coyotes can capture a beaver
waddling on dry land. Aside from that, floods may be the largest cause
of death. Beaver in Colorado are managed as furbearers.
Range: The beaver lives throughout Colorado in suitable habitat, although it is most abundant in the subalpine zone.
Habitat: Beavers live around ponds and streams that are surrounded by trees.
Diet:
Beavers feed on grasses and forbs in the summer, and bark in the
winter. Beavers eat the upper, tender branches, leaves and bark of
trees. They do not eat the inner wood.
Reproduction:
The den houses a nuclear family: parents, yearlings, and four or five
kits. A single litter of young is produced each year, born in the
spring after about a four-month gestation period.
Source:
David M. Armstrong Department of Ecology & Evolutionary Biology
Environmental Studies Program, University Museum of Natural History
University of Colorado, Boulder.
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