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Durango Herald, November 10, 2002
Cheryl Wiescamp and Durango Nature Studies staff
As winter approaches, beavers are completing
dam construction and collecting food stores. These creatures have remarkable
behavioral and physical traits, and are one of the few animals who create
their own habitat, sometimes creating conflicts with landowners.
We invite you to test your knowledge of these giant rodents (True or False):
1) Beavers eat fish. False, beavers are vegetarians,
eating the inner bark from riparian trees and shrubs including aspen,
birch, alder, cottonwood
and willow. They can chew down a 6 inch tree in 20 minutes. Beavers’ teeth
constantly grow and must be used year round to keep them short and sharp.
2) Beavers hibernate. False, beavers are active all winter long as they
are adapted to the cold and have access to their food source. They store
fresh sticks and twigs underwater in the pond they create with their dam.
3) Beavers pack mud onto their dams with their tails. False, beavers collect
mud and debris from the bottom of the pond and use their forepaws to pat
it into place. Tails are used to slap the water as a warning, for fat storage,
as a rudder when swimming and as kickstands when balancing to chew on trees.
4) Beavers mate for life. True, beaver pairs typically have 2-4 kits each
year, (occasionally up to 8). The kits are born around May and emerge from
the lodge in the summer. The young remain an additional year, assisting
with food collection, and then leave the lodge to find their own way.
5) Beavers do more harm than good. False, beaver activity does sometimes
conflict with surrounding land uses, but it is instrumental in creating
desirable wetland habitats. In Colorado, more than 80 percent of wildlife
species rely on wetlands during part of their life for food water, shelter
or a place to reproduce.
Now that you know a few interesting facts about beavers, what should you
do about them on your property? If they are not causing any problems, the
best route is to leave them alone. In fact, removing a beaver simply frees
up habitat for another to move in. However, if beavers are infringing on
your landscaping or irrigation ditches, we recommend the following strategies:
• To keep beavers from cutting down trees,
simply wrap them with wire fencing or remesh. The wire should be tall
enough so that in the winter
beavers cannot stand on the snow and reach above to the unprotected trunk.
Be sure to leave enough room between the tree trunk and the wire for
the tree to grow.
• To prevent flooding or blockage of culverts and ditches, flow devices
made from pipe or culvert and wire can be installed in ponds, streams
and ditches. A short video with step-by-step instructions is available at the
public libraries in Durango, Bayfield and Ignacio.
Beavers are not necessarily harmful. In fact, many land managers and ranchers
are now reintroducing beavers for stream restoration work. Beaver dams slow
stream erosion, raise water tables, and filter pollutants and sediments
- critical during times of mud slides and ash flows.
Beavers can best be observed during dawn or dusk. If you hike the Spud
Lake Trail off Old Lime Creek Road, you are assured to see beaver dams and
perhaps a few of these fascinating critters.
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