Comments
Zombie_Harambe t1_j90ayn5 wrote
Water running is their hell
Redhotmegasystem t1_j94qbp7 wrote
abandonment issues
Peta4ek187 t1_j93d1e7 wrote
I am ready to pay, just for the sake of watching them building dam
strictly_onerous t1_j93716c wrote
"is that trickling I hear? It needs to end NOW"
This is my favorite beaver fact. They just really need for that sound to not be there.
[deleted] t1_j8zl2xb wrote
I'm a big fan of post10 on Youtube. He just goes around clearing culverts around the US and often deals with beaver dams, though he does admit they are beneficial to the ecoysystem, they just can't block culverts because they cause floods on roads.
brianinohio t1_j8zmnqg wrote
Post10 fan too. Dude is awesome. Doing his shit for free is cool.
[deleted] t1_j8zo53n wrote
He has a Patreon and they get the vids first and YT must pay him I assume, plus merch. I'm glad he's making something for what he does. And it's so satisfying.
brianinohio t1_j8zos70 wrote
Indeed. Dude is looking out for people. Hope he gets paid by YouTube or Patreon :)
anarrogantworm t1_j8zu9a5 wrote
That's what beaver baffles are for!
Gagarin1961 t1_j91t8ir wrote
The production style of that reminds me of YouTube in 2008. The windows movie maker titles, the soft guitar background, and nothing but pure information from start to finish.
Skipaspace t1_j91od2m wrote
I understand the purpose of roads. But the road is man made. So that road benefits us. The dam benefits a whole ecosystem.
Does he clear what he does with the forest and game commission?
Bobyyyyyyyghyh t1_j92jbu5 wrote
The purpose of a culvert is to prevent flooding. A dam does the opposite of that. Dams in culverts benefit no one but the beaver
Cindexxx t1_j93u1eh wrote
No.... They benefit the ecosystem as a whole. That's the whole point of the post. They just don't help humans.
Bobyyyyyyyghyh t1_j93unz8 wrote
...
The ecosystem. Do you know what a culvert is? It's a sewer line that allows water to pass a road or hill.
McMeanface t1_j8zudqo wrote
I just love that beavers hear running water and immediately think ABSOLUTELY NOT
tickettoride98 t1_j90zgyi wrote
"It is an affront to my existence"
Jackalodeath t1_j91z1r3 wrote
It's a somewhat similar reaction to our aversion to certain frequency noises; just with a different result.
Take "horror" movies for example; you know how a vast majority have violins/violas/etc playing a certain cacophonous note, gradually building in intensity until a climax (right before jumpscares for instance.) Or a monster will have a somewhat high-pitched "shriek."
The sounds are typically (not always) designed pretty similar to the frequencies emitted by a crying baby, which we're "hardwired" to seek out/identify.
A majority of folks are moved by the sound of a wailing babe in some form, whether it be general irritation to invoking sympathy. We're just at a stage where we can resist the urge to immediately act upon it, but if you can hear, you're still succinctly aware it's happening.
Beavers have a few other habits that drive them to dam it; most notably the habit of eating the bark/limbs of trees, and piling the less-nutritious, "dead" bits of wood into piles. Pack those piles with mud/sediment, as they grow it becomes relatively structurally sound. Very similar to "primitive" human dwellings, how quaint.
Eat bark in one area for long enough, you'll have to travel out further from home (safety), for fresh bark; they're not exactly graceful on land, but nimble as fuck underwater. Very, very few of their predators stand a chance in Hell catching them in water.
Let evolution and learning do its thing for a few centuries, and beavers realized packing their leftovers and mud around a certain sound - uneven, burbling water - it'll stop, and the water that was running to make said sound starts to well up/flood the area it was coming from, giving it more range and easy escape routes to forage over wider areas.
A side effect of those piles is they typically end up raising slightly above water level, leaving a pocket of well-insulted air inside. As the structures settle and become more structurally sound, the area becomes surrounded by water on some or all sides, which makes it far easier to escape a predator while out and about - they are rodents after all, and rodents are the meatballs of nature in terms of the food chain. Think of it as building a studio apartment with an entrance only accessible through a moat, and you're one of only a few world-class swimmers in the neighborhood.
Wood also floats pretty well, and due to further adaptions - namely having two sets of lips, one in front and one behind their iron-reinforced buckteefs - it's extremely efficient for transporting said wood/food back home.
Unlike most other rodents, this relative safety of dam life finds them being more "monogamous," having much smaller litters compared to their rodent brethren, and they actually spend the time/energy to raise/teach their offspring instead of always worrying about getting eaten. Dam building is instinctual to a point, but practice makes perfect; you can tell the difference between a youngin's dam and an elder beaver's dam.
Another thing to note; you know how beavers chew down trees? They're not eating the trees' innards like one would think; most the time, they're bringing the good stuff too high to reach - young, tender, nutritious limbs - down to them. The innards of most trees are akin to eating nothing but celery, while the bark/newly formed limbs are like celery with ranch or peanut butter; more nutrient dense. Granted they have to basically "chew their cud" the hard way to get the most out of it, it's still better than the hard, "dead" innards. They also seem to know exactly where to chisel away at said trees to get them to fall towards a body of water for a quick escape in case the sound attracts unwanted attention^_^
Cindexxx t1_j93ug6l wrote
I actually knew the entirety of this already but you wrote it so wonderfully I read it all anyways. Truly a great piece!
Jackalodeath t1_j93ulea wrote
Why thank you^_^
Cindexxx t1_j93uqf0 wrote
You're very welcome! :)
RickardsRed77 t1_j921o65 wrote
“This place needs some Infrastructure”
milkman1218 t1_j93kayq wrote
running water And I took that personally -Beaver
RoChambeauxPDX t1_j8zjron wrote
Sure would be nice if we could evolve into a keystone species.
cutelyaware t1_j8zy3vb wrote
We play an important role in modifying our areas in ways that are beneficial to rats and pigeons.
Huge_Contribution_46 t1_j9061qn wrote
Raccoons and Corvids are the true champs of modern living. Coyotes too, live in cities undetected.
cutelyaware t1_j90fcb4 wrote
Not as successful in that way as rats and pigeons, but certainly more complex and photogenic. Peregrine falcons are doing increasingly well among our skyscraper cliffs preying on pigeons too. Humans are a force of nature.
ExceedingChunk t1_j93k80i wrote
And seagulls. Rats of the sky.
cutelyaware t1_j93pzlt wrote
Yes though seagulls are not very dependent upon us whereas the others are evolving to fit into our world.
saxywarrior t1_j907jvs wrote
The species beavers disrupted died or evolved. There are plenty of species humans are keystones for: dogs, cats, pigeons, rats, etc.. The problem is we definitely change the environment dramatically more than any other species and kill off way to many "competitors".
TheNightIsLost t1_j90keqv wrote
We are. Imagine what happens to urban animals if humans go extinct.
angryscientistjunior t1_j907xpd wrote
My thought exactly. Unite!
Ignitus1 t1_j8zvy4s wrote
“Important to ecosystems” is a claim full of survivorship bias. The species damaged by beaver activity probably aren’t around anymore.
We always talk about ecosystems as if they’re meant to be static. Ecosystems, just like the living things that inhabit them, are ever-changing. They’re not meant to be static or permanent.
Chi_ZenQuakers t1_j901n30 wrote
one man’s global warming is another’s tropic paradise.
[deleted] t1_j90b0k7 wrote
That's cool until ocean acidification causes another mass extinction event
doomgiver98 t1_j90cp4j wrote
Mass extinctions open up niches for other animals to fill and adapt.
Skipaspace t1_j91ompi wrote
You are absolutely correct.
But I want to be one of thr animals that fill and adapt.
Also, humans are causing it. There will be a lot of suffering for humans and animals...we should probably try to limit as much suffering as possible and not actively contribute to it.
Cindexxx t1_j93unb6 wrote
The rich elite: "No."
Throwaway000002468 t1_j90eylw wrote
In Southern Chile, they were artificially introduced and now pose a big threat to the local biodiversity.
[deleted] t1_j90azdb wrote
You should do some more research into this, it's genuinely interesting and I think you're drawing some incomplete conclusions
PicardTangoAlpha t1_j91xn30 wrote
>The species damaged by beaver activity probably aren’t around anymore.
The word "probably" means you've done absolutely zero research on this and can't name any "damaged" species.
Ignitus1 t1_j925eag wrote
It’s not hard to imagine that a species known for altering the environment would have an impact on the other species in that environment.
Besides, what sort of research would you expect to find? How is the fossil record going to show definitively that one species pushed another to extinction over a long period of time?
These interactions are inevitable in an ecological system.
PicardTangoAlpha t1_j92om7c wrote
Since you’ve looked for none: but claim expertise let’s call that what it is.
Ignitus1 t1_j92pmi6 wrote
Go ahead and show me where I claimed expertise. I’ll wait.
PicardTangoAlpha t1_j92w700 wrote
“It’s not hard to imagine “ hurt durr. So cringe.
Southbendusername t1_j93lfev wrote
Christ you're dense
tossinthisshit1 t1_j934vw4 wrote
you must be a beaver.
mrb783 t1_j91c0bu wrote
Yeah, all those species that die when they have access to fresh water in areas they otherwise wouldn't sure would have a bone to pick with beavers.
Dangerous_Muscle7032 t1_j90glje wrote
The restoration of riparian ecosystems are one of the best ways to remedy desertification and water table subsidation. Beavers work for free everyday/night doing just that.
ShockedChicken t1_j90i1i4 wrote
And then we have idiots in Michigan who decide to use explosives, and guns to set off said explosives, to destroy beaver dams.
This is why we can’t have nice things.
anarrogantworm t1_j8zugzf wrote
Here is an awesome documentary on beavers and the impact they can have on an ecosystem, even in the desert!
autoposting_system t1_j8zp28z wrote
Right. And then we modify their modifications. Using tannerite
imac849 t1_j8zlv0z wrote
Just don't make em angry
Cavemanjoe47 t1_j91u6oy wrote
Beavers flood areas so they can reach the trees they like to eat, particularly aspens up north. Most trees and plants can't handle being flooded. Anywhere they're non-native, they're basically pests, just look at Argentina.
This article reads like it was written by either a 12-year-old or Microsoft Explorer's shitty attempt at an AI.
PicardTangoAlpha t1_j91xd7i wrote
They engineer the landscape, like no other species.
[deleted] t1_j900159 wrote
[removed]
Mammoth-Mud-9609 t1_j90q5fj wrote
The role of different types of keystone species; predators, builders and mutualists in changing or maintaining the habitat around them. Removing the keystone species or a group of other species may damage the habitat, but it may be better to focus efforts on preserving the habitat rather than individual species. - https://youtu.be/os_pkbGrf3s
otclogic t1_j924t9n wrote
> The role of different types of keystone species; predators, builders and mutualists in changing or maintaining the habitat around them.
Beavers I can accept as a Keystone species, but I would think that at least one other animal on that list would prefer Tacatè or Miller.
zoolztool t1_j918zak wrote
Unfortunately I've tried explaining this sort of thing to people in western pa where there is still some wild beavers, but most people are more interested in either hunting them or having their dogs hunt them. You try and say, "they are important for the ecosystem", doesnt matter because people see them as threatening the value of their property. And to them that's the ultimate importance.
mrb783 t1_j91bhuk wrote
Yeah, they're pretty dammed important.
mbeards85 t1_j91lflh wrote
"He had come to know beaver for what they truly were—engineers, family-oriented home builders. He'd read that most of the cities in Europe were founded by beaver. That beaver had first felled the trees along the rivers and dammed them up. The rising water killed more
trees and when the food was gone and the beaver had no more bark to chew they left. The dams eventually broke apart, and the water drained and left large clearings along the rivers where the beaver had cut down all the trees. Early man came along and started cities where the clearings lay. Cities like London and Paris were founded and settled first by beaver." Excerpt from Brian's Return by Gary Paulsen
I remember reading this book and thinking that this was the coolest thing.
[deleted] t1_j91li6l wrote
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purpleelpehant t1_j91skd7 wrote
Beavers and mosquitoes. You heard it here first!
zjelco t1_j91v1o1 wrote
They even keep away filthy Orcs with their dams.
cuerdo t1_j92vbvi wrote
Humans will also be credited for being keystone of a ecosystem containing a great diversity of radioactive cockroaches.
Hungry_Treacle3376 t1_j9311i4 wrote
Just like humans /s
Northviewguy t1_j938r0i wrote
Canada was built on the Fur Trade and the Beaver remains a national symbol, on the reverse of every 5 cent piece.
[deleted] t1_j93vla0 wrote
Take that Americas pigeon.
NorthernerWuwu t1_j96xqdm wrote
Well, beneficial to some and detrimental to others. We tend to see wetlands as ecologically important though.
CosmicBearclaw t1_j9e8m3m wrote
They are also attracted to blood in the water, particularly from diarrhea.
[deleted] t1_j8zplf2 wrote
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strawberry_space_jam t1_j909e3s wrote
Gg
Wxmike94 t1_j8zj5zq wrote
Busy beavers
the_hell_you_say t1_j8zvskv wrote
Beaver has made my life better
imextremelymoderate t1_j8zzkmk wrote
I think the dead trees would disagree
Enlightened-Beaver t1_j90692a wrote
I approve this post
r_a_butt_lol t1_j8zu51f wrote
Fun fact: Beavers will build a dam over speakers playing the sound of running water.