Our climate hero, the American beaver,
will be getting its own management
plan in New Mexico after the state
senate passed a memorial recognizing
the busy rodent’s value to water
supplies and ecosystems—especially
in times of drought.
The beaver memorial acknowledges
that the dams, ponds and associated
wetlands created by beaver are known
to increase groundwater percolation,
which raises local groundwater tables
and increases water storage. The
memorial also recognizes the critical
role that ecosystem restoration could
play in protecting and recovering
many imperiled species.
WildEarth Guardians worked with
state lawmakers to draft the
memorial and shepherd it through
the state legislature. The memorial
directs the state wildlife agency
and other relevant agencies to report
back to the legislature by September
1st on an approach for how best to
develop the beaver management plan.
Only Oregon and Utah have
statewide beaver management
plans, both of which recognize
the climate adaptation benefits
beaver can offer.
A WildEarth Guardians statewide
assessment found beaver populations
are dangerously low on public lands
in New Mexico. Over 80% of streams
on public lands could support the
dam-building ecosystem engineer.
And yet recent surveys have found
few active beaver in streams and
rivers on national forests in the state.
Now the hard work begins of
coordinating a multi-agency and
stakeholder process to develop
the management plan that benefits
beaver and New Mexico’s headwaters.
WildEarth Guardians will continue to
lead the reestablishment of
functional beaver populations on
public lands across the state.
This is a big victory for beaver
and ecosystems in the West and
we hope you will join us and
support this critical ecosystem
restoration and climate adaptation
work.
No comments:
Post a Comment