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Coyotes-Wolves-Cougars.blogspot.com

Grizzly bears, black bears, wolves, coyotes, cougars/ mountain lions,bobcats, wolverines, lynx, foxes, fishers and martens are the suite of carnivores that originally inhabited North America after the Pleistocene extinctions. This site invites research, commentary, point/counterpoint on that suite of native animals (predator and prey) that inhabited The Americas circa 1500-at the initial point of European exploration and subsequent colonization. Landscape ecology, journal accounts of explorers and frontiersmen, genetic evaluations of museum animals, peer reviewed 20th and 21st century research on various aspects of our "Wild America" as well as subjective commentary from expert and layman alike. All of the above being revealed and discussed with the underlying goal of one day seeing our Continent rewilded.....Where big enough swaths of open space exist with connective corridors to other large forest, meadow, mountain, valley, prairie, desert and chaparral wildlands.....Thereby enabling all of our historic fauna, including man, to live in a sustainable and healthy environment. - Blogger Rick

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Friday, May 30, 2014

Dietland Müller-Schwarze has studied beaver behavior for over 30 years and currently is Emeritus Professor of Environmental Biology at SUNY College of Environmental Science and Forestry in Syracuse, NY...............Today, he gives us all a primer on how Beavers go about defending their territories from others of their kind................"Beavers mark their territories by creating "mud mounds" and then squirting them with castoreum from glands near the base of their tales".............."Castoreum contains many different kinds of compounds: alkaloids, phenolics, terpenes, alcohols, and acids among them"............. "The beaver appropriates the ingredients from the plants it eats"............"Compounds from a number of trees in the beaver’s diet end up in their castoreum".............. "Benzyl alcohol occurs in aspens and poplars, benzoic acid in black cherry and scots pine, and catechol in common cottonwood"................ "In summer, beavers eat aquatic plants such as pondweed and pond lilies – the alkaloids that these plants use to deter insects also end up in the beaver’s mix"...................."So there rages a chemical arms race in the woods"................. "Trees bolster their defenses against herbivores, especially during the dormant season"............ "Beavers and other animals defeat these defenses by breaking down, detoxing, sequestering, and recycling potentially harmful compounds"

beaver
Arms Race in the Woods: How Beavers Recycle Tree Defenses | The Outside Story | May 26th 2014



Arms Race in the Woods: How Beavers Recycle Tree Defenses


Illustration by Adelaide Tyrol
Arms Race in the Woods: How Beavers Recycle Tree Defenses Image

















Around a beaver pond, we sometimes catch a whiff of beaver
 odor. People
 have described it to me as smoky, woody, or like tobacco. It may
 waft over
 from the lodge, or it might emanate from scent mounds – little
piles of mud
 by the water’s edge. Beavers make scent mounds by dredging
up mud from
 the bottom of a pond, then carrying it up on land in their front
paws while
walking upright. The beaver drops the mud, then squats over
 the mound
and applies castoreum from glands near the base of the tail.
The smell means: keep away! In some neighborhoods, this
territorial
advertisement works remarkably well. I’ve been involved in
 studies where
human-made scent mounds effectively deterred free-ranging
 beavers from
 settling in unoccupied beaver habitat.
When a beaver detects a foreign castor smell in its territory,
it implies
 brazen behavior that has to be dealt with. The residents
invariably
 eliminate the strange scent mark. They paw it apart and
 scent mark
over it. If they come across the perpetrator, they’ll attack
viciously.
Researchers have found that beavers can identify family
 members
 by their castor smell; they can also distinguish between
 neighbors
 and complete strangers.
Castoreum contains many different kinds of compounds:
 alkaloids,
 phenolics, terpenes, alcohols, and acids among them.
The beaver
 appropriates the ingredients from the plants it eats;
ironically, the
plants use the compounds to say: keep away!
Plants synthesize a bewildering variety of secondary
 compounds
that differ from the basic classes of proteins, fats, and
 carbohydrates.
 Some, like alkaloids, taste bitter, while tannins are
 astringent.
When they work, the compounds defend the plants
 against mammal
 and insect herbivores, as well as fungi and other
 microorganisms.
These secondary compounds interfere with digestion
and inhibit
 reproduction. Some are outright toxic and even deadly.

















Compounds from a number of trees in the beaver’s diet end
 up in their castoreum. Benzyl alcohol occurs in aspens and
 poplars, benzoic acid in black cherry and scots pine, and
catechol in common cottonwood. In summer, beavers eat
aquatic plants such as pondweed and pond lilies – the
 alkaloids that these plants use to deter insects also end
up in the beaver’s mix.
Beavers cope with plant chemicals in different ways. They
 have in their saliva a protein that binds tannins and renders
them harmless. They deal with other compounds by breaking
 them down into their component parts: when they ingest salicin
– a bitter chemical in willow and poplar bark – the salicin
molecule gets broken down into sugar and, eventually, salicylic
 acid. (Beavers are not the only animals that have this trick –
leaf beetles also ingest salicin when munching on willow leaves.
 They use the glucose as a nutrient and the salicylic acid for
defense against predators, such as ants.)
Even humans appropriate beaver castor, though we use it to
 say: come here! Castor sacs are a secondary product of the
 fur trade and are sold to perfumers who use the castor to give
perfumes an “animal note.” In fact, the chemical investigation
of castoreum was driven by the perfume industry.
We’re also not above recycling plant compounds for our own
 purposes. Salicylic acid is the active principle of aspirin.
Over two thousand years ago, physicians in ancient Greece
prescribed willow bark to fight fevers and inflammation.
Native Americans used willow bark against headaches,
 and today we still treat pain of the lower back and
osteoarthritis with willow bark preparations.
And so there rages a chemical arms race in the woods.
Trees bolster their defenses against herbivores, especially
during the dormant season. Beavers and other animals
defeat these defenses by breaking down, detoxing,
sequestering, and recycling potentially harmful compounds.
 Plotting their next move, trees will crank up their defenses.
 Two- and three-year old aspen saplings are rich in
 bitter-tasting salicin-like glycosides. Beavers avoid
these and feed on larger, less bitter trees, allowing the
 young trees to prevail. The race goes on and no one ever
 wins. Each measure provokes a countermeasure.


Dietland Müller-Schwarze has studied beaver
 behavior for over 30 years and currently is 
Emeritus Professor of Environmental Biology
 at SUNY College of Environmental Science 
and Forestry in Syracuse, NY.

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