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How beavers have affected ecosystem at Voyageurs National Park
Date:
October 9, 2014
Source:
South Dakota State University
Felling trees, building dams and creating ponds -- beavers
have a unique ability to alter the landscape in ways that are
beneficial to other organisms, according to South Dakota
State University professor Carol Johnston of the natural
resource management department. That's why they are
known as a "keystone species."
The ecologist received a two-year National Science Foundation
grant for more than $143,000 to compile a book based on her
previous NSF-funded research on how beavers have affected
the ecosystem at Voyageurs National Park near International
Falls, Minnesota.
"Beavers influence the environment at a rate far beyond what
would be expected given their abundance," said Johnston, who
has been doing beaver research since the 1980s and authored
or co-authored 28 of the 37 articles in the compilation.
Beavers create patchiness because they cut down big trees and
make dams that flood the landscape creating wet meadows and
marshy vegetation, Johnston explained. However, historical and
aerial photos from 1927 and 1940 showed solid forests, meaning
little evidence of beaver activity.
From the 1940s through the 1980s, the beaver population in the
nearly 218,000-acre park increased steadily, according to
Johnston. By 1986, 13 percent of the landscape was impounded
by beavers.
"We saw lots of ponds where before there were none," she said.
In addition to duck and amphibians, moose and upland mammals
use this habitat extensively. "Having beaver on the landscape
creates a lot of biodiversity."
Since 1991, the number of beavers has begun to decrease,
Johnston pointed out. However, thanks to National Park Service
officials mapping the active beaver lodges, she can now relate the
population data to changes in the landscape.
"It's unusual to have both those types of data for such a large area,
" she said. That will allow her to track what happens to the
landscape when beaver numbers are reduced.
Both predation and depleted food supply may account for the
beavers' decline.
"Aspen is the preferred food," she said, noting beavers don't
hibernate and must rely on having a large supply of edible f
ood in their underwater cache to survive the winter.
Beavers forage up to 110 yards from the pond edge, creating
what Johnston calls a "bathtub ring of conifers" when most of
the aspen and deciduous trees have been harvested.
Venturing beyond that comfort zone makes them susceptible
to predators, she pointed out. "Beavers are a preferred prey f
or wolves."
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