From the “these inconsiderate rodents must be taxed” department.

Growing beaver populations have created a large number of new habitats along rivers and ponds. Beaver dams raise the water level, enabling the dissolution of the organic carbon from the soil. From beaver ponds, carbon is released to the atmosphere. Part of the carbon settles down on the bottom, ending up used by plants or transported downstream in the water.
“An increase in the number of beavers has an impact on the climate since a rising water level affects the interaction between beaver ponds, water and air, as well as the carbon balance of the zone of ground closest to water,” says Petri Nummi, University Lecturer at the University of Helsinki, Finland.
Current estimates indicate that beaver ponds range from carbon sinks to sources of carbon. Beaver ponds and meadows can fix as much as 470,000 tons of carbon per year or, alternatively, release 820,000 tons of carbon annually. Their overlapping functions as carbon sinks and sources make landscapes moulded by beavers complex.
Beavers conduct continuous landscaping
A beaver family usually changes territories once every three to five years, but can also stay in the same area as long as twenty years. After beavers abandon their territory, the dam gradually disintegrates and the pond empties. It may fill up again in, say, ten years as a result of returnees. Beaver habitats are in fact undergoing a constant change between terrestrial and aquatic ecosystems.
In the beginning of the 20th century, beavers were hunted to near extinction both in Europe and the central and southern regions of North America. According to estimates, there were 10 million beavers in Europe before the hunting began, out of which only some thousand survived in small, isolated populations across the continent.
Beavers were numerous in Finland as well. For millennia, the species was popular game among ancient Finns before being hunted to extinction towards the end of the 19th century.
“People today obviously have no idea of what pond and stream ecosystems are like in their natural state, since research in the field only began after beavers were taken out of the picture,” says Nummi.
Beaver numbers have incrementally risen, and five years ago the entire European population was estimated to be at least one million specimens. Most of them belong to the original Eurasian beaver species, but, for example, Finland’s current beaver population has its origins in the translocations of American and Eurasian beavers carried out in the late 1930s. Eurasian and American beavers do not interbreed.
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The paper: Petri Nummi et al. Beavers affect carbon biogeochemistry: both short-term and long-term processes are involved, Mammal Review (2018). DOI: 10.1111/mam.12134
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So did every brachiosaur fart! 30 tons of methane producing lizard
“Current estimates indicate that beaver ponds range from carbon sinks to sources of carbon.”
Flip a coin and be done with it.
This ought to make the fur fly
“Eurasian and American beavers do not interbreed.”
Eurasian and American beavers must be RACIST!
Not so marque2. Eurasian beavers are racists, and American beavers are victims of racism.
Colonizers, spreading their eurocentric views without regard for indigenous traditions and languages. Cultural genocide. Missionaries suppressing native spiritualism (which of course is inherently superior to colonial spiritualism) And worse – cultural appropriation!! Ethnic cleansing!! Smallpox blankets!! Oh, the agony, I can’t go on.
Or was the American beavers that are the settlers and racists? Darn, which was it again…………….? Can’t remember.
Canadian beavers are OK though. Polite, well liked, peaceable. No global ambitions.
“Eurasian and American beavers do not interbreed.”
How long until the Justice Dept gets involved?
AGW, now it’s BGW, only 24 more to go.
Beavers, on seeing a free-flowing stream anywhere, say “DAM IT”!
It’s well known that when beavers find a free- flowing stream, their reaction is “Dam it!”.
When beavers find free-flowig water anywhere, they say “DAM IT!”
KILL THE BEAVERS!
Funny you mention that. A client of mine who bought the best remote ocean front property in Maine, who works for HP PAID FOR HIS COLLEGE TUITION, trapping local critters. I could not believe my eyes in 2003 that someone that young could do that. It’s a lot of hard work and kids nowadays know nothing about it. He had a family, big acreage and salt water fishing, farm and a clam bed next to deepwater
that is beautiful and cannot be matched.
There are winners in this world and this was the best I’ve ever seen. He worked his butt off for it and did very well! Outstanding and glad to help!
(Remote offgrid)
Congrats my friend!
One last word and of advice… never plow snow with a Chevy Volt or a Tesla.
Alaska? They can see Russia from there.
Are we sure that they aren’t colluding with Russia?
I just wanted some fish. I don’t want any trouble.
No beavers in Australia, we are safe.
Busy,busy beavers.
One of the benefits of reintroducing wolves to Yellowstone was the return of the beavers which has improved the water table.
For those that believe in the radiant greenhouse effect, beaver ponds create more water surface area which allow more H2O to enter the atmosphere. Molecule per molecule, H2O is a stronger IR absorber than is CO2. So if Beavers actually do affect climate it is because their ponds allow more H2O to enter the atmosphere.
My grandson who lives in Oregon blows up beaver dams on his ranch with Tannerite. His teen-aged daughters take turns shooting the explosive to set it off. The first time, they used too much.
to all the commenters who punned, AWESOME!!! needed the humor.
I look forward to observing the discussion between the animal liberationists and the weather alarmists. Should be completely rational and appropriate.
“Beaver dams raise the water level, enabling the dissolution of the organic carbon from the soil”
Perhaps there is some truth to that. They make water ponds where it should be dry. In our area on the Canadian prairie storing water where it normally wouldn’t exist causes salinity in the soils adjacent to the ponds. For that reason plus the drainage culverts they block, there are local bounties on beaver tails up to 35.00 each. On the plus side they are easy to shoot because of their single minded determination to build and improve their works. Remove a few sticks and sit and wait. Hate to kill an animal just doing what comes natural to it but the destruction they cause is amazing.
1. Go Beavers!
2. Bring back the Beaver Hat would solve the problem and improve men’s dress standards (and maybe replace the ubiquitous ridiculous “baseball cap”).
3. Beavers are great everywhere except in my backyard.
The evidence is truly DAM-ing. When a beaver sees a flowing stream, he says “dam it!”
Two injured Inuit hunters huddled for three days with the body of their friend who was killed by a polar bear, four other bears circling their camp.
“They had to sit tight,” said Rob Hedley, administrator for the hamlet of Naujaat, Nunavut, where the hunters were from.
“It was pretty scary. They didn’t sleep and they were out there for a while.”
Nunavut’s second polar bear death this summer sparked widespread outrage Wednesday among Inuit, who feel their lives are being endangered by hunting restrictions imposed by southerners.
The hunters left Naujaat on the northernmost shore of Hudson Bay on Aug. 21 to hunt narwhal and caribou. They were expected home on Thursday.
Police said they were notified when the trio hadn’t shown up by Sunday.
A search began Monday with federal, territorial and local teams. Although rescuers knew roughly where the hunters were headed, search boats were blocked by heavy sea ice.
The Coast Guard icebreaker Louis St. Laurent joined the search and its helicopter found the hunters early Tuesday about 100 kilometres east of Naujaat near Lyon Inlet.
“It looks like it was a mother and a cub,” said Hedley. “The mother and the cub were killed.
https://calgaryherald.com/pmn/news-pmn/canada-news-pmn/details-emerge-on-polar-bear-death-hunters-huddled-as-bears-circled/wcm/4993735c-1f59-4f91-bc88-62d02e954cf9
Not surprising to learn that “Eurasian and American beavers do not interbreed.” They probably have a hard time getting cleared by the TSA.