Around 80 percent of the Tule River Reservation’s drinking water comes from the Tule watershed. Because the area is so important for the health of the community, the tribe has been preparing the area since 2014, building manmade dams to help the new beavers adapt more quickly. Beavers will create habitat development for amphibians like the western pond turtles, southern mountain yellow-legged frogs, and southwestern willow flycatchers, which will help increase biodiversity.
Beaver, Getty image
After a decade of work, the Tule River Tribe has released nine
beavers into the nation’s reservation in the foothills of
California’s southern Sierra Nevada mountains. The beavers are
expected to make the landscape more fire and drought resistant.
Beaver dams trap water in pools, making the flow of water slower so
the surrounding ecosystem can reap the benefits of the moisture
while making it more difficult for forest fires to start. They can
also help a forest heal after a fire by rehydrating the area.
“We’ve been through numerous droughts over the years,” Kenneth
McDarmet said, who is a Tule River tribal member and former
councilman. “It’s going to be wonderful to watch them do their
thing.”
Around 80 percent of the Tule River Reservation’s drinking water
comes from the Tule watershed. Because the area is so important for
the health of the community, the tribe has been preparing the area
since 2014, building manmade dams to help the new beavers adapt more
quickly.
Temperatures worldwide are expected to get hotter, increasing
drought and creating conditions that make wildfires bigger and more
deadly. In California, some of the worst wildfires on record have
happened in the last five years partly due to drought. In 2020,
three fires burned almost a million acres in the Sierra Nevada
Forest, and in 2021 a wildfire burned an additional 1.5 million
acres. Bringing beavers back may offer a break.
Prior to colonization, the North American beaver population was
estimated to be around 200 million. But in the 1800’s, beavers were
hunted for their pelts by settlers, decimating the population, while
farmers and landowners viewed — and still view them — as pests.
Today, the beaver population is estimated to be about 12 million.
But in recent years there has been a growing interest in traditional
ecological knowledge from tribes, and the beaver has become
celebrated as an ecological engineer.
In 2022, the California Department of Fish and Wildlife, or CDFW,
secured funding for the Beaver Restoration Program, a program
designed to restore the beaver population and support conservation
efforts. In 2023, the CDFW recognized beavers as a keystone species,
an animal that affects other animals on the landscape like bison or
bees, and thus influences the ecosystem in major ways. Their absence
typically has negative effects on the landscape and its
interconnected ecosystems.
Today, the CDFW program partners with tribes, non-profit
organizations, land-owners, and state and federal entities to
restore beaver populations and habitats in an effort to improve
climate change, drought, and wildfire resilience in California.
“We expect better habitat conditions for native critters on the
land,” said Krysten Kallum, a public information officer with the
CDFW. “It creates a refuge for plants and wildlife.”
More water means more plants that can attract other types of animals
to the area. The CDFW expects to see better habitat development for
amphibians like the western pond turtles, southern mountain
yellow-legged frogs, and southwestern willow flycatchers, which will
help increase biodiversity.
McDarment, of Tule River, said that tribal pictographs show beavers
living in the area, and it’s good to see them here again.
“My hope is to have beaver throughout the reservation,” he said.