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writing:beaver_dam_analogs [2025/11/22 02:02] JacobCoffinWriteswriting:beaver_dam_analogs [2025/11/22 03:59] (current) JacobCoffinWrites
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 https://wildfishconservancy.org/projects/beaver-dam-analog-project/ https://wildfishconservancy.org/projects/beaver-dam-analog-project/
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 === In a Solarpunk Society === === In a Solarpunk Society ===
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 That doesn't mean there isn't room for conflict: That doesn't mean there isn't room for conflict:
-  * In more populated and developed areas, these projects may run into trouble with outdated laws (or regulators) concerned with water rights, or with construction in waterways. For example, many US States have existing laws meant to protect shorelines and bodies of water, which can, ironically, cause problems when humans try to get permits for their half of this work. +  * In more populated and developed areas, these projects may run into trouble with outdated laws (or regulators) concerned with water rights, or with construction in waterways. For example, many US States have existing laws meant to protect shorelines and bodies of water, which prevent construction in rivers, and which can, ironically, cause problems when humans try to get permits for their half of this work. 
   * Even in a more solarpunk world, humans often don’t want to get their feet wet, or see their home or property flooded. Even people who steward land with good intentions may have plans for how the habitats in their care will take shape, and feel upset when a large rodent kills their trees or decides that their space will actually become a wetland. This is especially true in more densely-populated areas, where the land has been carved into many smaller parcels, and a new beaver’s continued existence essentially depends on every affected human treating them decently.   * Even in a more solarpunk world, humans often don’t want to get their feet wet, or see their home or property flooded. Even people who steward land with good intentions may have plans for how the habitats in their care will take shape, and feel upset when a large rodent kills their trees or decides that their space will actually become a wetland. This is especially true in more densely-populated areas, where the land has been carved into many smaller parcels, and a new beaver’s continued existence essentially depends on every affected human treating them decently.
   * For their own safety, Beaver Dam Analogs and wetland restoration may not be achievable or worthwhile in some areas, and beavers in these areas may be caught and relocated to wild where they don’t have to worry about dangerous human neighbors.    * For their own safety, Beaver Dam Analogs and wetland restoration may not be achievable or worthwhile in some areas, and beavers in these areas may be caught and relocated to wild where they don’t have to worry about dangerous human neighbors. 
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 +On a similar subject in coexisting with beavers, there are also several clever mechanisms for mitigating some of their activities so that they don't come into conflict with humans. Beavers have a compulsive instinct to dam flowing water, which causes problems when they set up near human dwellings, or come across a culvert under a road humans built through a wetland and jam it full of sticks and mud, causing the road to flood. 
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 +The following devices are designed with an understanding of how beavers detect moving water, by feeling currents or hearing flowing water. In the modern day many town and state governments, and individuals skip right to killing beavers rather than accepting the financial cost and hassle of setting these up, but they might be quite common in a solarpunk society:
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 +**[[https://workingwithbeavers.ca/coexist_level.php|Pond Leveller]]** This is basically [[https://www.beaversolutions.com/get-beaver-control-products/flexible-pond-levelers/|a long tube with a large wire cage around one end]]. The caged end goes into the beaver pond below the water level, and the rest goes downstream, through the beaver dam (humans cut a trench through it and put it back afterwards), to create a permanent leak through the dam that the beavers cannot stop. The point where the tube goes through the dam is higher than the rest of it on either end. This determines level of the entire pond above the dam. Water will flow through the pipe unless the pond level drops below the peak of the tube. The height of the tube (and thus the upstream pond) can be adjusted up or down if desired. To allow beavers to remain at the site, it is important that the water level remain as high as can be tolerated by neighboring humans; the lodge entrances must remain submerged and the pond needs to be deep enough that it will not freeze to the bottom in the winter. If the water level is lowered too far, the beavers may build additional dams and restart the cycle.
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 +The cage around the intake end of the tube prevents the beavers from getting close enough to detect water movement. Because the tube opening is underwater it doesn't make a flowing water noise they'll feel compelled to fix.
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 +**[[https://www.beaversolutions.com/get-beaver-control-products/culvert-protective-fences|Culvert Fences]]** Culverts (a pipe under a road) are an "easy" dam for beavers, as they only need to plug the culvert to back up the water and create a pond. The growing pond can quickly flood the road, trail, and nearby areas, making it impassable and sometimes damaging the infrastructure. There are a few ways to prevent this, and a culvert fence is a straightforward one. This is basically a metal wire fence which boxes in the 'inlet' end of the culvert. It starts narrow at the culvert and extends wider and wider out into the water upstream in a trapezoid shape. The holes in the fence are fairly large, enough to minimize floated debris building up, and sometimes even large enough for a beaver to squeeze through on its own, but too narrow for it to bring sticks through (this allows them to travel through the culvert like an animal underpass). Fence flooring is often installed to prevent tunneling under the fence.
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 +When beavers try to dam the culvert inlet, the trapezoid shape forces them to dam further and further from the culvert, which discourages them from trying to use the fence as part of the structure. This is because as they get further away from the culvert inlet the opening that the stream is flowing into is widening. This widening of the water reduces the water movement at the fence where the beaver is damming. Since the sound and feel of moving water are strong damming stimuli for beavers, their desire to continue damming is reduced. And if that's not enough, a culvert fence also creates a long perimeter that the beavers must dam against. Typically over 40 feet, this long perimeter makes for a lot more work than jamming some sticks into a pipe.
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 +**[[https://workingwithbeavers.ca/coexist_culvert.php|Culvert Protector/'Beaver-Proof Culvert']]** These look like a metal culvert extending out from under the road, into the upstream water, with a T-junction piece mounted to the end so the 'top' of the T is upright, extending up above the water and down into it. The top and bottom of this extension are open, but are protected with grates. The T-junction funnels the sound of running water upwards, decreasing the beaver's desire to plug the culvert, and the grate allows water to flow through but prevents sticks or debris from being placed in the culvert.
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 +**[[https://www.beaversww.org/manage-flooding/|Diversion Dams]]** This has a lot of overlap with the Beaver Dam Analogs (though they're usually made with beaver fencing, concrete reinforcing wire, or stronger gauge fencing, supported by metal fence posts, etc) - it uses an understanding of the locations beavers would like to dam, and the stimuli that causes them to build dams in order to get them to build at a location chosen by humans to prevent future conflict. These are often a good fit where roadbeds are built high with respect to the water level and the water level upstream is not a concern. In situations such as these, humans will build a smaller culvert fence to prevent plugging, and a larger, semi-circular fence upstream. By using strategically placed stones and other material to create some pooling and cascading water noise they can encourage the beavers to dam against the larger fence. 
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 +**[[https://workingwithbeavers.ca/coexist_wrap.php|Tree wrapping/wiring]]** In addition to causing flooding, beavers can be rough on the local trees, which they see as future dams, lodges, and food (they eat the soft inner tree bark). They can kill and cut down remarkably large and healthy trees in a surprisingly short time. To prevent this, and to protect individual trees or areas of vegetation (such as restoration sites with newly planted vegetation for example) humans can set up a protective fence made of wire mesh. This is considered a type of 'exclusion fencing.' Like many of the other tools, the fencing requires maintenance, both to ensure the beavers can't get past it, and to keep the trees from being choked by the wire as they grow.
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