Posted on 07/18/2013 1:55:09 PM PDT by Red Badger
Ellen Wohl, a geology professor at Colorado State University, has published a paper in the journal Geophysical Research Letters, describing the role beavers play in climate change. In a field study she undertook, she found that carbon is sequestered when beavers build dams and is released after the beavers abandon the dams they've built.
Most people are aware that beavers build dams. They're responsible for river and stream blockage across many parts of North America. What has not been known, until now, is what sort of impact beaver dams and their backed up water have on carbon sequestering.
Carbon of course, exists in the wood of trees. When trees die and decompose, that carbon is released into the atmosphere. But what happens when the wood of a dead tree becomes submerged beneath the water of a dam built by a beaver? That's what Wohl set out to learn.
In a field study in Colorado's Rocky Mountain National Park, Wohl took samples from areas known as beaver meadowsthe land that has become submerged or wet due to dams backing up flowing rivers or streams. She collected 29 sediment samples from the wet areas around 27 streams in the park. Upon analysis, the sediment turned out to be harboring 12 percent carbon by weight. This was in stark contrast to sediment samples she and colleagues collected last year in beaver meadows where the dams had been abandoned allowing the land to dry. There the samples revealed carbon content of just 3.3 percent. Wood buried beneath water and sediment decays more slowly than wood left on dry land. Thus, by building dams, beavers cause the carbon in the wood to be sequesteredat least until they abandon the dam and allow the water behind it to dry up.
Wohl's data suggests that if all the beaver meadow land now dried due to abandoned dams were still wet, the amount of additional carbon sequestered would add up to 2.7 million metric tons. Much of that carbon was released in the years shortly after the North American continent was colonizedtrappers significantly reduced the population of beavers leaving millions of dams abandoned.
Carbon sequestered by beaver dams hardly registers on a global scale of coursealmost ten billion tons of it is added to the atmosphere worldwide each year. Nonetheless, Wohl's study shows that at least some of those emissions can come from some surprising places.
There was some comedy movie years ago, in which it appeared that Leslie Nielsen was looking up a woman’s dress and said it was a nice beaver. But the woman was pulling a stuffed beaver from a high shelf or attic space. Was supposed to be double entendre I’m sure.
Naked Gun.
Uhhh...Ummmm...Uhhhh...Yeah...
Ya, thanks, it was the Naked Gun movie. Couldn’t recall that. Thanks.
Nice beaver.
Yep.
Beavers build dam; carbon is sequestered.
Beavers abandon dam; carbon is released.
Net change = 0
It doesn't take a rocket surgeon.
Do I? You betcha!
Primus - Wynona's Big Brown Beaver
It's the stuff of song and legend.
Some beavers don’t make the night longer.......it just seems that way................
Shave them!,,,,,
Eat a Beaver - Queer Nation is trying to make that legal.
:-(
I volunteer to do more beaver research.
I'd argue that it's still arguably in context. The headline says "beavers play a role in climate change", and the whole "climate change" debate was invented by the global-warming p*****s.
Because there hot?
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