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A new wetland created by beavers in the Methow River watershed.

A new wetland created by beavers in the Methow River watershed. Photo: NOAA

By Lauren Senkyr

Once numbering up to 400 million in North America, beavers were hunted to near extinction in the 19th century.  While it has long been known that their fur makes excellent clothing and top hats, the role of beavers in maintaining healthy river ecosystems was less well understood until recently.

The Methow Beaver Project is an excellent example of how beavers are now being used to enhance stream habitat to benefit endangered salmon and threatened steelhead trout in the Pacific Northwest.  Funded in part by the Ecotrust-led Whole Watershed Restoration Initiative, the project is restoring wetland and riparian habitat by relocating nuisance beavers to creeks within the Methow watershed in the Upper Columbia River Basin in Eastern Washington.

Beavers have been enlisted in restoration efforts in Methow Valley, Washington. Photo courtesy of NOAA.

Beavers have been enlisted in restoration efforts in Methow Valley, Washington. Ecotrust photo by Cameron Harrison.

Sometimes the fact that beavers dam up water, cut down trees, and flood riverbanks is seen as a problem.  Not everyone wants busy beavers in their backyard!  But these same activities that beavers do so well are exactly what river restoration professionals have been trying to emulate for decades to improve habitat for Pacific salmon species, which co-evolved with beavers over millenia.  Adding wood to streams, creating backwatered areas, and reconnecting a stream with its floodplain are frequently the very same objectives of river restoration projects.  For this reason, beaver reintroduction is identified as a priority action in the multi-agency Upper Columbia Spring Chinook Salmon and Steelhead Recovery Plan. The Methow Beaver Project is relocating beavers from places where they are seen as a problem, and moving them to places where they can be part of the solution to salmon recovery.

A video about the projects is below.

So far fourteen new beaver colonies have been established and an additional three are being monitored to determine their long-term viability. This ten-year project aims to establish 50 new beaver colonies within the Methow Watershed.  Since it began in 2008, the project’s success rate for establishing beaver colonies has increased by over 30% compared to other similar efforts in the Western United States.

The project has restored over 44 acres of wetland habitat at a fraction of the cost of typical construction-based restoration techniques.  Over time, the acres of restored habitat will continue to expand as the watershed processes created by beavers improve wetland, stream and riparian habitat both upstream and downstream of the relocation sites.  Over the long-term, it is expected that this project will result in over 1,000 acres of habitat improvement.

The project is led by the Methow Conservancy, U.S. Forest Service, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, and Washington State Department of Fish and Wildlife. The NOAA Restoration Center and the U.S. Forest Service provide financial support through the Whole Watershed Restoration Initiative.  Other project partners include Washington Department of Energy, Yakama Nation, Priest Rapids Coordinating Committee, National Fish and Wildlife Foundation, and many dedicated volunteers, private landowners, and local residents.

Lauren Senkyr is a habitat restoration specialist with NOAA’s Restoration Center in Portland, Oregon.

 

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The future of their culture and environment depends on young Ashaninka Environmental Stewards like these two. (Photo by Mary Marshall)
By Jon Waterhouse

On each expedition on The Healing Journey, Jon Waterhouse uses canoes to travel along rivers, recording traditional knowledge from local people, and detailed scientific readings of water conditions and quality using cutting-edge technology. This summer, he’s working with indigenous leaders in South America to kick off a new project: The Network of Indigenous Knowledge.

We’re headed back down to South America to spend the next two weeks in remote Peru, visiting with the Machiuengan and Ashaninka people in the community of Timpia (12 04 50 S – 72 49 18 W) located on the Urabamba River. Our first visit to this vast and bio-diverse region was two years ago when we went into the Amazon to meet with these tribes and learn about their ever-changing environment. We made great friends while there and learned that these incredible people share many of our concerns for the environment and it’s future. “Something is wrong with the fish” is what we were initially told so we’re in to help them figure this out.

When we first arrived at the Urubamba River, we were told . “Something is wrong with the fish.” So we’re in to help them figure this out. (Photo by Mary Marshall)

When we first arrived at the Urubamba River, we were told . “Something is wrong with the fish.” So we’re in to help them figure this out. (Photo by Mary Marshall)

Our meeting with the Tribal Leadership and members from the area while there will help us lay the groundwork the official kick-off of our NIK Project – the Network of Indigenous Knowledge, which we’ll have up and operational when we return to Peru in the fall. Creating an environmental network among the people of this region and the Alaska Native and Canadian First Nations people is the start of the global connection, and the true focus of The Healing Journey. This network will ultimately combine the collection of modern scientific environmental date with Indigenous knowledge from Indigenous societies around the globe, creating an accurate, informative and colorful picture of the condition of our planet.

The cultural exchange will be phenomenal and an integral part of this process and we are simply thrilled to be so close to actually connecting via satellite and other technologies these tribes who literally are worlds away from one another, yet who often share equally impactful environmental challenges.

Beginning on 23 May, you can go to our SPOT link to follow us on this latest Journey.

A satellite view shows  where the Tribes will gather for one of the Healing Journey and NIK meetings. (Map from Google Earth)

A satellite view shows where the Tribes will gather for one of the
Healing Journey and NIK meetings. (Map from Google Earth)

Watch for an update here in mid-June during the National Geographic Explorers’ Symposium on how things went in Peru and what the People of Timpia have on their minds. Also, become a part of this! Offer your suggestions, insight and ideas regarding our efforts in Peru! This is all about our connections!

Waterhouse_canoeJon Waterhouse is the executive director of the Yukon River Inter-tribal Watershed Council and a 2012 honoree for the Ecotrust Indigenous Leadership Award.

 

 

 

Mark Spalding-150x150Editor’s note: Ecotrust does not currently engage in work related to aquaculture, but we recognize that there is valuable dialogue to be held around this topic.  As always, we welcome discussion in the comment section below.

By Mark J. Spalding

Earlier this year, headlines trumpeted the fact that 2013 is the year that more than half the world’s global seafood consumption needs will be met by aquaculture.  This is no surprise—the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization estimates that aquaculture needs to expand by about 10% every year in order to fill demand for fish and other aquatic species—especially since 1 in 7 people rely on them as their primary source of protein.  We reached “peak fish” in wild catch from the ocean in the late 1980’s, and ever since, global food security relied on the expansion of aquaculture.

Food insecurity causes political and social instability, and even environmental instability in the sense that the pursuit of food at any cost promotes short-term thinking and reduces community commitment to a shared vision of a more stable, sustainable future.  Continued population growth places additional stress on wild resources.

The author at Guolian Zhanjiang Group’s shrimp aquaculture facility in China. Courtesy of The Ocean Foundation.

As the human population grows, the stress on the wild population of animals in our ocean increases and the system cannot keep up.  The oceans have suffered from decades of industrial overfishing, loss of habitat to development, destructive fishing gear such as bottom trawls, and changes in ocean chemistry and temperature.  The work to rebuild fish stocks and promote more precautionary thinking in managing wild fish stocks proceeds slowly.  As the UNFAO and the World Fish Centre each predict, it is aquaculture that can and should be expanded to meet the food security needs of a growing population.

Aquaculture has been practiced for thousands of years.  In Asia, fish were often raised in rice paddies and harvested when the rice crops were harvested and the paddies drained.  Other systems co-produced fish and vegetables—the waste from one nourishing the other.  Emerging technology allows us to produce diverse species on land in recirculating systems that can allow for local food security and small scale economic development far from the sea.  To be successful as a support for global food security, the deployment of aquaculture methods, the species grown, and the intended customers must both be sensitive to local resource protection and responsive to local demand.  Different contexts demand different solutions.

For example, in regions where refrigeration is scarce, fish must be grown to a smaller size so that they can be consumed without the need for storage, and at a lower cost.  Such fish operations can also supply institutional needs such as hospitals, schools, prisons, and other entities.

In regions where local wild fisheries are a key source of both economic and food security, outside fishers must be discouraged from adding to the pressure on wild fisheries.   Local communities can be assisted in the design of community-owned fishery management schemes.  To maintain commercial fisheries to supply demand, we need to reduce wild fishing effort, allow fish biomass to recover and maintain total catch at a level that is sustainable.

Two major aquaculture industries are less about supporting food security than filling consumer demand in North America and elsewhere—farmed salmon and farmed shrimp.  Most of the farms that produce these animals are in nearshore open waters or in (former) mangrove forests.  It is Atlantic salmon that can be farmed—and often are—far from their home waters.  Atlantic salmon escapees are now competing with Pacific salmon in the upper Northwest and British Columbia.  In Chile, outbreaks of disease have moved the salmon industry to different places along the coast as areas have become too polluted to support the salmon pen.  Feeding them in their cages requires conversion of millions of tons of small prey fish into fish meal—anchovies from Peru, pogies from the Gulf of Mexico, and menhaden from the Atlantic Coast, among them—in addition to antibiotics,  other drugs, and a special dye to make them pink, as though they had had the same diverse diet as their wild cousins.

We have plenty of terrestrial examples from bison to passenger pigeons that showed we were unable to take “wild-caught” animals to a global commercial scale for consumption without driving them to extinction. For most wild prey species, we stopped hunting them, or domesticated them before they disappeared.

Eating carnivorous fish such as tuna or salmon is like feeding cows to lions so we can eat the lions. First, both the tuna and the salmon have to be fed a large volume of fish products to become a marketable size and flavor for the wealthy country markets where they are sold.  Second, their feed is derived from other wild fish populations such as anchovies, herring, pollock, and menhaden that play a significant role IN the water as prey for larger animals.  Third, the prey fish are a significant source of protein for people in all poor, coastal regions.

Thus, we predict we will move toward eating more herbivorous fish — tilapia, carp, and catfish, among others — via recirculating aquaculture systems because of global population growth and feed conversion ratios.  This prediction is not without debate, and it may be on a long time scale that we see it play out in wealthy nations like the United States, but worldwide it may be unavoidable if we wish to avoid a continued downward trend in biomass in the ocean.

Obviously, we need new technologies and new ideas. The good news is they are emerging and being implemented; now, we need to implement them even faster.

New Trends on the Horizon

New Technologies: Recirculating aquaculture systems combined with hydroponic agriculture forms the new space of aquaponics, which  enables the growing of both plants and fish together in one highly efficient system. Aquaponics can provide controls that allow production with lower contaminant loads, and may be an organic alternative. These are especially beneficial if powered by renewable energy, and are designed to prevent loss of water via evaporation.

Focus on Herbivores: Successful herbivore aquaculture could take pressure off the use of wild animals to feed humans or other animals destined for human consumption. Also, farming is an alternative way to produce marine species for the home and commercial aquarium trade and to reduce pressure on vulnerable reef systems

Better Fishmeal:  When we do farm carnivores, such fish farms increasingly are consuming a significant percentage of the “reduction” wild catch made into fishmeal.  Aquaculture thus plays a role in continuing and increasing demand for wild fish.  However, another trend is in the improvements in feed content modifications to reduce the ratio of protein from meat.

Global Unemployment Problems: Aquaculture can provide viable local jobs requiring a variety of skill sets and education levels; although these jobs are not necessarily alternative livelihoods for local fisher communities who don’t want to work in an industrial setting.

Changes in Market Demand: Sustainable aquaculture can meet and encourage the “locavore” movement, while addressing legitimate concerns that global commercial scale aquaculture is the enemy of sustainability.

Rise of Community-Based, Grassroots, Diverse Constituency:  In the United States for example, many recirculating farms are grassroots oriented; the farms are often run by lower-income and traditionally socially disadvantaged individuals and communities in blighted urban areas and food deserts. These grassroots groups often support high quality standards to prevent new entrants who undercut them on quality and price, which would change the industry from overwhelmingly sustainable to something more like factory farming.

At the end of the day, we know that we now have less than 10 percent of the fish that were in the oceans in the 1950’s, while the world’s population has grown from fewer than 3 billion to more than 7 billion people.  Great management and habitat protection can help rebuild fish stocks globally.  Sensible wild fisheries management strategies can help those coastal communities with few alternatives.  Given the triple threat of population growth, habitat destruction, and changing ocean temperature and chemistry, we have to be ever more cautionary in our approach to taking wild fish out of the sea. Cautious starts to look a lot like deploying these new aquaculture technologies on land, with an eye toward managing energy, water, and transportation demands. That approach will ensure food security, to underpin social and economic security, and to allow the ocean stocks to replenish themselves.

Mark J. Spalding is president of The Ocean Foundation.

 

By Sarah Pope

Lets play the guessing game! If I were to tell you there was a state that had passed legislation establishing a carbon sequestration program granting statutory authority for a state agency to verify carbon sequestration practices over ten years ago, a state that then created an internationally recognized verification system, had over 50,000 acres of state land enrolled in this program that has, to date, sequestered over a million metric tons of carbon by working with producers in a way lauded by both the Natural Resource Conservation Service and the Environmental Protection Agency.  Where would you guess this exciting progress is being made? Surely it has to be a state with progressive leaders focused on the environment, right? California? Washington? Vermont? Maine?

Guess again. It’s Oklahoma, home of the waving wheat, red dirt, and climate change denial of epic proportions; and a state smack-dab in the middle of tornado alley, which will suffer greatly as wild swings in weather become more and more common.

An Oklahoma canola field hard at work sequestering carbon.

An Oklahoma canola field hard at work sequestering carbon.

So how does one go about flying under the radar and winning a battle against climate change “behind enemy lines?” By extending a hand of partnership, taking baby steps, and never letting perfect be the enemy of good.

The Oklahoma Association of Conservation Districts’ ECOpass program is now in its fifth year and we have seen success we never thought possible. In partnership with the Oklahoma Conservation Commission’s Carbon Program, we have been able to provide buyers with verified carbon sequestration practices on over 50,000 acres and have 100 percent of our contracts verified each year. This verification is what allows our program to stand out. Our dedicated staff works to ensure everyone gets a fair shake—from buyers to sellers to the general public.

Oklahoma has a history of stepping up to some pretty big natural resource challenges, looking at them straight on, and getting down to business to correct the problem, while working to protect and enhance those natural resources for future generations. The Dust Bowl, which until recently was considered the worst man-made ecological disaster of all time, is part of Oklahomans’ collective identity; we should know what can happen when natural balance is disturbed.

Dust storm approaching a barn near Boise City, Oklahoma on April 15, 1935.

Dust storm approaching a barn near Boise City, Oklahoma on April 15, 1935.

Unfortunately, it seems as though the current climate crisis is one that few are willing to come to terms with, since the dust isn’t blowing like it did almost one hundred years ago. Whether we fall into outright denial because it’s too difficult to wrap one’s mind around how to change the tide, or fall prey to misinformation created by divisive interest groups, it seems any work to be done in a state like Oklahoma is a futile, uphill battle. But we believe a program like ECOpass is just what is needed to start changing hearts and minds and moving the conversation in the direction of action.

It’s all in the approach

We say this little phrase quite a bit: “You can lead me just about anywhere but I’ll be damned if I’ll be pushed.” Traditionally, Oklahomans are practical people with a love and respect for our land. That respect can be traced to our Native American roots and the cultural values of respecting nature and preserving future generations’ resources. So when we started ECOpass,  we focused on stewardship, and avoided the current negative view of being associated with “climate change” action.

By speaking to those deeply rooted values, we have been able to convince landowners that their work now has a positive impact on many aspects of natural resource preservation. Now, there are those that still deny the danger of climate change. We hear constantly that the climate is merely running through a natural cycle and it will balance itself out. But when farmers see that someone is willing make a financial investment to address something they have been told is not really a problem, it makes those farmers and ranchers take a second look at what they thought was a “great hoax” and reexamine their beliefs.

It’s not an overnight fix, but we are building our case one person at a time. We come to the table with no expectation of drastic, immediate change but instead with the hope that we will change hearts and minds by leading, not pushing.

Sarah PopeSarah Pope is the Programs Director for the Oklahoma Association of Conservation Districts. She has worked for the past five years to bring their carbon program from a few great ideas on paper to a fully functioning, statewide program. In her free time, Sarah likes to play farmer with her real life farm husband and their four children in Loyal, OK. She is a native Oklahoman and firmly believes that we all “…belong to the land and the land we belong to is grand!”

 

Waterhouse_canoeThis post originally appeared on National Geographic Explorer’s Journal.

Freezing weather can’t put a dent in the excitement of heading out on a Healing Journey. (Photo by Mary Marshall)

On each “Healing Journey” Expedition, Jon Waterhouse uses travel along rivers, recording traditional knowledge from local people, and detailed scientific readings of water conditions and quality using cutting-edge technology. In March and April Jon and team are traveling from St. Mary’s, Alaska along the Yukon River by aircraft and snowmachine. Meanwhile his long-time collaborator John Francis is leading university students on Planetwalk around St. Mary’s… Ohio.

 By Jon Waterhouse

We’re back on the Yukon River – this time in St. Mary’s, Alaska where the Healing Journey was born! My wife, Mary and I arrived here late yesterday evening just as the lights of this lovely village were twinkling to life. Perched on the sloping banks of the Yukon River in Western Alaska, St. Mary’s will serve as our base camp for the next 10 days. Since we flew the nearly 500 air miles from Anchorage in a Cessna 206, we feel pretty fortunate that the weather was beautiful and the 3+ hour flight was smooth. Of course, that’s thanks to our uber capable pilot, David – who is also the CFO of the YRITWC, the non-profit org that I direct. (Only in Alaska, right?) The temperature here now is a whopping zero degrees F, but the sky is filled with dancing green northern lights – the upside to a cold night in the Far North!

We’ll be spending our time here in western Alaska visiting friends in Emmonak, Pilot’s Station, Kotlik, Scammon Bay, Russian Mission, Shageluk and Chevak – all of which are small villages located on or near the lower Yukon River.

There are no roads between these locations and though we will mostly be flying from one community to the next, we have snowmachines here for shorter trips between the villages within a reasonable distance of one another (less than 50 miles apart? Is that reasonable?) We’ll be collecting snow and ice samples from various points on the river – a first for us on the Yukon as so far our sampling season has been limited to summer.

Yeah with this much snow and ice, we're not taking the canoes this time. (Photo by Mary Marshall)

Yeah with this much snow and ice, we’re not taking the canoes this time. (Photo by Mary Marshall)

 

Another exciting aspect of this trip is that next week we will connect via Skype with our good buddy, Dr. John Francis, aka: the Planetwalker (read his earlier blog posts) as he walks with a group of college students across part of Indiana and Ohio. Each year, around Earth Day, John retraces a cross-country protest walk he took in the 70s after witnessing an oil spill in San Francisco Bay. The walk from one coast to the other took him 7 years – but he stopped riding in motorized vehicles for an incredible 22! We are looking forward to connecting with John and his trekkers via Skype from the rural Alaska classrooms we’ll be visiting while here.

I’m calling this trip a recon mission as we are preparing for next winter’s Healing Journey – a 1000+ mile journey on the frozen Yukon by snowmachine. Not only will we be speaking to Elders and Tribal leaders about the upcoming trip, sharing info about Native water rights and our upcoming tribal summit, we’ll also be connecting with young children in their classrooms, spreading the message of environmental stewardship. I feel a special connection to the people and land here – especially the kids – because this region is where the request was made of me to “go out and take the pulse of the river”. The children here have made a substantial impact on their environment by promoting the banning of plastic bags, and they have never backed down from a challenge when the future well-being of their natural environment is in question.

I am truly inspired to be here. Mary has lived in Alaska since 1975 but has never visited this part of the state. We have many friends here and are both thrilled for the opportunity to connect to a place and people that have essentially changed the direction of our own lives in such a positive way.

We’ll keep you posted as we continue west toward the coast of Alaska! Thanks for reading

View Map to Track the Healing Journey

Waterhouse_canoeJon Waterhouse is the executive director of the Yukon River Inter-tribal Watershed Council and a 2012 honoree for the Ecotrust Indigenous Leadership Award.

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