Monday, July 7, 2008

Fence Me In! June 23-26, 2008

Volunteers Mary, Alex, and Liz near Tasha Creek’s newest lodge, built by and for beaver.

This project involved a perfect number (3) of perfect volunteers and two interns, a summer Trust staff person, Utah Forest Project Manager Mary O’Brien, and Fremont River District Ranger Kurt Robins. Together the intrepid crew was successful in building a research fence around willows in Tasha Creek on the Fishlake National Forest. Before we built the fence, we spent a day making three sweaty round trips carrying metal fence posts and braces a mile up a steep trail. (Good thing the interns were cooking great meals!) But the exclosure took only a day and a half to build, which left us time to see the expanding series of beaver dams in this creek’s corridor and to record a day and a half of the browsing transects that the fence is designed to support. It appears there are too many mouths (especially elk and cattle) chomping on the willow, cottonwood, and aspen. These plants hold southern Utah forest streams together, supply beaver with food and dam materials, and support the biodiversity for which riparian areas and aspen groves are famous. This project contributes to Trust efforts to bring relief to these three essential poplar family members.

Thanks Elizabeth Krug, Alex Poole, and Mary Townsend!

Mary Townsend tying fence Alex and Liz tying fence. [No, Liz’s finger isn’t being punctured!]





1 comment:

Anonymous said...

This was a great experience! Thanks to Mary, Season and Aaron for the education, exercise and good food. I'll never look at a stream bank or riparian habitat in the same way again.