advertisement

Wolves preying on beavers in Minnesota reshape wetlands

WASHINGTON (AP) - One spring afternoon in 2015, biologist Thomas Gable followed signals from a gray wolf's GPS tracking collar to a small stream in Minnesota's Voyageurs National Park. There he found a large canine paw print in the mud and tufts of wolf and beaver fur caught in low bramble.

A beaver had fallen victim to a wolf, Gable deduced. The industrious rodent's work in progress stood nearby - aspen logs, stripped clean, spanned the stream, and a pond about a foot deep was forming behind them. But when Gable checked again 10 days later, the dam had begun to collapse. With no aquatic engineer to repair the structure, the pond had disappeared.

'œThe water had totally vanished,'ť said Gable, who is based at the University of Minnesota. But the episode sparked an idea.

Over the next four years, biologists placed GPS collars on about 30 wolves inside the park. Then they visited every location where wolves had lingered for more than 20 minutes and searched the ground for clues about animals they preyed upon. They also documented when new beaver dams were abandoned nearby.

'œOnce a wolf takes out a beaver," Gable said, 'œit takes a while for another beaver to return to the site."

At each abandoned dam site studied, it took more than a year for another beaver to return, according to research published Friday in the journal Science Advances.

Wolves preying on beavers profoundly affect northern Minnesota's wetland ecosystems because dams built by individual beavers - those not associated with beaver colonies - quickly fall apart. The new research doesn't show wolves reduced the total beaver population in Voyageurs National Park, but that they influenced where beavers were able to build and maintain dams and ponds.

On average, there are about 73 wolves in the Voyageurs ecosystem, but this number can fluctuate annually between 63 and 82, said Gable.

A survey during winter of 2019-2020 by the Minnesota Department of Natural Resources found the state was home to around 2,596 wolves.

Federal wildlife officials announced last month that the gray wolf would be removed from U.S. Endangered Species Act protection, leaving management decisions to states and opening the door to hunting in some. However, Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz has said he opposes recreational wolf hunting.

While wolf packs target large animals such as adult deer and moose in winter, they tend to hunt alone for smaller prey, including fawns and beavers, in summer.

Biologists often call beavers 'œecosystem engineers'ť because their dams create wetlands and new habitats for plants, aquatic insects, amphibians, fish and birds.

'œBeavers are so central to the way these boreal forests look that anything that affects beaver distribution is going to have a cascading effect,'ť said Rolf Peterson, a wildlife ecologist at Michigan Technological University who studies wolves in Michigan and was not involved in the new study.

While Yellowstone and adjoining western states are the most famous homes to gray wolves in the United States, wolf packs also live in forests of Minnesota and Michigan, where they mix with wolf populations in neighboring Canada.

Peterson contributed to research that found beaver colonies on Michigan's Isle Royale National Park increased five-fold between 2010 and 2018, when the wolf population there was dwindling.

___

Follow Christina Larson on Twitter: @larsonchristina

___

The Associated Press Health and Science Department receives support from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute's Department of Science Education. The AP is solely responsible for all content.

In this October 2020 photo provided by the Voyageurs Wolf Project, a beaver swims in front of its lodge in a beaver pond just south of Voyageurs National Park, Minn. Scientists studying gray wolves in the park have traced how wolves preying on beavers affect the ecosystem by impeding the ability of beavers to build and maintain new dams that create wetlands. (Tom Gable/Voyageurs Wolf Project via AP) The Associated Press
In this June 2012 photo provided by Tom Gable, a beaver strips the leaves off of a freshly cut branch in Grand Teton National Park, Wyo. Scientists studying gray wolves in Minnesota's Voyageurs National Park have traced how wolves preying on beavers affect the ecosystem by impeding the ability of beavers to build and maintain new dams that create wetlands. (Tom Gable via AP) The Associated Press
This May 2020 photo provided by the Voyageurs Wolf Project shows Wolf V092 during efforts to fit a GPS-collar, just south of Voyageurs National Park, Minn. Scientists studying gray wolves in the park have traced how wolves preying on beavers affect the ecosystem by impeding the ability of beavers to build and maintain new dams that create wetlands. (Tom Gable/Voyageurs Wolf Project via AP) The Associated Press
In this July 2015 photo provided by the Voyageurs Wolf Project, Austin Homkes, a field biologist with the Voyageurs Wolf Project, looks over a drained beaver pond that became a meadow once the water receded in Voyageurs National Park, Minn. These features are referred to as "beaver meadows" because once beaver ponds drain, the fertile soil allows for grasses, flowers, and shrubs to grow abundantly. (Tom Gable/Voyageurs Wolf Project via AP) The Associated Press
Article Comments
Guidelines: Keep it civil and on topic; no profanity, vulgarity, slurs or personal attacks. People who harass others or joke about tragedies will be blocked. If a comment violates these standards or our terms of service, click the "flag" link in the lower-right corner of the comment box. To find our more, read our FAQ.