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07 April, 2021 – Episode 819 – What Should You Know About Beavers?

07 April, 2021 – Episode 819 – What Should You Know About Beavers?
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It s so cool to see : Building dams by night, beavers resurface along Arizona s San Pedro River

It s so cool to see : Building dams by night, beavers resurface along Arizona s San Pedro River
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Pines in Peril

Grand Teton’s lodgepole forests are exquisitely adapted to wildfire but can they survive a changing climate?  In 1988, a fire ecologist named Monica Turner clambered into a helicopter and soared over Yellowstone National Park’s still-smoldering forests. One fire after another had torched the park that infamous summer, ultimately burning some 800,000 acres, and Turner expected devastation. Instead she beheld a green-and-black quilt, burned forests and living ones mingled across the landscape. A year later, lodgepole pine seedlings carpeted the ground so densely that, she said, “you couldn’t put your foot down without squashing a whole bunch of them.” The Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem’s forests, she realized, were more resilient than anyone had imagined.

Sara M Whalen

Sara M. Whalen Site staff MONONA – Sara M. Whalen passed away at age 79 on Tuesday, February 9, 2021 after a short illness. Sara was a maker of wonderful things. She made a beautiful family with her husband John Whalen. John and Sara met in Beloit, Wisconsin in 1964 on Memorial Day weekend when Sara was teaching 4th grade in Beloit and John was working at the Beloit Corp. They married the next summer and welcomed Anne into their lives a year later. Beloit was where they made their first batch of German Yeast cookies, a yearly Christmas tradition that has been passed down to all of their children. Soon after, Sara and John moved to Janesville where John, their favorite son was born. Sara and John moved to Madison in 1970 and then soon after moved to Monona where they shared a home together for 49 years. There they raised four children, the third and surprisingly fourth, Nora and Ruth, arriving on Leap Day, 1976. Throughout the years, Sara and John’s fam

How local environmental journalist Ben Goldfarb turned his love of beavers into a surprisingly successful book

Daniel Walters photo On a January outing to Turnbull Wildlife National Wildlife Refuge, Ben Goldfarb scouts for signs of beaver activity. W ildlife signs can be subtle, even to an expert tracker. A few errant droppings of dried scat, a hint of a hoof-print, or the trampled brush. But beavers? Beavers, oversized buck-toothed rodents that they are, are not known as subtle animals. Beavers don t just leave poop or prints. Beavers redraw maps. Beavers topple trees. Beavers raise rivers. Beavers build walls. Beavers change topography. Still, as we walk through the trails of Turnbull National Wildlife Refuge on a crisp January morning, environmental journalist Ben Goldfarb knows that beaver signs go beyond gnawed tree stumps.

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