Some facts about beavers:
Beavers may weigh 40 to 100 pounds.
Adult beavers are 20 to 30 inches in length and have 10- to 12-inch long tails.
Favorite foods include water lily tubers, clover, apples, leaves and bark.
Beavers mate for life, breed only once a year and average four kits per litter.
They can remain underwater 15 minutes without surfacing.
They have transparent eyelids that function much like goggles.
Source: Klamath Watershed Partnership
FORT KLAMATH, Ore. — Just like the animals they’re helping, Terry Simpson and Jayme Goodwin have been as busy as beavers.
Simpson and Goodwin, retired biologists who live in Crescent, are members of the Klamath Watershed Partnership’s beaver management team. Over the past two years, they and others on the eight-person team have relocated nine beavers.
When she was a Forest Service biologist for the Chemult Ranger District, Simpson learned how beavers can create better habitat for fish and help farmers and ranchers because their dams and resulting ponds can create season-long flood-irrigated pastures. A study in Washington determined beaver ponds created as much water storage as a large Columbia River dam. So, when the partnership’s beaver team was created, she quickly volunteered.