Nature Notes From Crater Lake
Volume 12, October 1946
Brown Mountain Beavers
By O. L. Wallis, Ranger-Naturalist
The brown mountain beaver (Aplodontia
rufa rufa Rafineque), furnishes one of the most individual forms of
animal life in Crater Lake National Park, interesting not only because
it is one of the most primitive mammals in existence but also because of
its limited range, its lack of close relatives, and its intensive food
storing activity.
Confined to the Pacific Northwest,
mountain beavers are grouped into the single rodent family
Aplodontiidae, into one genus
Aplodontia and into one species rufa, divided into nine
subspecies. The mammal has several other names: sewellel (Indian name),
boomer, and mountain burrower. Of these, the last is the most
appropriate; for Aplodontia is only distantly related to the
American Beaver (Castor canadensis), the builder of dams and
lodges. Differing in habitat, the mountain beaver lies in a series of
underground tunnels, six to seven inches in diameter, with many external
openings that are connected, above ground, by a network of runways.
There are two types of openings: The one for general use is kept fairly
clean and is used as an entrance and exit. The other type of burrow is
employed as a refuse opening, through which the rocks and dirt of
excavation are pushed forth.
Burrows are usually located in a moist
area, on a hilly slope where the soil is relatively loose, where springs
exist, and the vegetation is dense. During my summer's observations, I
have noted the (inner) workings near Vidae Falls, in Castlecrest
Gardens, in the springy area below the Gardens, and on the south slope
of Munson Ridge near the Park Headquarters. In all of these workings,
water was found to be trickling through at least a section of the tunnel
system throughout the entire summer. For such a timid animal, water
supply of this type proves to be protective as well as convenient. The
creature is able to drink in perfect safety within the confines of its
dwelling; also, the running water offers a means of disposal of waste
vegetation material which readily floats out of the lower end of the
burrow.
Aplodontia is a mammal which is
rarely seen, because it is naturally shy and is mainly nocturnal in
habit. On the early morning of August 26, I saw one of the animals
loping along its runway and sliding into its burrow in the Castlecrest
Gardens.
Ranger-Naturalist R. R. Huestis
reports: "During August 1941, a brown mountain beaver took temporary
refuge just above the ramp leading to the Sinnott Memorial, using the
lower part of a burrow system which has been occupied by a golden
mantled ground squirrel for the last three seasons. During two days the
mountain beaver made a number of emergences to gather forage or to run
the few feet between two entrances to the burrow system, both of which
had been somewhat enlarged to better fit the new occupant. The Sinnott
Memorial ramp is one of the most traveled walks in the park, so many
visitors had the chance of observing and photographing a mountain
beaver's feeding technique, an activity that many experienced
naturalists have never observed. The animal itself largely ignored the
presence of the gallery except when someone moved close to it. Most of
the visitors had never heard that there was such an animal, and, being
duly advised of its rarity in public places, were enchanted at their
opportunity and stood hopefully for considerable periods of time with
their cameras at the ready."
On August 27, at the Munson Ridge
location, I caught a male in a Verbail wire loop live trap. This capture
was made to find out what foods the mammal would eat and to study its
habits. Measurements of the individual were: total length: 326 mm; tail:
23 mm; hind foot: 59 mm; ear: 23.5 mm.
Characterized by short legs, tail and
ears; exceeding small eyes; large feet with naked soles and strong
claws; long and stiff whiskers; the animal is very primitive in
appearance and resembles a Mazama pocket gopher, (Thomomys monticola
mazama Merriam), which has been enlarged fifteen times. Coarse,
shiny dark guard hairs extend above the softer rich brownish or chestnut
fur. Below each ear is a white spot. Its stout body and broad, blunt
head makes it especially adapted to the burrowing life.
Mountain beavers are strictly
vegetarian in food habits, eating most types of herbage which grow near
their burrow. I found the vegetation cut for drying in neat piles around
the entrance holes or upon nearby rocks or logs. All the stems of the
material in any one pile pointed in one direction. Around the hole would
be several piles; each contained the same species of plant and may have
indicated the size of the load carried by the individual. As a rule, the
material constituted plants which grew in the immediate vicinity; on one
occasion, however, red elderberry cuttings were observed 45 yards from
the nearest shrub.
Foliage collected and eaten by mountain
beavers covers a wide variety of plants. Availability seems to be the
important factor in the type of food selected. In each of the locations
the materials collected varied in direct proportion to the species
growing nearby. Although the area adjacent to the burrows at Vidae Falls
and Castlecrest Gardens supported great numbers of Lewis' monkeyflower,
in no case, was I able to find cuttings of this species. But my captive
animal ate this plant quite readily. At the location on the south slope
of Munson Ridge, three of the burrow entrances were located under a
green-leaved alder; but no traces of this shrub were identified in the
bunches of cuttings.
Although F. Lyle Wynd reports that
false green hellebore is fatal to live stock (Nature Notes Volume
2, No. 2 August 1929) and that most species of Aconitum are
poisonous to animals and human beings (Nature Notes Volume 2, No.
3 September 1929), both monkshood (Aconitum columbianum), and
false green hellebore, (Veratrum viride Ait.), were eaten by the
captured beaver without apparent maleffect. Monkshood was identified,
also, in the bunches of drying vegetation at Castlecrest.
Twice daily at 7:00 A.M. and 10:00
P.M., from August 20 to August 26, examinations were made of the food
piles at the Munson Ridge location to determine if the mountain beaver
was active during the daytime. These observations showed that most of
the activity of cutting and stacking occurred during the night; only
once, on August 24, were new cuttings found at the night examination.
Each morning from August 11 through
August 27, the materials appearing at the eleven holes at the Munson
Ridge location were counted and marked. The marking was done by writing
the date on a prominent leaf with pen and ink. By means of this counting
and marking, it was possible to note the number of pieces of vegetation
cut and stacked and the length of time required for the material to dry
before it was taken into the burrow. During this period, the mountain
beaver collected over 3246 pieces of vegetation. Dicentra stems
amounted to nearly 25% of the material gathered and Valeriana
followed with nearly 24%. On August 22, alone, 488 pieces were piled.
Note Table I.
| |
Plant
Species |
Number of
Stems |
Percentage
of Total |
| |
| Dicentra |
799 |
24.619 |
| Valeriana |
761 |
23.451 |
| Smilacina |
334 |
18.767 |
| Aquilegia |
78 |
2.404 |
| Sambucus |
35 |
1.079 |
| Aster |
44 |
1.048 |
| Senecio |
30 |
.924 |
| Grass |
22 |
.678 |
| Epilobium |
15 |
.462 |
| Misc. |
852 |
26.256 |
|
3246 |
Total |
Table I - Material gathered
at the Munson Ridge location by one mountain beaver during the
period of August 11 through August 27. These figures list the number
of stems of each of the species and not the bulk of the plant cut by
the mammal.
The length of time the cuttings were
left to dry depended upon the species, the weather, and the location of
the pile. Specimens of
Sambucus were not dry after five days. On August 25, four out of
twenty-seven cuttings of Smilacina marked on August 21, and five
out of twenty-one stems marked on August 22 were still present revealing
the length of time some cuttings were left to dry. Dicentra and
Valeriana stems were usually removed the next day after they were
counted and marked; these have thinner leaves. In locations situated in
the dense shrubbery, the drying of the material took twice as long as in
open situations. On cloudy or rainy days, the vegetation scarcely
wilted, and therefore, remained piled for a longer period.
At the Munson Ridge location the
mountain beaver harvested its material as soon as it became completely
dried, while the individual at the Vidae Falls site allowed the material
to stay out until it became so dry that it was brittle.
In captivity the mountain beaver
consumed 497 plants from August 30 to September 5. This count was taken
in the number of plants eaten, therefore, indicates a greater amount of
food than the number applies when compared with the number of stems
counted in the field survey. Twenty-one species of vegetation are
represented. See Table III. This range could be greatly increased by
more intensive experimenting.
Although the mountain beaver is
considered to be quite stupid and primitive, from these food studies, it
can be assumed that he is quite a diligent and systematic worker.
|
Plants Collected and Eaten by Mountain Beaver
|
| Aconitum columbianum
Nutt. |
Monkshood |
| Anaphalis margaritacea
(L.) Benth. and Hook. |
Pearly Everlasting |
| Aquilegia formosa Fisch. |
Columbine |
| Aster englemanni var.
ledophyllus Gray. |
Engelman Aster |
| Dicentra formosa (Andr.)
DC |
Bleeding Heart |
| Epilobium angustifolium
L. |
Fireweed |
| Lupinus latiffolius
ligulatus (Greene) C. P. Smith |
Klamath Lupine |
| Salix eastwoodae
Cockerell |
Eastwood's Willow |
| Sambucus racemosa calicarpa
(Greene) Jepson |
Red Elderberry |
| Senecio triangularis
Hook. |
Tall Ragwort |
| Smilacina amplexicaulis
glabra MacBride |
Fat Solomon |
| Valeriana sitchensis
Beng. |
Varlerian |
| Veratrum viride Ait. |
Corn Lily; False Green
Helebore |
Table II - Vegetation
identified in piles stacked by mountain beavers in all of the
locations noted in Crater Lake National Park.
| Rubus lasiococcus Gray. |
Creeping Raspberry |
| Vaccinium membranaceum
Dougl. |
Big Huckleberry |
| Erigeron salsuginosus
Gray. |
Fleabane |
| Ribes erythrocarpum
Coville & Leiberg |
Crater Lake Currant |
| Castilleja miniata
Dougl. |
Paint Brush |
| Mimulus Lewisii Pursh. |
Lewis's Monkey Flower |
| Phacelia heterophylla
Pursh. |
Phacelia |
| Sorbus cascadensis G. N. Jones |
Mountain Ash |
Table III - Plants, in
addition to those found in Table II, which were eaten by the
mountain beaver in captivity.