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View Full Version : Mother Nature fights back in suburbia



BTinSF
08-01-2009, 06:41 AM
I'm putting this here because it's not exactly earth-shattering news but it makes me feel good and maybe it will you too. Mother nature has ways of thwarting up-tight humans. The mods, of course, can move it if they insist it's a "current event".

Martinez creek menagerie now has minks
Carolyn Jones, Chronicle Staff Writer
Friday, July 31, 2009

http://imgs.sfgate.com/c/pictures/2009/07/31/ba-minks01_ph2_0500436786.jpg

One of three beaver dams partly blocks the Alhambra Creek in Martinez, which is celebrating its second Beaver Fest today.

First, there were beavers. Then otters and muskrats.

And now - as if the Martinez Public Works Department needed more cute, furry mammals paddling around Alhambra Creek - there are mink.

Ten months after the city spent $500,000 to shore up the eroding creek bank, a condition many blamed on the beavers and their obsessive handiwork, a mother mink and four babies were spotted this week cavorting near the beaver's primary dam, just north of the Escobar Street bridge in downtown Martinez.

The silky, razor-toothed critters have apparently taken up residence in the pond created by the beavers' dam, along with a variety of other aquatic wildlife.

http://imgs.sfgate.com/c/pictures/2009/07/31/ba-minks01_ph1_0500432763.jpg
A baby mink peeks from a muskrat hole in Martinez (I feel a new avatar coming over me)

"I was pretty blown away," said Doug Bell, a wildlife biologist with the East Bay Regional Park District, who viewed video and still photographs of the frolicking creatures and confirmed that they are, indeed, mink. "They appear to be taking advantage of the habitat created by the beavers. Isn't that fantastic?"

Mink are native to the area but are highly unusual. They're more often spotted in the delta or the Sierra Nevada, but their population could be rising because of the decreasing popularity of mink coats, Bell said.

Maureen Flannery, collections manager for the ornithology and mammalogy department at the California Academy of Sciences, also confirmed that the animals in question are Neovison vison, a.k.a. American mink.

The babies probably were born in April or May and will stay with their mother until fall, when they will head out to claim their own territories, she said.

"It's definitely a sign the local ecosystem is healthy and doing well," she said. "And it's nice people can now view them in the wild."

Meanwhile, the city of Martinez, which at one point wanted to trap and kill the beavers, is taking a cautious approach to the town's explosion of wildlife.

"We'll have to monitor the situation," said Don Salts, the city's deputy public works director. "But mink? That's news to me."

Dan Murphy, owner of Bertola's restaurant adjacent to the beavers' dam, was also taking a wait-and-see attitude. Liability concerns over the restaurant's weakening foundation were one reason the city decided to shore up the creek bank last fall.

"I don't really care," Murphy said. "Although I guess the creek's becoming more and more of a habitat, which is pretty cool."

The mink are a happy addition to Martinez's growing menagerie, said vice mayor Mike Menesini.

"Martinez is a very welcoming city, and obviously we have room for everyone," he said. "Although it'll be interesting to see how this mixed community gets along."

So far, the mink, beavers, muskrats, otters and turtles have adopted an attitude of mutual indifference. The crayfish aren't so lucky - they're often dinner for their carnivorous creek-mates.

The mink were first observed by Cheryl Reynolds and Heidi Perryman, members of a group of beaver advocates called Worth a Dam. Reynolds, who formerly ran the wildlife hospital at the Lindsay Wildlife Museum, was spending a quiet moment by the creek Wednesday evening when she saw "four little squirming things" splash in front of her.

"They make this chirping sound. It was really crazy," she said. "I knew they were mink because of the little white patch under their chin."

It's no surprise the mink have moved in with the beavers. The dams slow down the creek, making it easier for mink to scoop up crayfish, ducklings and other morsels, including, perhaps, baby beavers.

The adult beaver pair that moved into Alhambra Creek in early 2007 had a litter of four kits in May, but the kits have not been seen in some time, Perryman said.

Still, the natural cycle has been a joy to watch, Reynolds said.

"It's amazing to see how much that creek has changed since the beavers moved in," she said. "There's always people over there now. It's a great natural education."

A dam good time

-- Today is Beaver Fest in downtown Martinez, a celebration of three years of beavers in Alhambra Creek. The festival will include bagpipe music to celebrate the return of beavers to Scotland, where they have been nearly extinct for 400 years. There also will be live bluegrass and jazz bands, tours of the beaver dams and arts projects.

-- The festival runs 12:30-6:30 p.m. at Alhambra and Marina Vista avenues.

-- For information go to www.martinezbeavers.org.

Telling the difference

Beavers: Flat, scaly tail and disproportionately large teeth. Can weigh as much as 70 pounds.

Mink: Long and narrow body, about a third the size of an otter. White spots on their chins. Strong, musky odor and sharp teeth.

Muskrats: Short and stout with rat-like tail.

Otters: Narrow body, three to four feet long with a wider face than a mink.

Sources: Doug Bell, East Bay Regional Park District; Maureen Flannery, California Academy of Sciences.

E-mail Carolyn Jones at carolynjones@sfchronicle.com.
http://sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2009/07/31/BAI3191KT2.DTL

theWatusi
08-01-2009, 12:03 PM
time to make some coats

M II A II R II K
08-01-2009, 12:09 PM
Actually this can be in this forum instead.

glowrock
08-01-2009, 02:53 PM
Nice beaver. Why thank you, I just had it stuffed yesterday! :)

Seriously though, nice to see wildlife doing well in the suburbs...

Aaron (Glowrock)

M II A II R II K
08-01-2009, 03:00 PM
This reminds me of that thread about the invading cougars with Moe from the 3 Stooges.

vid
08-01-2009, 08:54 PM
We have this here. It is called "everywhere".

BTinSF
08-01-2009, 08:59 PM
We have this here. It is called "everywhere".

Yes, I've seen it--and you should take care of it. I've also seen parts of Canada that made me fear you don't appreciate what you have just as Americans didn't for so long (and too many still don't).

krudmonk
08-01-2009, 09:31 PM
Isn't this creek issue affecting downtown Martinez, which is pretty old? That's what I can recall of the reports on the original dam a few years ago. I Know Contra Costa is a lot of scattered development, but lampooning a historic district is not really in line with the title here. Correct me if I'm mistaken, though.

KevinFromTexas
08-02-2009, 02:47 AM
We have toads and frogs that chirp at night. It's a great sound. I usually see at least one a night when I walk out into our backyard. I have to keep the dogs away from them, because if they grab one, they'll pee in their mouth and make them foam at the mouth. lol We also have at least two different kinds of lizards, one kind of gecko and one type of salamander. We also spot turtles around sometimes and the odd rat snake or garter snake. There's actually a creek named Turtle Creek that runs through our neighborhood at the end of the street. I've seen a few turtles in the field next to it. And my brother and his wife had one show up on their doorstep about a month ago. Their friend who lives next door is a biologist, he said the turtle was probably 40 years old. We don't have anything as exotic as this article mentions, but we do have opossums, skunks and raccoons. We also have red tailed hawks and a few types of owls. We even have bats sometimes. You'll see them flying around the street lights swooping down and grabbing bugs.

John R
08-02-2009, 03:30 AM
188 miles north of Kevin in Fort Worth, I have seen all of the same kinds of wildlife recently. However, the other day, I can add wild turkey that I saw waking across the bike trail right in the middle of the city. The day before that I saw an opossum in almost the same spot.

babybackribs2314
08-02-2009, 04:34 AM
There are raccoons in Central Park... I'm guessing they're the largest wild mammals in Manhattan, lol (although it wouldn't surprise me if there were giant rats in the subway/sewers that were bigger...).

BTinSF
08-02-2009, 05:29 AM
There are raccoons in Central Park... I'm guessing they're the largest wild mammals in Manhattan, lol (although it wouldn't surprise me if there were giant rats in the subway/sewers that were bigger...).

Sure there aren't some coyotes there? We have them in Golden Gate Park.

And I think I've posted this one before: a deer crossing the Golden Gate Bridge (without even paying the toll ;) ). Note the police escort.

http://imgs.sfgate.com/c/pictures/2004/05/19/ba_cheapdeer01.jpg
Source: http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/object/article?f=/c/a/2004/05/19/BAGV06NT0D15.DTL&object=%2Fc%2Fpictures%2F2004%2F05%2F19%2Fba_cheapdeer01.jpg

vid
08-02-2009, 08:21 AM
A deer broke into a downtown office building here several years ago. It managed to get into the elevator and up to the third floor. The live all over the industrial port lands but usually don't wander into the downtown areas. The residential areas on the other hand have a problem with bears.

John R
08-02-2009, 09:32 PM
I have seen a muskrat in Central Park before.

SlickFranky
08-02-2009, 11:39 PM
On my daily walk downtown to work I regularly see ducks, geese, herons, beavers, trout, and a variety marsh/wetlands birds. I've also seen foxes and deer, though they are much rarer in the city center.

JDRCRASH
08-03-2009, 12:19 AM
Mother Nature fights back in suburbia

:banana:

nouveau_Mauvilla
08-03-2009, 05:51 AM
Awesome, thanks for posting.

The most exotic thing in my neighborhood (which is bordered by maybe the busiest street in my city and another busy one, and all around is Midtown, ten minutes from downtown) is our small population of cottontail rabbits. Sure we have opposums, raccoons, squirrels, box turtles, snakes, hawks, owls, endangered aquatic turles in our drainage ditch, and things of that nature, but I find it fairly unusual that our neighborhood has always had a little community of cottontails. I guess it is because many lots in this neighborhood have several acres, the largst being 6 acres, mostly wooded. But still, we aren't some new subdivision out in the boonies. My house was built in 1940 and there is city all around.

hauntedheadnc
08-03-2009, 07:09 AM
This hawk...

http://i205.photobucket.com/albums/bb88/hauntedheadnc/January%202009/Downtown07.jpg

...lives in one of the B's atop the BB&T Building...

http://i205.photobucket.com/albums/bb88/hauntedheadnc/January%202009/Downtown02.jpg

...from which it swoops down to snatch the unwary pigeons...

http://i205.photobucket.com/albums/bb88/hauntedheadnc/Birthday%20pics/0812200829.jpg

...that infest downtown.

Also, while driving along the five-lane Charlotte Street downtown one morning I had to swerve into another lane to avoid a groundhog that was waddling across the street, apparently on its way to the city maintenance garage. If I'd looked in my rearview mirror I could have seen city hall towering over the scene.

In addition, I was once warned in the lobby of this luxury hotel...

http://i205.photobucket.com/albums/bb88/hauntedheadnc/Grove%20Park/GroveParkInn01.jpg

...to be careful while walking around this neighborhood (http://forum.skyscraperpage.com/showthread.php?t=169769) because there had been bear sightings in that part of town lately.

BTinSF
08-03-2009, 04:42 PM
:previous:

Downtown SF has this peregrine falcon and its mate which have been periodically nesting on a downtown highrise and have raised several broods of babies there (and, of course, fed them too from the local pigeon supply):

http://raptor-gallery.com/02-19-09/images/_GPN2192.jpg
Source: http://raptor-gallery.com/02-19-09/index.htm

KevinFromTexas
08-03-2009, 05:30 PM
A few years ago a deer ran through my neighborhood. We've lived in this neighborhood for 25 years, and I'd never seen one until that night. I was riding my bike back from the grocery store. I caught a glimpse of something standing in someone's front yard. I thought it was a German Shepherd at first. It then ran across the person's yard to the next house. I could hear its hooves beating on the driveway. It was a good sized doe. We've seen them all over Southwest Austin, and we saw one that had been hit near our house, but never one right inside our neighborhood. I figure she must have come up one of those creeks I mentioned above.

dimondpark
08-03-2009, 06:11 PM
Martinez is a very quaint little town and isnt really your typical suburb-seems very Mayberryish. Well, except for the huge oil refineries. LOL

Oakland has mountain lions.
http://www.theoakbook.com/MoreDetail.aspx?Aid=1781&CatId=15

dave8721
08-03-2009, 06:14 PM
Crocodile that had taken up residence in a lake (connected to the ocean by canals) on the University of Miami campus:
http://media.naplesnews.com/media/img/photos/2008/10/31/Crocodile_t607.JPG

Strange Meat
08-03-2009, 06:59 PM
Haha, whatever, we see bears, mountain lions, etc, all reported in some suburb all the time around here. :)

M II A II R II K
08-03-2009, 07:00 PM
Does anyone still have that picture of Moe from the 3 Stooges with that horn to chase away the cougars......



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