Beavers put to work restoring streams

WASHINGTON BIOLOGISTS are turning to one of nature’s best ecosystem engineers, the beaver, to help with river restoration that benefits endangered fish runs. AP photo

ELLENSBURG, Wash. (AP) — In a heavily irrigated Washington valley where fish, crops and people often compete for water, biologists are turning to one of nature’s best engineers to help restore streams and salmon habitat.

Landowners typically trap or kill beavers that block irrigation canals and flood homes in the Yakima Valley. But one project is relocating the troublemaking creatures to the headwaters of the Yakima River, where their talent for chewing willows and constructing lodges can be put to good use.