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Re-centering relations: The trouble with quick fix approaches to beaver-based restoration.

Authors :
Gottschalk Druschke, Caroline
Booth, Eric G.
Demuth, Bathsheba
Holtgren, J. Marty
Lave, Rebecca
Lundberg, Emma R.
Myhal, Natasha
Sellers, Ben
Widell, Sydney
Woelfle-Hazard, Cleo Aster
Source :
Geoforum; Nov2024, Vol. 156, pN.PAG-N.PAG, 1p
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

• River restoration has a growing focus on North American beaver (Castor Canadensis). • Beaver-based fixes can harm stream restoration, beaver, and lands and waters. • There are millennia of Indigenous theory about beaver relations in North America. • Settler restorationists can partner with beaver and Native peoples who know beaver. • River restoration must reconnect beaver back to people, place, and time. This Forum brings together river restoration researchers and practitioners to stimulate debate about the recent explosion of interest in North American beaver (Castor canadensis) and beaver-related practices in North American river restoration science and management. While the beaver is described in recent literature as a low-cost, high-impact ecosystem engineer capable of minimizing the impacts of wildfire, drought, flood, and disturbance across the continent, we consider the importance of shifting from a focus on prescriptive results—on what beaver get humans—and towards engaging with beaver in relational process. Through a set of provocations that highlight the potential damage beaver fixes pose for stream restoration, for beaver, and for the lands and waters they inhabit with humans and other beings, we invite settler river scientists, river restorationists, and river thinkers to question the increasingly taken-for-granted logic of beaver as isolated creature, ecosystem engineer, and river savior; defer to the millennia of theory about beaver and their relations on this continent, partnering with beaver and with the Native peoples who have known them longest; and reconnect beaver back to people, place, and time in support of lively, dynamic, diverse, flourishing river systems across the continent. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00167185
Volume :
156
Database :
Supplemental Index
Journal :
Geoforum
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
180585262
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.geoforum.2024.104121