In late spring the beaver family is considerably increased by the arrival of four miniature beavers. They weigh but 1 pound each at birth and are fully furred. At this time, the father is ostracized and the mother and her young live together in the lodge. When the young are about 3 weeks old, they take to the water for the first time. They quickly learn the beaver method of swimming; this is to kick with the hind feet and let the forelegs trail loosely alongside the breast, using the flat tail both as elevator and rudder. The young beavers are called kits, and indeed are as playful as true kittens can be. It is most amazing to watch them cavorting about in the water with as much ease as youngsters of other mammals do on dry land. As autumn nears, this play is exchanged for the sterner duties of existence, and the young take their places as adults of the family.
Fifty years pass. As the colony increases the dam must be made larger, new lodges must be built; and when the trails to the aspen forest become too long, canals are dug part way out to lessen the hazards which may befall the beaver on dry land. The pond gradually silts up to higher and higher levels until at last it is full of black, fertile soil. All of the aspens within reach are finally cut down and the hungry beavers turn to the resinous bark of the spruces. Finally the struggle is given up. The beavers migrate to a new location, and the following spring a freshet tears out the center of the dam. Now the pond is gone. With it are gone the trout that played in its depths, and the teal that rested there on their way south. In its place is a beaver meadow, a grassy park in the center of the spruce forest with spring flowers spangling its green surface. Aspens are already beginning to crowd in about its edges, and the creek is cutting deeper into its soft soil with every spring. Before long heavy erosion will begin to take its toll, and some day in the future a male beaver will again come galloping awkwardly down the slope.
The changing conditions which such a cycle bring about are almost impossible to evaluate. At least three climax types of environment are represented: those of the alder thicket, the beaver pond, and the beaver meadow. In a graphic fashion this cycle illustrates what is going on in Nature continually, more slowly perhaps, but just as surely.
Porcupine
Erethizon dorsatum (Greek: to irritate in allusion to the quills and Latin: pertaining to the back)
Range: Most of North America north of the Mexican border. Notable by their exception are the south central and southeastern United States.
Habitat: Usually associated with conifer forest, yet may sometimes be found miles from any forest. An inhabitant of all life zones up to timberline (Arctic-Alpine).
Description: A black to grizzled black and yellow creature covered with quills. Total length 18 to 22 inches. Tail 7 to 9 inches. Weight 10 to 28 pounds. Body short and wide; supported by short bowed legs. Tail heavy and muscular, armed with short slender quills. Head small with dull eyes and long black whiskers, but with short ears. The incisors are extremely large and are of a bright, rich yellow color. The quills are shortest on the face and reach their greatest length near the middle of the back. Often they are nearly hidden in the coarse, seal brown to black underfur. The long guard hairs are also seal brown close to the body, but change to a rather sere yellow at the tips. Only one young is brought forth each year in a den among the rocks, or sometimes in a hollow log. The young are among the most precocious of any mammal.
The porcupine in North America is considered as belonging to but the one species dorsatum, although there are seven subspecies. The most common subspecies found in the Southwest is epixanthum (Greek epi, upon, and xanthus, yellow), sometimes called “yellow-haired” porcupine. The porcupine is unique among North American mammals in bearing the sharp quills which are perhaps its most interesting feature. Certainly they are responsible in large part for the unusual life history of this misunderstood animal.
Quills are no more than greatly modified hairs, and in sorting through the various types of pelage on a porcupine’s back, a few examples will be found which are intermediate between the hair and the quills. This does not mean that coarser hairs gradually turn to quills. Each follicle produces hair or quill, as the case may be, for the life of the animal. A quill consists of three well-defined parts: a solid sharp tip usually black in color; a hollow shaft, which is white; and a root similar to that of a hair.