Saturday, January 11

Spying on Beavers From Space Could Help Save California

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For first in four centuries, it' good to be a beaver. Long persecuted for their pelts and reviled as pests, the dam- rodents are today hailed by as saviors. Their ponds and wetlands store in the face of drought, filter out pollutants, furnish for endangered species, and . In , Castor canadensis is so prized that the state recently committed millions to its restoration.

While beavers' benefits are indisputable, however, our knowledge remains riddled with gaps. don't know how many are out there, or which direction their populations are , or which watersheds most desperately need a beaver infusion. Few states have systematically surveyed them; moreover, many beaver ponds are tucked into remote streams far from human , where they're near-impossible to count. “There's so much we don't understand about beavers, in part because we don't have a baseline of where they are,” says Emily Fairfax, a beaver researcher at the University of .

But that's starting to change. Over the past several years, a team of beaver scientists and engineers have been teaching an to spot the rodents' on . Their creation has the potential to transform our of these paddle-tailed engineers—and help -stressed states like California aid their comeback. And while the model hasn't yet gone , are already salivating over its potential. “ of our in the state should be taking advantage of this powerful mapping tool,” says Kristen Wilson, the lead forest scientist at the the Conservancy. “It's really exciting.”

The beaver-mapping model is the brainchild of Eddie Corwin, a former member of Google's -estate . Around 2018, Corwin began to contemplate how his company might become a better steward of water, particularly the many coastal creeks that run past its Bay offices. In the course of his , Corwin read Water: A , by an aptly named Alice Outwater. One chapter dealt with beavers, whose bountiful wetlands, Outwater wrote, “can hold millions of gallons of water” and “reduce and erosion downstream.” Corwin, captivated, devoured other beaver and , and soon started proselytizing to his Dan Ackerstein, a sustainability consultant who with Google. “We both fell in with beavers,” Corwin says.

Corwin's beaver obsession met a receptive . Google's are famously encouraged to devote time to passion projects, the policy that produced Gmail; Corwin decided his passion was beavers. But how best to assist the buck-toothed architects? Corwin knew that beaver infrastructure—their sinuous dams, sprawling ponds, and spidery canals—is often so epic it can be seen from . In 2010, a researcher discovered the world's longest beaver dam, a stick-and-mud bulwark that stretches more than a half-mile across an Alberta park, by perusing Google . Corwin and Ackerstein began to wonder whether they could contribute to beaver research by a machine-learning algorithm to automatically detect beaver dams and ponds on satellite imagery—not one by one,

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