Kokanee salmon and beavers along Taylor CreekLoading
  • RB Beavers
    Mature Kokanee salmon spawn along Taylor Creek near Lake Tahoe on Thursday, October 4, 2012. The state Dept. of Forestry has been tearing down beaver dams in the Lake Tahoe area to ease passage for coho salmon. Beavers use such dams to store food for winter, so their destruction puts the beavers' future in peril. Environmentalists, who note the beavers are native and not the salmon, say its another instance of the state making life and death decisions that defy nature. Ted and Sherry Guzzi are co-founders of the Sierra Wildlife Coalition.
    Randall Benton
  • RB Beavers
    A beaver carries twigs to its lodge along Taylor Creek near Lake Tahoe on Thursday, October 4, 2012. The state Dept. of Forestry has been tearing down beaver dams in the Lake Tahoe area to ease passage for coho salmon. Beavers use such dams to store food for winter, so their destruction puts the beavers' future in peril.
    Randall Benton
  • RB Beavers
    US Forest Service biologist Sarah Muskopf, left, teaches a group of visiting children about the life cycle of the Kokanee salmon along Taylor Creek near Lake Tahoe on Thursday, October 4, 2012.
    Randall Benton
  • RB Beavers
    A tree felled by a beaver along Taylor Creek near Lake Tahoe on Thursday, October 4, 2012. The state Dept. of Forestry has been tearing down beaver dams in the Lake Tahoe area to ease passage for coho salmon. Beavers use such dams to store food for winter, so their destruction puts the beavers' future in peril.
    Randall Benton
  • RB Beavers
    Visitors observe fish (including Kokanee salmon) through a window at the Taylor Creek Visitor Center along Taylor Creek near Lake Tahoe on Thursday, October 4, 2012.
    Randall Benton

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