Beavers cut flooding and pollution and boost wildlife populations
Categorie(s): Ecology, News, Water
Beavers have alleviated flooding, reduced pollution and boosted populations of fish, amphibians and other wildlife, according to a five-year study of wild-living animals in Devon.
The report, which will help the government decide whether to allow wild beavers to return to England after being hunted to extinction more than 400 years ago, concludes that the species has brought measurable benefits to wildlife and people.
The study, by a team of scientists overseen by Prof Richard Brazier (University of Exeter) concludes that beavers’ quantifiable benefits on the River Otter, including eco-tourism and ‘ecosystem services‘ such as flood alleviation, outweigh costs such as the minor flooding of some farmland.
The number of beavers on the Otter has risen from two breeding pairs in 2015 to at least eight pairs today as the herbivorous rodent has expanded along tributaries including the River Tale.
The beavers’ positive impact includes one family constructing six dams upstream of the flood-prone village of East Budleigh. The dams have slowed the flow of floodwater through the village, reducing ‘peak flows’ during flood events.
The scientists also found that the beavers played a significant role in filtering pollutants including manure, slurry and fertilisers from the river, while new wetlands created by the beavers have benefited water voles, riverine birds such as dippers and wildfowl including teal. There were 37% more fish in pools created by beaver dams than in comparable stretches of river. Trout have been recorded leaping over beaver dams during high river flows.
Beaver dam
While beavers prevent flooding by slowing floodwater flows, their dams can also flood valuable valley farmland. This happened at just five sites in the 250km2 river catchment over five years. Riverside orchards were also at risk from beavers gnawing the trees, but negative impacts were mostly solved with active management.
To prevent flooding beaver deceivers were placed: pipes that carry water through beaver dams without the beavers realising, to lower water levels and stop flooding.
“Following five years of detailed research work, the report concludes that the positive impacts of beavers outweighed the negatives,” said Brazier. “However, it also makes clear that those who benefit from beaver reintroduction may not always be the same people as those who bear the costs, highlighting that the reduction of flood risk in communities downstream may come at a cost of water being stored on farmland upstream.”
Mark Elliott, who led the River Otter beaver trial for Devon Wildlife Trust, said: “We’ve all been surprised by these amazing animals’ ability to thrive, once again, in our wetland ecosystems. It also shows their unrivalled capacity to breathe new life into our rivers and wetlands, very few of which are in good health. There are overwhelming reasons why beavers should be reintroduced back into the wider countryside.”
According to Elliott, the key to successfully returning the beaver across England will be to provide support for affected landowners, so that those who lose small areas of farmland to flooding will not incur financial losses.
“It’s a native species to Britain so we shouldn’t be having to keep them in with fences in the long-term,” he said. “This is a massive step towards boosting the richness of wildlife around the River Otter, reducing pollution, mitigating flooding and making this landscape more resilient to climate change.”
Source: The Guardian, Februari 17th 2020
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