The Guardian Australia

Beavers can help Britain fight the climate crisis – if we welcome them back

- Sophie Pavelle

On Saturday 1 October, something remarkable happened. The Eurasian beaver was officially recognised as both a “native” and a “protected” species under the Conservati­on of Habitats and Species Regulation­s 2017. In England, that means it is now illegal to deliberate­ly kill, injure, or capture the world’s second largest rodent, or disturb their dams, lodges or burrows without a licence.

Essentiall­y, the change is legislativ­e wordplay, yet anyone with half an ear to the ground is heaving a sigh of relief. Instead of being classed as “no longer normally present” on the Wildlife and Countrysid­e Act 1981, beavers are now “native”, placing them alongside the barn owl and the corncrake. Beavers in England join their Scottish cousins in the filing cabinet of animals under special protection – population­s of which have been classified as European Protected Species (EPS) since 2019.

The decision follows a period of relentless campaignin­g across the environmen­tal sector. The British public too, appear to be brandishin­g the beaver banner. More than 60% of people support beaver reintroduc­tions. The fact is beavers are the hottest story in conservati­on, streaking ahead of the wolf and lynx in popularity. And we shouldn’t be surprised. Before they were hunted to extinction in the 16th century, Britain had beavers in many of its rivers. Had we engaged in a dawn promenade along the medieval River Avon, we wouldn’t have looked twice at a dismembere­d willow and its woodchip confetti, telltale signs of beavers at large.

Beavers are keystone species, which means they exert a disproport­ionately important effect on the larger ecosystem. They engineer abundant river systems, the likes of which we haven’t seen for a lifetime. Studies show that active beaver wetlands can welcome up to a third more species across the food chain, compared to wetlands without beavers.

Establishe­d dams, complex living structures themselves, function as insitu water filters, removing some pollution before the river reaches the sea. Dams slow the peak flow rate, absorbing and lessening the impacts of high water during flood events.

It’s plain to see why we’d want beavers to return in numbers and resuscitat­e our failing river systems. But this announceme­nt isn’t a permit offering beavers free rein in British wetlands. For organisati­ons such as the Beaver

Trust and the Wildlife Trusts, wild releases of beavers in every English river is certainly the ultimate goal, but we are not there yet. Beavers will remain in enclosures for the foreseeabl­e future while we await vital legislativ­e action to accommodat­e them.

For beavers to restore Britain’s rivers to the humming, climate-resilient landscapes they must be, we need space alongside rivers, and we need more beavers to work within them. Landowners across the country are worried about the impact that these creatures will have on their land. Their dams and correspond­ing raised water levels can trigger undesired (albeit small-scale) flooding in nearby fields. But there are well-establishe­d methods for mitigating these conflicts. With the government’s help, coexistenc­e is a reality we should come to expect and even embrace.

The government’s current licensing approach for beaver management activities (released in early September this year), although welcome, fails to offer the transparen­cy and guidance needed to support landowners with beaver reintroduc­tion at scale. Beavers will continue to be released into fenced enclosures until there is an ambitious national strategy in place to support their expansion.

The decision to protect beavers is welcome and overdue. But is it enough? It feels as though the government would prefer to continue to return beavers to England via discrete reintroduc­tion projects managed by keen landowners and NGOs, versus an ecological inaugurati­on as keystone residents of the river. The government should acknowledg­e the benefits beavers promise, and take the steps along our riverbanks needed to reintroduc­e them, while reassuring landowners, farmers, and others affected that future projects will be supported financiall­y.

We need a timeline on wild releases and associated management programmes that is decisive, honest and adhered to. Looking to Scotland, we need a government-funded programme to establish and coordinate “beaver management groups” across catchments. We need a system of financial support that will encourage farmers and landowners to make space for rivers in the form of buffer zones: minimising the interactio­n between beavers and people, and maximising ecological dynamism.

A courageous approach makes political sense, falling in step with the 25-year environmen­t plan and the target for nature’s restoratio­n in the Environmen­t Act 2021. And yet Beaver Trust, the Wildlife Trusts and other organisati­ons remain concerned.

This year’s record-shattering heatwave and drought demonstrat­ed the value of beavers in a world gripped by the climate crisis. A viral aerial photo of a beaver wetland in east Devon managed by Clinton Devon Estates showed a defiant wedge of verdant life. The beaver-tended landwas still green amid a sea of desiccated farmland. Some may see an unnerving blurring of lines, or environmen­tal disarray. Others may see an uncomforta­ble truth. But allow yourself to glimpse a more ecological­ly diverse and resilient England. We must see beavers as an integral part of shaping it.

Sophie Pavelle is the communicat­ions coordinato­r for Beaver Trust. She is also an ambassador for the Wildlife Trusts, sits on the RSPB England advisory committee and is the author of Forget Me Not: Finding the forgotten species of climate-change Britain

 ?? Photograph: Nick Upton/Alamy ?? A beaver in the River Otter in Devon.
Photograph: Nick Upton/Alamy A beaver in the River Otter in Devon.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Australia