The Scotsman

Platform

Scotland’s new beavers are like Yellowston­e’s wolves, writes Alan Mcdonnell

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Dig a hole, plant a tree, let it grow. You’ve now taken three (only slightly simplified) steps to providing a home for wildlife.

Plant enough native trees beside each other and you create a woodland which is host to a whole community of wild plants and animals. By the time your woodland has matured, sown seeds and grown new trees, that community of plants and animals will have formed complex inter-relationsh­ips and created opportunit­ies for yet more life – a habitat as vibrant as anywhere in Europe or North America.

Until profound changes in land use were introduced in the 18th century, woodland and trees were an integral part of Scottish people’s lives. Gaelic place names based on now-lost trees and extinct forest animals are still in use today and carry whispers of what the Highland landscape used to be. Rebuilding that wildliferi­ch landscape is possible.

Just a few years after Trees for Life volunteers planted in treeless parts of Glen Affric, we saw the return of woodland fungi, plants and insects. Birds like black grouse and willow warbler followed within ten years and more wildlife returns every year.

However, if nature is to become truly re-establishe­d, we need to bring back pivotal species we have lost to unlock a multitude of openings for other plants and animals. The oftquoted return of wolves to Yellowston­e is one of the most famous examples of a reintroduc­tion triggering an ecological cascade effect, leading as it has to a regenerati­on of all kinds of wildlife in the National Park, from trees to insects, amphibians, birds and mammals.

In Scotland, we are starting to live with our own pivotal reintroduc­tion – the beaver. Renowned as nature’s engineers, beavers’ dextrous hands and iron-hard, orange incisors have transforme­d the river systems they have returned to across Europe. When beavers build dams, they clean sediment from the water and hold back floodwater­s. Wetlands can form above beaver dams, creating new habitats for plants and insects which in turn support almost everything that looks for food in a river – salmon, frogs, ducks, herons, bats, ospreys and otters all have richer hunting grounds.

When the vegetarian beaver chews through a tree trunk, the tree is prompted to sprout new growth, so riverbank woodlands become dynamic, with young and old trees growing side by side, providing a host of new shelter options for wildlife seeking a home.

As beavers return to our rivers, a Yellowston­estyle cascade effect is within reach. But we also need to be practical about what it takes to co-exist with wild nature. Where nature and people’s use of land compete for space, there is potential for conflict. Twenty-six European countries have already reintroduc­ed beavers and dealt with conflict between beavers, farmers and fishermen by managing the impacts that beavers have on people’s land uses.

If people and beavers can co-exist comfortabl­y across Europe, we can do the same here.

Restoring habitats and reintroduc­ing wildlife takes time, money and long-term commitment. We profit hugely from the well-being and enjoyment the natural world gives us. Enabling nature to thrive creates a wilder, more robust environmen­t which can uphold livelihood­s and sustain hearts, for us and for the generation­s who will inherit our legacy in the land. l Alan Mcdonnell is conservati­on projects manager at the charity Trees for Life

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