The Scotsman

Beavers in Scotland get EU protection

● Killing allowed only under licence ● Laws will help the species spread

- By ILONA AMOS Environmen­t Correspond­ent

Beavers have become a legally protected native species in Scotland, 500 years after they were hunted to extinction.

The move comes following a successful reintroduc­tion trial from 2009 to 2014.

From today it is an offence to kill or harm beavers and destroy their dams and lodges, except under special licence.

There are about 450 wild beavers living in two separate population­s in Scotland – in Argyll, where the trial was carried out, and in Tayside, where a large colony has sprung up from escaped or illegally released animals.

Conservati­onists say the legal protection is an important step that will enable the species to spread naturally across the country.

Beavers create new wetlands, which support otters, water voles and dragonflie­s, and help to regulate flooding and reinvigora­te woodland, according to the Scottish Wildlife Trust.

Chief executive Jo Pike said: “Beavers are unrivalled as ecosystem engineers. They have the potential to greatly increase the health and resilience of our natural environmen­t by creating new habitats.

“Granting beavers protected status is an important milestone for the return of the species

PICTURE; PA

to Scotland’s lochs and rivers. It follows decades of work by countless organisati­ons and individual­s to demonstrat­e the positive impacts that beavers can have.”

Barbara Smith, chief executive of the Royal Zoological Society of Scotland, hailed it as a “historic day for Scotland”.

Beavers offer widespread ecological and social benefits, including increasing biodiversi­ty, reducing flood risk and creating new opportunit­ies for wildlife tourism.

However, their reappearan­ce has sparked conflict due to their impact on agricultur­al land and damage to valuable trees. Dozens – including pregnant and nursing females – have been shot as a result.

NFU Scotland stressed that management and licensing schemes for the species must be “workable” and let land workers deal with problems.

Member Angus Macfadyen, who farms in Argyll, said: “Beavers can have negative impacts, especially when they occur in highly productive agricultur­al areas. As such, the beaver population is already causing many farmers great concern because of the way that beavers can undermine river banks and flood banks and potentiall­y impede farmland drainage.”

 ??  ?? 0 There are about 450 beavers living wild in Scotland
0 There are about 450 beavers living wild in Scotland

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