Western Daily Press (Saturday)
PARK LIFE FOR BEAVERS AND HIPPOS
LONGLEAT is famous for having imported all kinds of exotic wildlife to its Wiltshire safari park for decades.
But now it is an intruder that snuck into the estate under the cover of darkness that has got keepers and conservationists excited.
For a beaver reintroduced to the UK by conservation programmes has managed to find its way to the stately home.
Remarkably it will live with the hippos on the estate, which is the first time in an estimated 100,000 years the animals which were once both native to Britain will share the same habitat.
Beavers, which were hunted to extinction in Britain in the middle of the 16th century, once thrived in this country and some would most likely have been happily living in Wiltshire more than 400 years ago.
And even though Longleat became the first drive-through safari park outside Africa in 1966 none had lived there since.
Late last year though a keeper spotted something in his headlights that he recognised instantly.
Mark Tye, Longleat lakes and birds team manager, said: “I was driving home through the estate back in October last year when I spotted something in the car headlights and I did a bit of a double take.
“At first I couldn’t quite work out what I was looking at, but it soon became very clear when I saw the huge
paddle-like tail there was a beaver crossing the road in front of me!”
It’s thought the last time hippos and beavers were found together in the UK was during the Eemian period which also saw elephants and monkeys roam the country.
Beavers are large, semiaquatic rodents native to the northern hemisphere. They once thrived here but were heavily hunted for their fur, scent
This will be the first time in over 100,000 years that beavers have co-existed alongside hippos in Britain EVA BISHOP
sacs and meat, with the last animal thought to have been killed sometime in the middle of the 16th century.
In recent years, groups of animals have been released at sites across the country and their numbers are steadily increasing.
The news of their arrival at Longleat has been welcomed by Eva Bishop,
communications director at the Beaver Trust.
“We were delighted to hear of the arrival of beavers in the woods around Longleat, an exciting moment for the whole team there to witness their return and activities in action,” she said.
“Beavers are a gift in these changeable times, for their potential water and wildlife benefits, so to follow them establishing within the Longleat surroundings will be fascinating.
“More exciting still, this will be the first time in over 100,000 years that beavers have co-existed alongside hippos in Britain, where they once lived together in the giant swamps of interglacial Europe.
“It is also exciting for the many visitors to Longleat who may be seeing beaver evidence for the first time; the gnawed willow branches or classic beaver-gnawed tree stumps.
“Beavers are one of the large herbivores that have been missing from our landscape for 400 years so we want to share this excitement with everyone,” she added. The beavers are among a string of native wild species returning to Longleat in recent years.
Alongside wild otters, red kites, owls, kingfishers and several species of deer, two giant white tailed eagles have also started visiting the estate; part of a reintroduction programme for the species based on the Isle of Wight.
“They were here, they should be here and, if we can get the habitat right, why shouldn’t they be here again?” said Longleat’s head of animal operations Darren Beasley.
“For decades we’ve been renowned for our exotic wildlife, but for me the return of these amazing native species is just as exciting,” he added.
Longleat’s half-mile lake is an artificial water feature, which was dug by hand in the 18th century.
It was designed by Capability Brown, England’s greatest landscape gardener. In 1804 it was further modified by garden designer Humphrey Repton, who also created the artificial island at the centre of the lake.