After a 400-year absence, the industrious
rodents are back. On a river near Okehampton their reintroduction has led to
biodiversity and cleaner water
Sunday 14 February 2016 00.04 GMTLast
modified on Monday 15 February 201611.05 GMT
“Look at these teeth marks!” Professor
Richard Brazier pauses, mud oozing over his Wellington
boots, to admire the work of a pair of beavers who have been introduced into a
patch of Devon woodland. “Just look at the
size of them!” He runs his fingers along the incisions left in the exposed
trunk of a recently toppled tree, before turning to survey the devastation
around him.
The devastation is part of a scheme that
backers hope will provide a template for a more balanced approach to flood
prevention. The government is spending £3.2bn on flood management in the course
of this parliament. As flood events such as those seen in Cumbria at the end of last year become more
common, so attention has turned to flood management, with a call for resources
to be allocated not to building flood defences to deal with the water when it
arrives downstream but prevent it getting there at all.
The beavers resident on the three
hectares of woodland near Okehampton in Devon
could be part of the solution. In the five years since they moved there, they
have toppled trees, gnawed bark, dug channels, constructed dams and made a
rather impressive home for themselves.
“Prior to working with beavers we’d never
really come across animals that would disrupt your work so much,” says Brazier,
a hydrologist at the University
of Exeter, as he surveys the tangle of branches and tree trunks.
But there is hope, too. New shoots are
sprouting from the felled willows and a closer inspection reveals that beneath
the devastation lies further evidence of new life promoted by the beavers’
work. “They are a keystone species who are obviously engineering the
environment to their own benefit,” says Brazier. “But what’s interesting is all
the other benefits.”
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