Eurasian Beaver - Castor fiber
( Linnaeus, 1758 )

 

 

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Subspecies: Unknown
Est. World Population: 1479863

CITES Status: NOT LISTED
IUCN Status: Least Concern
U.S. ESA Status: NOT LISTED

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Jumping Ability: (Horizontal)

Life Span: in the Wild
Life Span: in Captivity

Sexual Maturity: (Females)
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Habitat:
The Eurasian Beaver is one of the largest rodents (15-20 kg, rarely up to 40 kg) and is adapted for a semi-aquatic lifestyle, using a variety of freshwater systems, including rivers, streams, irrigation ditches, lakes, and swamps (Wilson et al. 2016). It generally prefers freshwater habitats surrounded by woodland or scrub, but may occur in agricultural land or even suburban and urban areas (Tattersall 1999, Halley and Rosell 2002). Patterns of recolonisation demonstrate a clear preference for still or slow, laminar water flow if it is available (Nowak 1999, Halley and Rosell 2002, Halley pers. comm. 2006). It is often associated with wetlands containing Salicaceae species (e.g. willows, aspens, poplars) (Piton et al. 2020). 

The Eurasian Beaver lives in family groups of an adult pair, kits and subadults, and can establish territories spanning 1.8-4 km of water bank (Gaywood 2017). It feeds on aquatic and terrestrial herbaceous vegetation and broadleaved woody vegetation. It can construct dams to retain water, create feeding areas (this may be particularly important when terrestrial vegetation is difficult to access), provide safe refuge, facilitate travel and aid the transport of woody material (Gaywood 2017, Mohr Mortensen et al. 2021). They rest in burrows and/or lodges.

Range:
The Eurasian Beaver (Castor fiber) was once widespread in Europe. However, by the beginning of the 20th century, overhunting had drastically reduced both the numbers and range of this species. In Europe, only a few isolated sites remained: parts of the Rhône (France) and Elbe (Germany), southern Norway, the Neman River, the Dnieper Basin (Belarus) and the Voronezh Basin (Russia). A series of management measures and reintroductions since the 20th century have enabled the Eurasian Beaver to return to much of its former range, and there are now several rapidly expanding subpopulations extending from Spain and France across central and eastern Europe to European Russia. Its distribution is thus mapped on this assessment as native (capturing all areas of remnant populations, populations reintroduced from the 19th century onwards, and that have spread naturally within the native range from both remnant and reintroduced populations). Today, the majority of the European population is found in central and eastern Europe (Wróbel 2020), with subpopulations in western Europe relatively scattered, but growing. The species has become re-established in all countries of its former European range except for Portugal, Italy, and the southern Balkans (Halley et al. 2021), though future range expansions are likely. It is generally a lowland species but occurs up to 1,387 m in France (Poitevin and Quéré 2021)

Outside of the assessment area, the Eurasian Beaver also occurs in Asian Russia, Kazakhstan, Mongolia and China.

Conservation:
A number of conservation measures have contributed to the species' recovery in Europe, including reintroductions and translocations, hunting restrictions, and habitat protection. It is listed under the Bern Convention (Appendix III) and the EU Habitats and Species Directive (Annex V for the Swedish and Finnish populations, Annex II and IV for all others). Early provision of interpretation and public viewing opportunities as well as education programmes are recommended, as this provides a benefit to the local economy through wildlife tourism, and helps foster positive attitudes toward beavers (Halley and Rosell 2002). Further research into the population trends could be beneficial.

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