Beaver: Difference between revisions
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{{Short description|Genus of mammal}} |
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{{otheruses}} |
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{{Other uses}} |
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{{Taxobox |
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{{Featured article}} |
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| color = pink |
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{{Pp|small=yes}} |
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| name = Beavers |
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{{Pp-move|small=yes}} |
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| fossil_range = Late [[Miocene]] - Recent |
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{{Use mdy dates|date=February 2021}} |
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| image = Beaver.jpg |
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{{Use American English|date=December 2020}} |
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| image_width = 200px |
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{{Automatic taxobox |
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| image_caption = [[American Beaver]] |
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| name =Beaver |
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| regnum = [[Animal]]ia |
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| fossil_range ={{small|Late [[Miocene]]{{snd}}Recent}} |
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| phylum = [[Chordate|Chordata]] |
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| image =American Beaver.jpg |
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| classis = [[Mammal]]ia |
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| image_caption =[[North American beaver]] (''Castor canadensis'') |
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| ordo = [[Rodent]]ia |
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| taxon =Castor |
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| familia = [[Castoridae]] |
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| authority =[[Carl Linnaeus|Linnaeus]], [[10th edition of Systema Naturae|1758]] |
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| genus = '''''Castor''''' |
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| subdivision_ranks=Species |
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| genus_authority = [[Carolus Linnaeus|Linnaeus]], 1758 |
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| subdivision = {{ubl|''[[North American beaver|C. canadensis]]'' – North American beaver|''[[Eurasian beaver|C. fiber]]'' – Eurasian beaver|{{extinct}}''[[Castor californicus|C. californicus]]''|{{extinct}}''[[Castor praefiber|C. praefiber]]''|{{extinct}}''[[Castor neglectus|C. neglectus]]''}} |
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| subdivision_ranks = [[Species]] |
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| range_map=Castor range.png |
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| subdivision = |
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| range_map_caption=Range of the living beavers as of 2016 (including introduced ''C. canadensis'' populations in Europe and Patagonia, but missing ''C. fiber'' populations in Mongolia and northwestern China, as well as reintroduced populations in the United Kingdom){{Update inline|date=March 2023|?=yes|reason=See discussion on talk page.}} |
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''[[American Beaver|C. canadensis]]''<br /> |
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| type_species=''[[Castor fiber]]''<ref>{{cite journal |author1=International Commission on Zoological Nomenclature |title=Opinion 75. Twenty-Seven Generic Names of Protozoa, Vermes, Pisces, Reptilia and Mammalia Included in the Official List of Zoological Names |journal=Smithsonian Miscellaneous Collections |date=1922 |volume=73 |issue=1 |pages=35–37 |url=https://www.biodiversitylibrary.org/page/8910949 |access-date=January 23, 2022 |archive-date=January 23, 2022 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220123181504/https://www.biodiversitylibrary.org/page/8910949 |url-status=live }}</ref> |
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''[[European Beaver|C. fiber]]'' |
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| type_species_authority=[[Carl Linnaeus|Linnaeus]], 1758 |
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}} |
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'''Beavers''' (genus '''''Castor''''') are large, [[semiaquatic]] [[rodents]] of the [[Northern Hemisphere]]. There are two existing [[species]]: the [[North American beaver]] (''Castor canadensis'') and the [[Eurasian beaver]] (''C. fiber''). Beavers are the second-largest living rodents, after [[Hydrochoerus|capybaras]], weighing up to {{convert|50|kg|abbr=on}}. They have stout bodies with large heads, long chisel-like [[incisors]], brown or gray [[fur]], hand-like front feet, [[Webbed foot|webbed]] back feet, and tails that are flat and scaly. The two species differ in skull and tail shape and fur color. Beavers can be found in a number of [[Freshwater ecosystem|freshwater habitats]], such as rivers, streams, lakes and ponds. They are [[herbivorous]], consuming [[Bark (botany)|tree bark]], [[aquatic plants]], grasses and [[sedges]]. |
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'''Beavers''' are semi-aquatic [[rodent]]s native to [[North America]] and [[Europe]]. They are the only living members of the [[family (biology)|family]] [[Castoridae]], which contains a single [[genus]], '''''Castor'''''. [[genetics|Genetic]] [[research]] has shown the European and North American beaver populations to be distinct [[species]] and that [[hybrid]]ization is unlikely. |
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Beavers build [[Beaver dam|dams]] and lodges using tree branches, vegetation, rocks and mud; they chew down trees for building material. Dams restrict water flow, and lodges serve as shelters. Their infrastructure creates [[wetland]]s used by many other species, and because of their effect on other organisms in the [[ecosystem]], beavers are considered a [[keystone species]]. Adult males and females live in [[Pair bond|monogamous pairs]] with their offspring. After their first year, the young help their parents repair dams and lodges; older siblings may also help raise newly born offspring. Beavers hold [[Territory (animal)|territories]] and mark them using scent mounds made of mud, debris, and [[castoreum]]—a liquid substance excreted through the beaver's [[urethra]]-based castor sacs. Beavers can also recognize their kin by their [[anal gland]] secretions and are more likely to tolerate them as neighbors. |
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== General == |
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Beavers are best known for their natural trait of building [[dam]]s in [[river]]s and [[stream]]s, and building their homes (''lodges'') in the eventual [[pond]]. They are the second-largest rodent in the world (after the [[capybara]]). |
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Historically, beavers have been hunted for their fur, meat, and castoreum. Castoreum has been used in medicine, perfume, and food flavoring; beaver pelts have been a major driver of the [[fur trade]]. Before protections began in the 19th and early 20th centuries, [[overhunting]] had nearly exterminated both species. Their populations have since rebounded, and they are listed as species of [[Least-concern species|least concern]] by the [[IUCN Red List]] of mammals. In human culture, the beaver symbolizes industriousness, especially in connection with construction; it is the [[national animal]] of Canada. |
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Beavers continue to grow throughout life. Adult [[specimen]]s weighing over 25 [[kilogram|kg]] (55 lb) are not uncommon. Females are as large as or larger than males of the same age, which is uncommon among [[mammal]]s. |
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== Etymology == |
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The English word ''beaver'' comes from the [[Old English]] word {{lang|ang|beofor}} or {{lang|ang|befor}} and is connected to the [[German language|German]] word {{lang|de|biber}} and the [[Dutch language|Dutch]] word {{lang|nl|bever}}. The ultimate origin of the word is an [[Proto-Indo-European language|Indo-European]] root for {{gloss|brown}}.<ref>{{cite web |title=Beaver |website=[[Lexico]] |access-date=September 4, 2021|url=https://www.lexico.com/definition/beaver|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20201028140138/https://www.lexico.com/definition/beaver|url-status=dead|archive-date=October 28, 2020}}</ref> [[Cognate]]s of ''beaver'' is the source for several European [[placenames]], including those of [[Beverley]], [[Bièvres (disambiguation)|Bièvres]], [[Biberbach (disambiguation)|Biberbach]], [[Biebrich (disambiguation)|Biebrich]], [[Bibra (disambiguation)|Bibra]], [[Bibern (disambiguation)|Bibern]], [[Bibrka]], [[Bobr (disambiguation)|Bobr]], [[Bober (disambiguation)|Bober]], [[Bóbrka (disambiguation)|Bóbrka]], [[Bjurholm]], [[Bjurälven]], and [[Bjurum]].{{sfn|Poliquin|2015|p=21}} The [[genus]] name ''Castor'' has its origin in the Greek word {{lang|el|κάστωρ}} {{transliteration|grc|kastōr}} and translates as {{gloss|beaver}}.<ref>{{cite web |title=Castor |website=[[Lexico]] |access-date=January 22, 2021 |url=https://www.lexico.com/definition/castor |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210208112633/https://www.lexico.com/definition/castor |url-status=dead |archive-date=February 8, 2021}}</ref> |
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== Taxonomy == |
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[[Carl Linnaeus]] coined the genus name ''Castor'' in 1758<ref>{{cite web|title=Castor|url=https://www.itis.gov/servlet/SingleRpt/SingleRpt?search_topic=TSN&search_value=180211#null|url-status=live|website=[[Integrated Taxonomic Information System]] |access-date=September 21, 2020 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20201111212913/https://www.itis.gov/servlet/SingleRpt/SingleRpt?search_topic=TSN&search_value=180211#null |archive-date=November 11, 2020}}</ref> as well as the [[specific epithet|specific (species) epithet]] ''fiber'' for the Eurasian species.<ref name="ITISfiber">{{cite web|title=Castor fiber|url=https://www.itis.gov/servlet/SingleRpt/SingleRpt?search_topic=TSN&search_value=573165#null|url-status=live|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20201103070634/https://www.itis.gov/servlet/SingleRpt/SingleRpt?search_topic=TSN&search_value=573165#null|archive-date=November 3, 2020|access-date=September 21, 2020|website=ITIS}}</ref> German zoologist [[Heinrich Kuhl]] coined ''C. canadensis'' in 1820,<ref name="ITIScandensis">{{cite web|title=Castor canadensis|url=https://www.itis.gov/servlet/SingleRpt/SingleRpt?search_topic=TSN&search_value=180212#null|url-status=live|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20201103070405/https://www.itis.gov/servlet/SingleRpt/SingleRpt?search_topic=TSN&search_value=180212#null|archive-date=November 3, 2020|access-date=September 21, 2020|website=ITIS}}</ref> many scientists considered both names synonymous for one same species{{sfn|Poliquin|2015|pp=79–80}}<ref name="MacDonald"/> until the 1970s, when [[Chromosome#Number in various organisms|chromosomal]] evidence became available confirming both as separate where the Eurasian has 48 chromosomes, while the North American has 40.) The difference in chromosome numbers prevents them from interbreeding.<ref>{{cite journal|last1=Lahti|first1=S.|last2=Helminen|first2=M.|year=1974|title=The beaver ''Castor fiber'' (L.) and ''Castor canadensis'' (Kuhl) in Finland|journal=Acta Theriologica|volume=19|issue=4|pages=177–189|doi=10.4098/AT.ARCH.74-13|doi-access=free}}</ref> Twenty-five subspecies have been classified for ''C. canadensis'', and nine have been classified for ''C. fiber''.<ref name="ITISfiber"/><ref name="ITIScandensis"/> |
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There are two [[Extant taxa|extant]] species: the [[North American beaver]] (''Castor canadensis'') and the [[Eurasian beaver]] (''C. fiber''). The Eurasian beaver is slightly longer and has a more lengthened skull, triangular [[nasal cavity|nasal cavities]] (as opposed to the square ones of the North American species), a lighter fur color, and a narrower tail.{{sfn|Runtz|2015|pp=22–25}} |
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===Evolution=== |
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{{multiple image |
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| align =right |
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| direction =horizatonal |
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| width =220 |
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| image1 =Castor canadensis1.jpg |
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| caption1 =North American beaver (''Castor canadensis'') |
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| alt1 =North American Beaver on a river bank |
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| image2 =Castor fiber eating in Eskilstuna, Sweden.jpg |
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| caption2 =Eurasian beaver (''Castor fiber'') |
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| alt2 =A Eurasian Beaver gnawing on a branch |
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}} |
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{{cladogram|caption=Phylogeny of extant and extinct relatives of modern beavers based on genetics and morphology.<ref name="Fabre">{{Cite journal|last1=Fabre |first1=Pierre-Henri |last2=Hautier |first2=Lionel |last3=Dimitrov |first3=Dimitar |last4=Douzery |first4=Emmanuel J. P. |year=2012 |title= A glimpse on the pattern of rodent diversification: a phylogenetic approach |journal=[[BMC Evolutionary Biology]] |volume=12 |number=88 |page=88 |doi=10.1186/1471-2148-12-88 |pmid=22697210 |pmc=3532383 |doi-access=free |bibcode=2012BMCEE..12...88F }}</ref><ref name=Rybczynski/> |
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|cladogram={{clade|style=width:500px; |
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|label1=[[Castorimorpha]] |
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|1={{clade |
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|label1=[[Castoroidea]] |
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|1={{clade |
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|label1=[[Castoridae]]<!--[[File:Die Gartenlaube (1858) b 068 white background.jpg|50px]]--> |
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|1={{clade |
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|1=''Agnotocastor coloradensis'' |
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|2={{clade |
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|1={{clade |
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|1=''Agnotocastor praetereadens'' |
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|2={{clade |
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|1=''[[Anchitheriomys]]'' sp. [[File:Anchitheriomys.JPG|50px]] |
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|2={{clade |
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|1=[[Castorinae]] (modern beavers) [[File:Die Gartenlaube (1858) b 068 white background.jpg|50px]] |
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|2=[[Castoroidinae]] [[File:Giant-beaver-fieldmuseum.jpg|50px]] |
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}} |
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}} |
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}} |
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|2={{clade |
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|1=''[[Agnotocastor]]'' sp. |
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|2={{clade |
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|1=''[[Migmacastor procumbodens]]'' |
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|2=Palaeocastorinae [[File:Palaeocastor fossor.jpg|50px]] |
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}} |
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}} |
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}} |
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}} |
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}} |
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|label2=[[Geomyoidea]] |
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|2={{clade |
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|1=[[Heteromyidae]] (kangaroo rats and allies) [[File:Image taken from page 108 of 'Report of an expedition down the Zuni and Colorado Rivers by Captain L. Sitgreaves (white background).jpg|50px]] |
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|2=[[Geomyidae]] (gophers) [[File:Western pocket gopher.jpg|50px]] |
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}} |
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}} |
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}} |
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}} |
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Beavers belong to the rodent suborder [[Castorimorpha]], along with [[Heteromyidae]] ([[kangaroo rats]] and [[kangaroo mice]]), and the [[gophers]]. Modern beavers are the only extant members of the family [[Castoridae]]. They originated in North America in the late [[Eocene]] and colonized Eurasia via the [[Bering Land Bridge]] in the early [[Oligocene]], coinciding with the ''[[Grande Coupure]]'', a time of significant changes in animal species around 33{{spaces}}million years ago ([[myr]]).<ref name="Doronina 2017">{{cite journal |last1=Doronina |first1=Liliya |last2=Matzke |first2=Andreas |last3=Churakov |first3=Gennady |last4=Stoll |first4=Monika |last5=Huge |first5=Andreas |last6=Schmitz |first6=Jürgen |title=The beaver's phylogenetic lineage ''illumina''ted by retroposon reads |journal=[[Scientific Reports]] |year=2017 |volume=7 |issue=1 |page=43562 |doi=10.1038/srep43562|pmid=28256552 |pmc=5335264 |bibcode=2017NatSR...743562D |doi-access=free}}</ref><ref name=Korth2002/> |
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The more [[Basal (phylogenetics)|basal]] castorids had several unique features: more complex [[Occlusion (dentistry)|occlusion]] between cheek teeth, parallel rows of upper teeth, premolars that were only slightly smaller than molars, the presence of a third set of premolars (P3), a [[Foramen|hole]] in the [[stapes]] of the inner ear, a smooth [[palatine bone]] (with the palatine opening closer to the rear end of the bone), and a longer [[Rostrum (anatomy)#Vertebrates|snout]]. More [[Synapomorphy and apomorphy|derived]] castorids have less complex occlusion, upper tooth rows that create a V-shape towards the back, larger second premolars compared to molars, absence of a third premolar set and stapes hole, a more grooved palatine (with the opening shifted towards the front), and reduced [[incisive foramen]]. Members of the subfamily ''Palaeocastorinae'' appeared in late-Oligocene North America. This group consisted primarily of smaller animals with relatively large front legs, a flattened skull, and a reduced tail—all features of a [[fossorial]] (burrowing) lifestyle.<ref name=Korth2002>{{cite journal |last=Korth |first=W. W. |year=2002 |title=Comments on the systematics and classification of the beavers (Rodentia, Castoridae) |journal=[[Journal of Mammalian Evolution]] |volume=8 |issue=4 |pages=279–296 |doi=10.1023/A:1014468732231 |s2cid=27935955}}</ref> |
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In the early [[Miocene]] (about 24 mya), castorids [[Evolution|evolved]] a [[semiaquatic]] lifestyle. Members of the subfamily [[Castoroidinae]] are considered to be a [[sister group]] to modern beavers, and included giants like ''[[Castoroides]]'' of North America and ''[[Trogontherium]]'' of Eurasia.<ref name=Rybczynski>{{cite journal |last=Rybczynski |first=N. |year=2007|title=Castorid phylogenetics: Implications for the evolution of swimming and tree-exploitation in beavers|journal=[[Journal of Mammalian Evolution]] |volume=14 |pages=1–35 |doi=10.1007/s10914-006-9017-3 |s2cid=33659669}}</ref><ref name=Korth2002/> ''Castoroides'' is estimated to have had a length of {{convert|1.9|–|2.2|m|ft|1|abbr=on}} and a weight of {{convert|90|–|125|kg|lb|0|abbr=on}}.<ref name="R&S">{{cite journal |last1=Swinehart |first1=A. L. |last2=Richards |first2=R. L. |title=Paleoecology of Northeast Indiana Wetland Harboring Remains of the Pleistocene Giant Beaver (Castoroides Ohioensis) |journal=[[Proceedings of the Indiana Academy of Science]] |date=2001 |volume=110 |page=151 |url=https://journals.iupui.edu/index.php/ias/article/download/7219/7239 |access-date=November 21, 2014 |archive-date=March 4, 2016 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160304084347/https://journals.iupui.edu/index.php/ias/article/download/7219/7239 |url-status=live }}</ref> Fossils of one genus in Castoroidinae, ''[[Dipoides]]'', have been found near piles of chewed wood,<ref name=Rybczynski/> though ''Dipoides'' appears to have been an inferior woodcutter compared to ''Castor''. Researchers suggest that modern beavers and Castoroidinae shared a bark-eating [[Lowest common ancestor|common ancestor]]. Dam and lodge-building likely developed from bark-eating, and allowed beavers to survive in the harsh winters of the [[subarctic]]. There is no conclusive evidence for this behavior occurring in non-''Castor'' species.<ref name=Plint2020>{{Cite journal|last1=Plint|first1=Tessa|last2=Longstaffe|first2=Fred J.|last3=Ballantyne|first3=Ashley|last4=Telka|first4=Alice|last5=Rybczynski|first5=Natalia|year=2020|title=Evolution of woodcutting behaviour in Early Pliocene beaver driven by consumption of woody plants|journal=[[Scientific Reports]]|volume=10|number=13111|page=13111|doi=10.1038/s41598-020-70164-1|pmid=32753594|pmc=7403313|bibcode=2020NatSR..1013111P|issn=2045-2322|doi-access=free}}</ref> |
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The genus ''Castor'' likely originated in [[Eurasia]].<ref name="speciation"/> The earliest fossil remains appear to be ''C. neglectus'', found in Germany and dated 12–10 mya.<ref>{{cite journal|last1=Samuels|first1=J. X.|last2=Zancanella|first2=J.|year=2011|title=An early Hemphillian occurrence of ''Castor'' (Castoridae) from the Rattlesnake Formation of Oregon|journal=Journal of Paleontology|volume=85|issue=5|pages=930–935|doi=10.1666/11-016.1|s2cid=128866799}}</ref> [[Mitochondrial DNA]] studies place the common ancestor of the two living species at around 8 mya. The ancestors of the North American beaver would have crossed the Bering Land Bridge around 7.5 mya.<ref name="speciation">{{cite journal |last1=Horn |first1=S. |last2=Durke |first2=W. |last3=Wolf |first3=R. |last4=Ermala |first4=A. |last5=Stubbe |first5=M. |last6=Hofreiter |first6=M. |title=Mitochondrial Genomes Reveal Slow Rates of Molecular Evolution and the Timing of Speciation in Beavers (''Castor''), One of the Largest Rodent Species|journal=[[PLOS ONE]]|year=2011 |volume=6 |issue=1 |page=e14622|doi=10.1371/journal.pone.0014622|pmid=21307956 |pmc=3030560 |bibcode=2011PLoSO...614622H |doi-access=free }}</ref> ''Castor'' may have competed with members of Castoroidinae, which led to [[niche differentiation]].<ref>{{cite journal|last1=Samuels|first1=J. X.|last2=Van Valkenburgh|first2=B.|year=2008|title=Skeletal indicators of locomotor adaptations in living and extinct rodents|journal=[[Journal of Morphology]]|volume=269|issue=11 |pages=1387–1411|doi=10.1002/jmor.10662| pmid=18777567|s2cid=36818290}}</ref> The fossil species ''C. praefiber'' was likely an ancestor of the Eurasian beaver.<ref>{{cite journal|last1=Barisone|first1=G.|last2=Argenti|first2=P.|last3=Kotsakis|first3=T.|year=2006|title=Plio-Pleistocene evolution of the genus ''Castor'' (Rodentia, Mammalia) in Europe: ''C. fiber plicidens'' of Pietrafitta (Perugia, Central Italy)|journal=[[Geobios]]|volume=39|issue=6|pages=757–770|doi=10.1016/j.geobios.2005.10.004|bibcode=2006Geobi..39..757B }}</ref> ''[[Castor californicus|C. californicus]]'' from the [[Early Pleistocene]] of North America was similar to but larger than the extant North American beaver.<ref name=K&A>{{cite book | author=Kurtén, B. | author-link=Björn Kurtén | author2=Anderson, E. | title=Pleistocene Mammals of North America | location=New York | publisher=[[Columbia University Press]] | year=1980 | pages=236–237 | isbn=978-0231037334|oclc=5830693}}</ref>' |
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==Characteristics== |
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[[File:Beaver skeleton.jpg|thumb|left|alt=see caption|Mounted North American beaver skeleton]] |
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Beavers are the second-largest living rodents, after [[Hydrochoerus|capybara]]s. They have a head–body length of {{convert|80|–|120|cm|abbr=on}}, with a {{convert|25|–|50|cm|abbr=on}} tail, a shoulder height of {{convert|30|–|60|cm|abbr=on}}, and generally weigh {{convert|11|–|30|kg|abbr=on}},<ref name="MacDonald">{{Cite book |last1=Busher |first1=P. |url=https://archive.org/details/encyclopediaofma0000unse_m0x7/page/590/mode/2up |title=The Encyclopedia of Mammals |last2=Hartman |first2=G. |publisher=[[Oxford University Press]] |year=2001 |isbn=978-0760719695 |editor=MacDonald |editor-first=D. W. |edition=2nd |pages=590–593 |contribution=Beavers}}</ref> but can be as heavy as {{convert|50|kg|lb|abbr=on}}. Males and females are almost identical externally.{{sfn|Müller-Schwarze|Sun|2003|pp=10, 14}} Their bodies are streamlined like [[marine mammal]]s and their robust build allows them to pull heavy loads.<ref name=JohnHopkins/>{{sfn|Runtz|2015|p=73}} A beaver [[Animal coat|coat]] has 12,000–23,000 hairs/cm<sup>2</sup> (77,000–148,000 hairs/in<sup>2</sup>) and functions to keep the animal warm, to help it float in water, and to protect it against predators. [[Guard hairs]] are {{convert|5|–|6|cm|abbr=on}} long and typically reddish brown, but can range from yellowish brown to nearly black. The [[underfur]] is {{convert|2|–|3|cm|abbr=on}} long and dark gray. Beavers [[molt]] every summer.<ref name="MacDonald"/>{{sfn|Müller-Schwarze|Sun|2003|pp=12–13}} |
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Beavers have large skulls with powerful [[Muscles of mastication|chewing muscles]]. They have four chisel-shaped incisors that continue to grow throughout their lives. The incisors are covered in a thick [[tooth enamel|enamel]] that is colored orange or reddish-brown by iron compounds.{{sfn|Müller-Schwarze|Sun|2003|pp=11–12}}<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Gordon |first1=L. M. |last2=Cohn |first2=M. J.|last3=MacRenaris |first3=K. W. |last4=Pasteris |first4=J. D. |last5=Seda |first5=T. |last6=Joester |first6=D. |year=2015 |title=Amorphous intergranular phases control the properties of rodent tooth enamel|journal=[[Science (journal)|Science]] |volume=347 |issue=6223 |pages=746–750 |doi=10.1126/science.1258950 |pmid=25678658 |bibcode=2015Sci...347..746G |s2cid=8762487|doi-access=free }}</ref> The lower incisors have roots that are almost as long as the entire lower jaw. Beavers have one premolar and three molars on all four sides of the jaws, adding up to 20 teeth. The molars have meandering ridges for grinding woody material.{{sfn|Müller-Schwarze|Sun|2003|p=12}} The eyes, ears and nostrils are arranged so that they can remain above water while the rest of the body is submerged. The nostrils and ears have valves that close underwater, while [[nictitating membranes]] cover the eyes. To protect the [[larynx]] and [[trachea]] from water flow, the [[epiglottis]] is contained within the nasal cavity instead of the throat. In addition, the back of the tongue can rise and create a waterproof seal. A beaver's lips can close behind the incisors, preventing water from entering their mouths as they cut and bite onto things while submerged.{{sfn|Runtz|2015|p=55}}<ref name=Pelagic/> |
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[[File:Picture Natural History - No 40 41 42 - Beaver feet and tail.png|thumb|right|alt=Illustration of a fore foot, a hind foot showing webbing, and the tail of a beaver|The fore foot, hind foot, and tail of a beaver]] |
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[[File:Beaver tail print on snow.jpg|thumb|Beaver tail and footprints on snow]] |
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The beaver's front feet are dexterous, allowing them to grasp and manipulate objects and food, as well as dig. The hind feet are larger and have [[webbed foot|webbing between the toes]], and the second innermost toe has a "double nail" used for grooming.<ref name=Pelagic/>{{sfn|Runtz|2015|p=71}} Beavers can swim at {{cvt|8|km/h|abbr=on}};{{sfn|Runtz|2015|p=73}} only their webbed hind feet are used to swim, while the front feet fold under the chest.<ref name=Pelagic>{{cite book|last1=Campbell-Palmer|first1=Róisín|last2=Gow|first2=Derek|last3=Needham|first3=Robert|last4=Jones|first4=Simon|last5=Rosell|first5=Frank|date=2015|title=The Eurasian Beaver|publisher=Pelagic Publishing Ltd|pages=7–12|isbn=978-1784270407}}</ref> On the surface, the hind limbs thrust one after the other; while underwater, they move at the same time.<ref>{{cite journal|last1=Allers|first1=D.|last2=Culik|first2=B. M.|year=1997|title=Energy Requirements of Beavers (''Castor canadensis'') Swimming Underwater |journal=[[Physiological Zoology]]|volume=70|issue=4|pages=456–463|doi=10.1086/515852|pmid=9237306|s2cid=21784970}}</ref> Beavers are awkward on land but can move quickly when they feel threatened. They can carry objects while walking on their hind legs.<ref name=JohnHopkins>{{cite book |last1=Baker |first1=B. W. |last2=Hill|first2=E. P.|contribution=Beaver ''Castor canadensis'' |title=Wild Mammals of North America: Biology, Management, and Conservation|editor1-last=Feldhamer |editor1-first=G. A.|editor2-last=Thompson|editor2-first=B. C.|editor3-last=Chapman|editor3-first=J. A.|publisher=[[Johns Hopkins University Press]]|edition=2|year=2003|pages=289–297 |isbn=978-0801874161|oclc=51969059}}</ref><ref name=Pelagic/> |
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The beaver's distinctive tail has a conical, muscular, hairy base; the remaining two-thirds of the appendage is flat and scaly. The tail has multiple functions: it provides support for the animal when it is upright (such as when chewing down a tree), acts as a rudder when it is swimming, and stores fat for winter. It also has a [[countercurrent exchange|countercurrent]] blood vessel system which allows the animal to lose heat in warm temperatures and retain heat in cold temperatures.{{sfn|Runtz|2015|pp=55, 63–67}} |
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The beaver's sex organs are inside the body, and the male's penis has a cartilaginous [[baculum]]. They have only one opening, a [[cloaca]], which is used for reproduction, scent-marking, defecation, and urination.<ref>{{cite book|last1=Rosell|first1=Frank|last2=Campbell-Palmer|first2=Róisín|title= Beavers: Ecology, Behaviour, Conservation, and Management|url= https://books.google.com/books?id=skVWEAAAQBAJ&pg=PA74|access-date=27 December 2024|year=2022|page=74|publisher=OUP Oxford|isbn= 978-0-19257-199-1}}</ref> The cloaca evolved secondarily, as most mammals have lost this feature, and may reduce the area vulnerable to infection in dirty water. The beaver's intestine is six times longer than its body, and the [[caecum]] is double the volume of its stomach.{{sfn|Müller-Schwarze|Sun|2003|pp=13–14, 17, 44}} Microorganisms in the caecum allow them to process around 30 percent of the [[cellulose]] they eat.<ref name=JohnHopkins/> A beaver defecates in the water, leaving behind balls of sawdust. Female beavers have four [[mammary glands]]; these produce milk with 19 percent fat, a higher fat content than other rodents. Beavers have two pairs of glands: castor sacs, which are part of the urethra, and [[anal gland]]s. The castor sacs secrete [[castoreum]], a liquid substance used mainly for marking territory. Anal glands produce an oily substance which the beaver uses as a waterproof ointment for its coat. The substance plays a role in individual and family recognition. Anal secretions are darker in females than males among Eurasian beavers, while the reverse is true for the North American species.{{sfn|Müller-Schwarze|Sun|2003|pp=6, 13–14, 41–45}} |
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[[File:Castor fiber vistulanus3.jpg|thumb|left|Eurasian beaver swimming|alt=Beaver swimming]] |
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Compared to many other rodents, a beaver's brain has a [[hypothalamus]] that is much smaller than the [[cerebrum]]; this indicates a relatively advanced brain with higher intelligence. The [[cerebellum]] is large, allowing the animal to move within a three-dimensional space (such as underwater) similar to tree-climbing squirrels. The [[neocortex]] is devoted mainly to [[Somatosensory system|touch]] and hearing. Touch is more advanced in the lips and hands than the [[whiskers]] and tail. Vision in the beaver is relatively poor; the beaver eye cannot see as well underwater as an [[otter]]. Beavers have a good sense of smell, which they use for detecting land predators and for inspecting scent marks, food, and other individuals.{{sfn|Müller-Schwarze|Sun|2003|pp=11, 14–15}} |
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Beavers can hold their breath for as long as 15 minutes but typically remain underwater for no more than five or six minutes.{{sfn|Runtz|2015|p=74}} Dives typically last less than 30 seconds and are usually no more than {{convert|1|m|abbr=on}} deep.<ref>{{cite journal|last1=Graf|first1=P. M.|last2=Wilson|first2=R. P.|last3=Sanchez|first3=L. C.|last4=Hacklӓnder|first4=K.|last5=Rosell|first5=F.|year=2017|title=Diving behavior in a free-living, semi-aquatic herbivore, the Eurasian beaver ''Castor fiber''|journal=Ecology and Evolution|volume=8|issue=2|pages=997–1008|doi=10.1002/ece3.3726|pmid=29375773|pmc=5773300|doi-access=free}}</ref> When diving, their heart rate decreases to 60 beats per minute, half its normal pace, and blood flow is directed more towards the brain. A beaver's body also has a high tolerance for carbon dioxide. When surfacing, the animal can replace 75 percent of the air in its lungs in one breath, compared to 15 percent for a human.<ref name=Pelagic/>{{sfn|Runtz|2015|p=74}} |
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==Distribution and status== |
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wet |
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[[File:Beaver near Swan Lake (33797143245).jpg|thumb|right|alt=A beaver at the shores of a lake|North American beaver in [[Yellowstone National Park]]]] |
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==Species == |
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[[Image:Biberschaedel-drawing.jpg|thumb|A beaver [[skull]]]] |
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The [[European Beaver]] (''Castor fiber'') was hunted almost to [[extinction]] in [[Europe]], both for fur and for ''[[castoreum]]'', a secretion of its scent gland believed to have medicinal properties. However, the beaver is now being re-introduced throughout Europe. Several thousand live on the [[Elbe]], the [[Rhone River|Rhone]] and in parts of [[Scandinavia]]. In northeast [[Poland]] there is a thriving community of ''Castor fiber''. They have been [[reintroduction|reintroduced]] in [[Bavaria]], [[The Netherlands]] and [[Serbia]] ([[Zasavica]] bog) and are tending to spread to new locations. The beaver finally became extinct in [[Great Britain]] in the [[sixteenth century]]: [[Giraldus Cambrensis]] reported in [[1188]] (''Itinerarium'' ii.iii) that it was to be found only in the [[Teifi]] in [[Wales]] and in one river in [[Scotland]], though his observations are clearly [[first hand]]. |
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The [[IUCN Red List]] of mammals lists both beaver species as [[Least-concern species|least concern]].<ref name=iucn-canadensis>{{cite iucn |author=Cassola, F.|title=''Castor canadensis'' |volume=2016 |page=e.T4003A22187946 |year=2016 |doi=10.2305/IUCN.UK.2016-3.RLTS.T4003A22187946.en}}</ref><ref name=iucn-fiber>{{cite iucn |author=Batbold, J. |author2=Batsaikhan, N. |author3=Shar, S. |author4=Hutterer, R. |author5=Kryštufek, B. |author6=Yigit, N. |author7=Mitsainas, G. |author8=Palomo, L. |year=2021 |amends=2016 |title=''Castor fiber'' |page=e.T4007A197499749 |doi=10.2305/IUCN.UK.2021-1.RLTS.T4007A197499749.en}}</ref> The North American beaver is widespread throughout most of the United States and Canada and can be found in northern Mexico. The species was introduced to Finland in 1937 (and then spread to northwestern Russia) and to [[Tierra del Fuego|Tierra del Fuego, Patagonia]], in 1946.<ref name=iucn-canadensis/> {{As of|2019}}, the introduced population of North American beavers in Finland has been moving closer to the habitat of the Eurasian beaver.<ref>{{cite journal|last1=Alakoski|first1=R.|last2=Kauhala|first2=K.|last3=Selonen|first3=V.|year=2019|title=Differences in habitat use between the native Eurasian beaver and the invasive North American beaver in Finland|journal=Biological Invasions|volume=21|issue=5|pages=1601–1613|doi=10.1007/s10530-019-01919-9|doi-access=free|bibcode=2019BiInv..21.1601A }}</ref> Historically, the North American beaver was trapped and nearly extirpated because its fur was highly sought after. Protections have allowed the beaver population on the continent to rebound to an estimated 6–12{{spaces}}million by the late 20th century; still far lower than the originally estimated 60–400{{spaces}}million North American beavers before the fur trade.<ref name=Naiman>{{cite journal |title=Alteration of North American Streams by Beaver |author1=Naiman, Robert J. |author2=Johnston, Carol A. |author2-link=Carol A. Johnston |author3=Kelley, James C. |journal=[[BioScience]] |date=Dec 1988 |pages=753–762 |doi=10.2307/1310784 |url=http://www.landscouncil.org/documents/Beaver_Project/Articles/Naiman_et_al_1988_alter_n_american_streams_by_beaver.pdf |access-date=February 28, 2010 |volume=38 |issue=11 |jstor=1310784 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120304035814/http://www.landscouncil.org/documents/Beaver_Project/Articles/Naiman_et_al_1988_alter_n_american_streams_by_beaver.pdf |archive-date=March 4, 2012}}</ref> The introduced population in Tierra del Fuego is estimated at 35,000–50,000 individuals {{As of|2016|lc=y}}.<ref name=iucn-canadensis/> |
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In October [[2005]], six European beavers were re-introduced to Britain in Lower Mill Estate in [[Gloucestershire]], and there are plans for re-introductions in [[Scotland]] and [[Wales]].<ref>http://www.msn.co.uk/htx/returnofthebeaver/</ref> |
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The Eurasian beaver's range historically included much of Eurasia, but was decimated by hunting by the early 20th century. In Europe, beavers were reduced to fragmented populations, with combined population numbers being estimated at 1,200 individuals for the [[Rhône]] of France, the [[Elbe]] in Germany, southern Norway, the [[Neman|Neman river]] and [[Dnieper|Dnieper Basin]] in Belarus, and the [[Voronezh (river)|Voronezh river]] in Russia. The beaver has since recolonized parts of its former range, aided by conservation policies and [[Reintroduction of beavers to Europe|reintroductions]]. Beaver populations now range across western, central, and eastern Europe, and [[western Russia]] and the [[Scandinavian Peninsula]].<ref name=iucn-fiber/> Beginning in 2009, beavers have been successfully reintroduced to parts of Great Britain.<ref>{{cite web |title=Beaver reintroduction in the UK |url=https://www.rspb.org.uk/our-work/our-positions-and-casework/our-positions/species/beaver-reintroduction-in-the-uk/ |url-status=live|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20201106144420/https://www.rspb.org.uk/our-work/our-positions-and-casework/our-positions/species/beaver-reintroduction-in-the-uk/ |archive-date=November 6, 2020 |access-date=September 28, 2020 |publisher=[[Royal Society for the Protection of Birds]]}}</ref> {{As of|2020|alt=|pre=In|bare=y}}, the total Eurasian beaver population in Europe was estimated at over one million.<ref>{{cite journal |last=Wróbel |first=M. |year=2020 |title=Population of Eurasian beaver (''Castor fiber'') in Europe |journal=Global Ecology and Conservation |volume=23 |page=e01046 |doi=10.1016/j.gecco.2020.e01046|doi-access=free |bibcode=2020GEcoC..2301046W }}</ref> Small native populations are also present in Mongolia and northwestern China; their numbers were estimated at 150 and 700, respectively, {{As of|2016|lc=y}}.<ref name=iucn-fiber/> Under New Zealand's [[Hazardous Substances and New Organisms Act 1996]], beavers are classed as a "prohibited new organism" preventing them from being introduced into the country.<ref>{{cite web |title=Hazardous Substances and New Organisms Act 2003 – Schedule 2 Prohibited new organisms |url=http://legislation.govt.nz/act/public/1996/0030/latest/DLM386556.html#DLM386556 |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20201106092832/http://legislation.govt.nz/act/public/1996/0030/latest/DLM386556.html |archive-date=November 6, 2020 |access-date=January 26, 2012 |publisher=New Zealand Government}}</ref> |
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The extinct North American [[Giant beaver]] (''Castoroides ohioensis'') was one of largest rodents that ever [[evolution|evolved]]. It disappeared, with other large mammals in the [[Holocene extinction event]], which began about 13,000 years ago. |
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==Ecology== |
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[[File:Europäischer Biber, Elbebiber (Castor fiber albicus).ogv|thumb|alt=A video of beavers swimming and foraging on grasses|Eurasian beavers swimming and foraging]] |
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[[Image:117-1715 IMG.JPG|250px|right|thumb|Canoeists try unsuccesfully to run a beaver dam in [[Algonquin Park]]. The dam is about 1 m high.]] |
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Beavers live in [[freshwater ecosystems]] such as rivers, streams, lakes and ponds. Water is the most important component of beaver habitat; they swim and dive in it, and it provides them refuge from land predators. It also restricts access to their homes and allows them to move building objects more easily. Beavers prefer slower moving streams, typically with a [[Stream gradient|gradient]] (steepness) of one percent, though they have been recorded using streams with gradients as high as 15 percent. Beavers are found in wider streams more often than in narrower ones. They also prefer areas with no regular flooding and may abandon a location for years after a significant flood.{{sfn|Müller-Schwarze|Sun|2003|pp=107, 109}} |
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The habitat of the beaver is the [[riparian zone]] inclusive of stream bed. The habit of the beaver for hundreds of thousands of years in the [[Northern Hemisphere]] has been to keep these watery systems healthy and in good repair, although to a human observer, seeing all of the downed trees, it might sometimes seem that the critters are doing just the opposite. The beaver works as a [[keystone species]] in an [[ecosystem]] by creating [[wetlands]] that are utilized by many other species. Next to humans, no other extant animal does more to shape its landscape. Introduced to an area without its natural predators, as in [[Tierra del Fuego]], beavers have flooded thousands of acres of land and are considered an unstoppable plague. One notable difference in Tierra del Fuego from most of North America is that the trees found in Tierra del Fuego do not [[coppicing|coppice]] as do willows, poplars, aspens, and other North American trees. Thus the "damage" by the beavers seems more severe. Oddly enough, the beaver is not as expert a forester as one would expect; the leading cause of death for beavers is being struck by the very trees that they fell. |
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Beavers typically select flat landscapes with diverse vegetation close to the water. North American beavers prefer trees being {{cvt|60|m}} or less from the water, but will roam several hundred meters to find more. Beavers have also been recorded in mountainous areas. [[Biological dispersal|Dispersing]] beavers will use certain habitats temporarily before finding their ideal home. These include small streams, temporary swamps, ditches, and backyards. These sites lack important resources, so the animals do not stay there permanently. Beavers have increasingly settled at or near human-made environments, including agricultural areas, [[suburbs]], [[golf courses]], and shopping malls.{{sfn|Müller-Schwarze|Sun|2003|pp=106–110}} |
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===Dams=== |
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The dams are created both as a protection against predators, such as coyotes, wolves and bears, and to provide easy access to food during winter. Destroying a beaver dam without removing the beavers takes a lot of effort, especially if the dam is downstream of an active lodge. Beavers can rebuild such primary dams overnight, though they may not defend secondary dams as vigorously. |
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[[File:Beaver Eating Lilly Pads (15682458379).jpg|thumb|alt=Beaver in water eating lily pads|North American beaver eating lily pads]] |
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Beavers have been known to build very large dams. <ref>http://abob.libs.uga.edu/bobk/bbeavdam.html</ref> The largest known was discovered near Three Forks, Montana, and was 2,140 feet long, 14 feet high, and 23 feet thick at the base. <ref>http://home.earthlink.net/~scouters2/beaver.html</ref> When objectionable beaver flooding occurs, modern water level control devices can be installed for a cost-effective and environmentally sound solution. Unwanted damage to trees can be prevented by wrapping chicken wire or sheet metal around the base of trees. <ref>http://www.BeaversWW.org</ref> |
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Beavers have an [[herbivorous]] and a [[Generalist and specialist species|generalist]] diet. During the spring and summer, they mainly feed on herbaceous plant material such as leaves, roots, herbs, ferns, grasses, [[sedges]], [[Nymphaea|water lilies]], [[Brasenia|water shield]]s, [[Scirpus|rushes]], and [[Typha|cattails]]. During the fall and winter, they eat more [[Bark (botany)|bark]] and [[cambium]] of woody plants; tree and shrub species consumed include [[aspen]], [[birch]], [[oak]], [[dogwood]], [[willow]] and [[alder]].<ref name="MacDonald"/>{{sfn|Runtz|2015|p=89}}<ref name="canal"/><ref name=JohnHopkins/> There is some disagreement about why beavers select specific woody plants; some research has shown that beavers more frequently select species which are more easily digested,<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Fryxell |first1=J. M. |last2=Doucet |first2=C. M. |year=1993 |title=Diet Choice and the Funcional Response of Beavers |journal=Ecology |volume=74 |issue=5 |pages=1297–1306 |doi=10.2307/1940060 |jstor=1940060 |pmid= |bibcode=1993Ecol...74.1297F |s2cid=}}</ref> while others suggest beavers principally forage based on stem size.<ref>{{cite journal|last1=Mahoney|first1=Michael J.|last2=Stella|first2= John C.|year=2020|title=Stem size selectivity is stronger than species preferences for beaver, a central place forager|journal=[[Forest Ecology and Management]]|volume=475|pages=118331|doi=10.1016/j.foreco.2020.118331|bibcode=2020ForEM.47518331M |s2cid=224922775}}</ref> Beavers may [[Hoarding (animal behavior)|cache]] their food for the winter, piling wood in the deepest part of their pond where it cannot be reached by other [[Browsing (herbivory)|browsers]]. This cache is known as a "raft"; when the top becomes frozen, it creates a "cap".<ref name=JohnHopkins/><ref name="MacDonald"/> The beaver accesses the raft by swimming under the ice. Many populations of Eurasian beaver do not make rafts, but forage on land during winter.<ref name="MacDonald"/> |
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It is primarily the sound of water in motion that stimulates the beavers to build. However, studies involving beaver habitual activities have indicated that beavers may respond to an array of stimuli, not just the sound of running water. In two experiments Wilson (1971) and Richard (1967, 1980) demonstrate that, although beavers will pile material close to a loudspeaker emitting sounds of water running, they only do so after a considerable period of time. Additionally the beavers, when faced with a pipe allowing water to pass through their dam, eventually stopped the flow of water by plugging the pipe with mud and sticks. The beavers were observed to do this even when the pipe extended several meters upstream and near the bottom of the stream and thus produced no sound of running water. Beavers normally repair damage to the dam and build it higher as long as the sound continues. However, in times of high water, they often allow spillways in the dam to flow freely. Beavers have even attempted to build dams in response to recordings of water flowing even in the absence of water.<ref>http://www.naturealmanac.com/archive/beaver_dams/beaver_dams.html</ref> |
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Beavers usually live up to 10 years. [[Felid]]s, [[canid]]s, and [[bears]] may prey upon them. Beavers are protected from predators when in their lodges, and prefer to stay near water. Parasites of the beaver include the bacteria ''[[Francisella tularensis]]'', which causes [[tularemia]]; the protozoan ''[[Giardia duodenalis]]'', which causes [[giardiasis]] (beaver fever); and the [[beaver beetle]] and [[mites]] of the genus ''[[Schizocarpus]]''.{{sfn|Müller-Schwarze|Sun|2003|pp=83, 113–114, 118–122}}<ref name="beaverfever"/> They have also been recorded to be infected with the [[rabies virus]].<ref>{{cite journal|last1=Morgan|first1=S. M. D.|last2=Pouliott|first2=C. E.|last3=Rudd|first3=R. J.|last4=Davis|first4=A. D.|year=2015|title=Antigen Detection, Rabies Virus Isolation, and Q-PCR in the Quantification of Viral Load in a Natural Infection of the North American Beaver (''Castor canadensis'')|journal=[[Journal of Wildlife Diseases]]|volume=51|issue=1|pages=287–289|doi=10.7589/2014-05-120|pmid=25380356|s2cid=5364807}}</ref> |
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[[Image:Beaver signs.JPG|250px|left|thumb|Trees, up to 250 mm (10 inches) in diameter, felled by beavers in one night.]] |
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===Infrastructure=== |
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Beaver dams can be disruptive; the flooding can cause extensive property damage, and when the flooding occurs next to a railroad roadbed, it can cause derailments by washing-out under the tracks, or when a beaver dam bursts and the resulting flash flood overwhelms a culvert. This disruption is not limited to human geography; beavers can destroy nesting habitat for endangered species, and often destroy mature trees for which they have no use. |
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{{redirect|Beaver lodge|the town in Alberta, Canada|Beaverlodge}} |
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{{further|Beaver dam}} |
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[[File:American Beaver, tree cutting.jpg|thumb|alt=Beaver chewing through a tree trunk|North American beaver chewing down a tree]] |
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Beavers need trees and shrubs to use as building material for [[Beaver dam|dams]], which restrict flowing water to create a pond for them to live in, and for lodges, which act as shelters and refuges from predators and the elements. Without such material, beavers dig [[burrow]]s into a [[Bank (geography)|bank]] to live. Dam construction begins in late summer or early fall, and they repair them whenever needed. Beavers can [[felling|cut down]] trees up to {{cvt|15|cm}} wide in less than 50 minutes. Thicker trees, at {{cvt|25|cm}} wide or more, may not fall for hours.{{sfn|Müller-Schwarze|Sun|2003|pp=54, 56–57, 68, 108}} When chewing down a tree, beavers switch between biting with the left and right side of the mouth. Tree branches are then cut and carried to their destination with the powerful jaw and neck muscles. Other building materials, like mud and rocks, are held by the forelimbs and tucked between the chin and chest.{{sfn|Runtz|2015|pp=84, 103}} |
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On the other hand, dam building can also be beneficial in restoring wetlands, the land's most beneficial ecosystem. Such wetland benefits include flood control downstream, biodiversity (by providing habitat for many rare as well as common species), and water cleansing, both by the breakdown of toxins such as pesticides and the retention of silt by beaver dams. The latter also reduces erosion as well as decreasing turbidity that is the limiting factor for aquatic life. While beavers can create damage, part of the problem is one of perception and time scale. Such damage as the undermining of a roadway or the drowning of some trees is very visible shortly after the beginning of beavers' activity in an area. The benefits, mentioned below, are long-term and not easily seen except by someone who is monitoring a catchment and realizes what huge positive effects beavers cause. |
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[[Image:Beaverlodge.JPG|thumb|right|250px|Beaver lodge, approx. 20-foot diameter. [[Ontario, Canada]]]] |
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Beavers start building dams when they hear running water, and the sound of a leak in a dam triggers them to repair it.{{sfn|Runtz|2015|p=104}} To build a dam, beavers stack up relatively long and thick logs between banks and in opposite directions. Heavy rocks keep them stable, and grass is packed between them. Beavers continue to pile on more material until the dam slopes in a direction facing upstream. Dams can range in height from {{cvt|20|cm}} to {{cvt|3|m}} and can stretch from {{cvt|0.3|m}} to several hundred meters long. Beaver dams are more effective in trapping and slowly leaking water than man-made concrete dams. Lake-dwelling beavers do not need to build dams.{{sfn|Müller-Schwarze|Sun|2003|pp=54–56, 109}} |
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==== Flood control ==== |
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[[File:Beaverlodge.JPG|thumb|alt=see caption|Open-water beaver lodge in Canada]] |
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A beaver dam has a certain amount of freeboard above the water level. When heavy rains occur, the pond fills up and the dam gradually releases the extra stored water. Often this is all that is necessary to reduce the height of the flood wave moving down the river, and will reduce or eliminate damage to human structures. Flood control is achieved in other ways as well. The surface of any stream intersects the surrounding water table. By raising the stream level, the gradient of the surface of the water table is reduced, and water near the beaver dam flows more slowly into the stream. This helps in reducing flood waves, and increases water flow when there is no rain. Beaver dams also smooth out water flow by increasing the area wetted by the stream. This allows more water to seep into the ground where its flow is slowed. This water eventually finds its way back to the stream. Rivers with beaver dams in their head waters have lower high water and higher low water levels.[[Image:Broken_Beaver_Dam.jpg|thumb|right|250px|Drained Beaver Dam. [[Allegheny State Park]]]] |
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Beavers make two types of lodges: bank lodges and open-water lodges. Bank lodges are burrows dug along the shore and covered in sticks. The more complex freestanding, open-water lodges are built over a platform of piled-up sticks. The lodge is mostly sealed with mud, except for a hole at the top which acts as an air vent. Both types are accessed by underwater entrances.<ref name=JohnHopkins/>{{sfn|Müller-Schwarze|Sun|2003|pp=56–57}} The above-water space inside the lodge is known as the "living chamber", and a "dining area" may exist close to the water entrance.<ref name="MacDonald"/> Families routinely clean out old plant material and bring in new material.{{sfn|Müller-Schwarze|Sun|2003|p=32}} |
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==== Wetland creation ==== |
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North American beavers build more open-water lodges than Eurasian beavers. Beaver lodges built by new settlers are typically small and sloppy. More experienced families can build structures with a height of {{cvt|2|m}} and an above-water diameter of {{cvt|6|m}}. A lodge sturdy enough to withstand the coming winter can be finished in just two nights. Both lodge types can be present at a beaver site. During the summer, beavers tend to use bank lodges to keep cool. They use open-water lodges during the winter. The air vent provides ventilation, and newly added carbon dioxide can be cleared in an hour. The lodge remains consistent in oxygen and carbon dioxide levels from season to season.{{sfn|Müller-Schwarze|Sun|2003|pp=6, 57–58}} |
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If a beaver pond becomes too shallow due to the settling of sediment, or if the tree supply is depleted, beavers will abandon the site. Eventually the dam will be breached and the water will drain out. The rich thick layer of silt, branches, and dead leaves behind the old dam is the ideal habitat for wetland species. Many of them will have been on the fringes of the pond. [[Wetlands]] have significant environmental benefits. |
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Beavers in some areas will dig canals connected to their ponds. The canals fill with groundwater and give beavers access and easier transport of resources, as well as allow them to escape predators. These canals can stretch up to {{cvt|1|m}} wide, {{cvt|0.5|m}} deep, and over {{cvt|0.5|km}} long. It has been hypothesized that beavers' canals are not only transportation routes but an extension of their "[[Central place foraging|central place]]" around the lodge and/or food cache.<ref name="canal">{{Cite journal |last1=Abbott|first1=Matthew |last2=Fultz|first2=Brandon|last3=Wilson|first3=Jon|last4=Nicholson|first4=Jody |last5=Black |first5=Matt |last6=Thomas|first6=Adam|last7=Kot|first7=Amanda|last8=Burrows|first8=Mallory |last9=Schaffer |first9=Benton |last10=Benson|first10=David|year=2013|title=Beaver-Dredged Canals and their Spatial Relationship to Beaver-Cut Stumps|volume=121|issue=2|pages=91–96 |journal=Proceedings of the Indiana Academy of Science |url=https://www.researchgate.net/publication/275098832}}</ref><ref>{{Cite journal |last1=Grudzinski |first1=Bartosz P. |last2=Cummins |first2=Hays |last3=Vang|first3=Teng Keng |year=2019|title=Beaver canals and their environmental effects|journal=Progress in Physical Geography: Earth and Environment |pages=189–211 |doi=10.1177/0309133319873116 |volume=44 |issue=2 |s2cid=204257682 |url=https://www.researchgate.net/publication/335838343}}</ref> As they drag wood across the land, beavers leave behind trails or "slides", which they reuse when moving new material.<ref name=JohnHopkins/> |
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==== The grazing meadow (vega) ==== |
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===Environmental effects=== |
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As the wetland fills and dries out, pasture species colonize it and it becomes a meadow suitable for grazing. In an area with nothing but forest down to the stream edge, this provides a valuable niche for many animals which otherwise would be excluded. |
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{{main article|Environmental impacts of beavers}} |
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{{Multiple image |
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| header = Beaver dam enlargement |
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| image1 = Beaver dam - geograph.org.uk - 1452003.jpg |
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| caption1 = September 2009 |
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| image2 = Beaver dam - four months on - geograph.org.uk - 1623430.jpg |
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| caption2 = December 2009 |
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| footer = Images of a beaver dam over a four-month period. Dams block rivers and create ponds. |
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| altfooter = Beaver dams being built to block a stream |
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}} |
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The beaver works as an [[ecosystem engineer]] and [[keystone species]], as its activities can have a great impact on the landscape and [[biodiversity]] of an area. Aside from humans, few other extant animals appear to do more to shape their environment.<ref name=Rosell/> When building dams, beavers alter the paths of streams and rivers, allowing for the creation of extensive [[wetland]] habitats.<ref>{{cite journal |author1=Burchsted, D. |author2=Daniels, M. |author3=Thorson, R. |author4=Vokoun, J. |year=2010 |title=The river discontinuum: applying beaver modifications to baseline conditions for restoration of forested headwaters |journal=[[BioScience]] |volume=60 |issue=11 |pages=908–922 |doi=10.1525/bio.2010.60.11.7 |s2cid=10070184 |url=http://opencommons.uconn.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1000&context=geosci |access-date=September 18, 2020 |archive-date=August 5, 2020 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200805173711/https://opencommons.uconn.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1000&context=geosci |url-status=live }}</ref> In one study, beavers were associated with large increases in open-water areas. When beavers returned to an area, 160% more open water was available during droughts than in previous years, when they were absent.<ref>{{cite journal|last1=Hood|first1=Glynnis A.|last2=Bayley|first2=Suzanne E.|year=2008|title=Beaver (''Castor canadensis'') mitigate the effects of climate on the area of open water in boreal wetlands in western Canada|journal=Biological Conservation|volume=141 |issue=2|pages=556–567 |doi=10.1016/j.biocon.2007.12.003|bibcode=2008BCons.141..556H |s2cid=84584842 }}</ref> Beaver dams also lead to higher [[water table]]s in mineral soil environments and in wetlands such as [[Fen|peatlands]]. In peatlands particularly, their dams stabilize the constantly changing water levels, leading to greater [[Carbon sequestration|carbon storage]].<ref>{{Cite journal|last1=Karran|first1=Daniel J.|last2=Westbrook|first2=Cherie J.|last3=Bedard-Haughn|first3=Angela|date=2018|title=Beaver-mediated water table dynamics in a Rocky Mountain fen|journal=Ecohydrology|language=en|volume=11|issue=2|pages=e1923|doi=10.1002/eco.1923|bibcode=2018Ecohy..11E1923K |s2cid=133775598|issn=1936-0592}}</ref> |
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Beaver ponds, and the wetlands that succeed them, remove sediments and pollutants from waterways, and can stop the loss of important soils.<ref>{{cite journal |title=Beaver pond biogeochemical effects in the Maryland Coastal Plain |journal=Biogeochemistry |year=2000 |pages=217–239 |jstor=1469618 |last1=Correll|first1=David L. |last2= Jordan|first2=Thomas E. |last3= Weller|first3=Donald E. |volume=49 |issue=3 |doi=10.1023/a:1006330501887|s2cid=9393979 }}</ref><ref>{{cite journal|last1=Puttock|first1=A.|last2=Graham|first2=H. A.|last3=Carless|first3=D.|last4=Brazier|first4=R. E.|year=2018|title=Sediment and Nutrient Storage in a Beaver Engineered Wetland|journal=[[Earth Surface Processes and Landforms]]|volume=43|issue=11|pages=2358–2370|doi=10.1002/esp.4398|pmid=30333676|pmc=6175133|bibcode=2018ESPL...43.2358P|doi-access=free}}</ref> These ponds can increase the [[Productivity (ecology)|productivity]] of freshwater ecosystems by accumulating [[nitrogen]] in sediments.<ref name=Rosell/> Beaver activity can affect the temperature of the water; in northern latitudes, ice thaws earlier in the warmer beaver-dammed waters.<ref name=ice>{{cite journal |title=Beavers (''Castor canadensis'') facilitate early access by Canada geese (''Branta canadensis'') to nesting habitat and areas of open water in Canada's boreal wetlands |journal=Mammalian Biology |year=2013 |volume=78 |pages=73–77 |author=Bromley, Chantal K. |author2= Hood, Glynnis A. |issue=1 |doi=10.1016/j.mambio.2012.02.009|bibcode=2013MamBi..78...73B }}</ref> Beavers may contribute to [[climate change]]. In Arctic areas, the floods they create can cause [[permafrost]] to thaw, [[Arctic methane emissions|releasing methane into the atmosphere]].<ref>{{cite journal|last1=Jones|first1=B. M.|last2=Tape|first2=K. D.|last3=Clark |first3=J. A.|last4=Nitze|first4=I. |last5=Grosse|first5=G.|last6=Disbrow|first6=J. |year=2020 |title=Increase in beaver dams controls surface water and thermokarst dynamics in an Arctic tundra region, Baldwin Peninsula, northwestern Alaska |journal=[[Environmental Research Letters]] |volume=15|issue=7 |page=075005|doi=10.1088/1748-9326/ab80f1|bibcode=2020ERL....15g5005J|doi-access=free}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|author=Hunt, Kate|date=June 30, 2020|title=Beavers are gnawing away at the Arctic permafrost, and that's bad for the planet|work=CNN|access-date=March 11, 2021|url=https://www.cnn.com/2020/06/29/americas/beavers-arctic-scn-climate-change-trnd/index.html|archive-date=June 2, 2023|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230602042218/https://www.cnn.com/2020/06/29/americas/beavers-arctic-scn-climate-change-trnd/index.html|url-status=live}}</ref> |
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==== The riverine forest ==== |
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As wetlands are formed and [[riparian]] habitats are enlarged, aquatic plants colonize the newly available watery habitat.<ref name=Rosell/> One study in the [[Adirondacks]] found that beaver engineering lead to an increase of more than 33 percent in [[herbaceous plant]] diversity along the water's edge.<ref>{{cite journal |author1=Wright, J. P. |author2=Jones, C. G. |author3=Flecker, A. S. | year=2002 | title=An ecosystem engineer, the beaver, increases species richness at the landscape scale | journal=[[Oecologia]] | volume=132 | issue=1 | pages=96–101 | doi=10.1007/s00442-002-0929-1 |pmid=28547281 | url=http://www.caryinstitute.org/sites/default/files/public/reprints/Wright_et_al_2002_An_ecosystem_Oecologia_132_96-101.pdf |archive-url=https://ghostarchive.org/archive/20221009/http://www.caryinstitute.org/sites/default/files/public/reprints/Wright_et_al_2002_An_ecosystem_Oecologia_132_96-101.pdf |archive-date=2022-10-09 |url-status=live|bibcode=2002Oecol.132...96W |s2cid=5940275 }}</ref> Another study in semiarid [[eastern Oregon]] found that the width of riparian vegetation on stream banks increased several-fold as beaver dams watered previously dry terraces adjacent to the stream.<ref>{{cite journal |doi=10.1002/esp.1553 |title=Geomorphic changes upstream of beaver dams in Bridge Creek, an incised stream channel in the interior Columbia River basin, eastern Oregon |author1=Pollock, Michael M. |author2=Beechie, Timothy J. |author3=Jordan, Chris E. |name-list-style=amp |journal=[[Earth Surface Processes and Landforms]] |volume=32 |issue=8 |pages=1174–1185 |year=2007 |bibcode=2007ESPL...32.1174P |s2cid=129844314 |doi-access=free }}</ref> Riparian ecosystems in arid areas appear to sustain more plant life when beaver dams are present.<ref>{{cite journal|last1=Fairfax|first1=E.|last2=Small|first2=E. E.|year=2018|title=Using remote sensing to assess the impact of beaver damming on riparian evapotranspiration in an arid landscape|journal= Ecohydrology|volume=11|issue=7|page=e1993|doi=10.1002/eco.1993|bibcode=2018Ecohy..11E1993F |s2cid=134994160}}</ref> Beaver ponds act as a refuge for riverbank plants during [[wildfires]], and provide them with enough moisture to resist such fires.<ref name=wildfire>{{cite journal|last1=Fairfax|first1=E|last2=Whittle|first2=A.|year=2020|title=Smokey the Beaver: beaver-dammed riparian corridors stay green during wildfire throughout the western United States|journal=[[Ecological Applications]]|volume=30|issue=8|page=e02225|doi=10.1002/eap.2225|pmid=32881199|doi-access=free|bibcode=2020EcoAp..30E2225F}}</ref> [[Beaver eradication in Tierra del Fuego|Introduced beavers at Tierra del Fuego]] have been responsible for destroying the indigenous forest. Unlike trees in North America, many trees in South America cannot grow back after being cut down.<ref name=nature>{{Cite journal | last1=Choi | first1=C. | title=Tierra del Fuego: The beavers must die | doi=10.1038/453968a | journal=[[Nature (journal)|Nature]] | volume=453 | issue=7198 | page=968 | year=2008 | pmid=18563116| doi-access=free }}</ref><ref>{{cite web|author=Gilliland, H. C.|date=June 25, 2019|title=Invasive beavers are destroying Tierra del Fuego|website=[[National Geographic]]|url=https://www.nationalgeographic.com/animals/2019/07/beaver-overpopulation-tierra-del-fuego/|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190725134742/https://www.nationalgeographic.com/animals/2019/07/beaver-overpopulation-tierra-del-fuego/|url-status=dead|archive-date=July 25, 2019|access-date=December 20, 2020}}</ref> |
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Finally the meadow will be colonized by riverine trees, typically aspens, willows and such species which are favoured by the beaver. Beavers are then likely to recolonize the area, and the cycle begins again. |
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[[File:Sockeye salmon jumping over beaver dam Lake Aleknagik, AK Kristina Ramstad 1997.jpg|thumb|left|upright|[[Salmon]] (''[[Oncorhynchus nerka]]'') jumping a beaver dam]] |
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Beaver activity impacts [[Community (ecology)|communities]] of [[aquatic invertebrate]]s. Damming typically leads to an increase of [[lentic ecosystem|slow or motionless water]] species, like [[dragonflies]], [[oligochaetes]], [[snails]], and [[mussels]]. This is to the detriment of [[Lotic ecosystems|rapid water]] species like [[black flies]], [[stoneflies]], and [[Hydropsychidae|net-spinning caddisflies]].<ref name="Rosell" /><ref>{{cite journal|last1=McDowell|first1=D. M.|last2=Naiman|first2=R. J.|year=1986|journal=Oecologia|title=Structure and function of a benthic invertebrate stream community as influenced by beaver (''Castor canadensis'')|volume=68|issue=4|pages=481–489|doi=10.1007/BF00378759|jstor=4217870|pmid=28311700|bibcode=1986Oecol..68..481M|s2cid=24369386}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal|author=Harthun, M.|year=1999|title=The influence of the European beaver (''Castor fiber albicus'') on the biodiversity (Odonata, Mollusca, Trichoptera, Ephemeroptera, Diptera) of brooks in Hesse (Germany)|journal=Limnologica|volume=29|issue=4|pages=449–464|doi=10.1016/S0075-9511(99)80052-8|doi-access=free}}</ref> Beaver floodings create more dead trees, providing more habitat for terrestrial invertebrates like ''[[Drosophila]]'' flies and [[bark beetles]], which live and breed in dead wood.<ref name="Rosell" /><ref>{{cite journal|author=Spieth, H. T.|year=1979|title=The virilis group of ''Drosophila'' and the beaver ''Castor''|journal=The American Naturalist|volume=114|issue=2|pages=312–316|doi=10.1086/283479|jstor=2460228|s2cid=83673603}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal|author=Saarenmaa, H.|year=1978|title=The occurrence of bark beetles (Col. Scolytidae) in a dead spruce stand flooded by beavers (''Castor canadensis'' Kuhl)|journal=Silva Fennica|pages=201–216|doi=10.14214/sf.a14857|doi-access=free|hdl=10138/14857|hdl-access=free}}</ref> The presence of beavers can increase wild [[salmon]] and [[trout]] populations, and the average size of these fishes. These species use beaver habitats for spawning, overwintering, feeding, and as havens from changes in water flow. The positive effects of beaver dams on fish appear to outweigh the negative effects, such as blocking of migration.<ref>{{cite journal |author1=Kemp, P. S. |author2=Worthington, T. A. |author3=Langford, T. E. L. |author4=Tree, A. R. J. |author5=Gaywood, M. J. | year=2012 | title=Qualitative and quantitative effects of reintroduced beavers on stream fish | journal=Fish and Fisheries | volume=13 | issue=2 |pages=158–181 | doi=10.1111/j.1467-2979.2011.00421.x|bibcode=2012AqFF...13..158K }}</ref> Beaver ponds have been shown to be beneficial to [[frog]] populations by protecting areas for larvae to mature in warm water.<ref>{{cite journal|last1=Stevens|first1=C. E.|last2=Paszkowsk|first2=C. A.|last3=Foote|first3=A. L.|year=2007|title=Beaver (''Castor canadensis'') as a surrogate species for conserving anuran amphibians on boreal streams in Alberta, Canada|journal=[[Biological Conservation (journal)|Biological Conservation]]|volume=134|issue=1|pages=1–13|doi=10.1016/j.biocon.2006.07.017|bibcode=2007BCons.134....1S |url=https://www.beaverinstitute.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/08/beaver-Castor-canadensis-as-a-surrogate-species-for-amphibian-conservation-2.pdf |archive-url=https://ghostarchive.org/archive/20221009/https://www.beaverinstitute.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/08/beaver-Castor-canadensis-as-a-surrogate-species-for-amphibian-conservation-2.pdf |archive-date=2022-10-09 |url-status=live}}</ref> The stable waters of beaver ponds also provide ideal habitat for freshwater [[turtles]].<ref>{{cite journal|last1=Russel|first1=K. R.|last2=Moorman|first2=C. E.|last3=Edwards|first3=J. K.|last4=Guynn|first4=D. C.|year=1999|title=Amphibian and reptile communities associated with beaver (''Castor canadenis'') ponds and unimpounded streams in the Piedmont of South Carolina|journal=Journal of Freshwater Ecology|volume=14|issue=2|pages=149–158|doi=10.1080/02705060.1999.9663666|doi-access=free|bibcode=1999JFEco..14..149R }}</ref> |
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Beavers help [[waterfowl]] by creating increased areas of water. The widening of the [[riparian zone]] associated with beaver dams has been shown to increase the abundance and diversity of birds favoring the water's edge, an impact that may be especially important in [[semi-arid climate]]s.<ref>{{cite journal |title=Influence of Beaver Dam Density on Riparian Areas and Riparian Birds in Shrubsteepe of Wyoming |journal=[[Western North American Naturalist]] |year=2008 |volume=68 |issue=3 |pages=365–373 |author1=Cooke, Hilary A. |author2=Zack, Steve |doi=10.3398/1527-0904(2008)68[365:IOBDDO]2.0.CO;2 |s2cid=62833818 |url=https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=2138&context=wnan |access-date=September 18, 2020 |archive-date=September 22, 2020 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200922141102/https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=2138&context=wnan |url-status=live }}</ref> Fish-eating birds use beaver ponds for foraging, and in some areas, certain species appear more frequently at sites where beavers were active than at sites with no beaver activity.<ref name=Rosell>{{cite journal |title=Ecological impact of beavers ''Castor fiber'' and ''Castor canadensis'' and their ability to modify ecosystems |author=Rosell F|author2= Bozser O|author3= Collen P|author4= Parker H |journal=[[Mammal Review]] |year=2005 |pages=248–276 |url=https://www.researchgate.net/publication/37687178|doi=10.1111/j.1365-2907.2005.00067.x |volume=35 |issue=3–4 |hdl=11250/2438080|hdl-access=free }}</ref><ref name=birds>{{cite journal |title=Bird species richness within beaver ponds in south-central New York |author=Grover, A. M. |author2= Baldassarre, G. A. |year=1995 |journal=Wetlands |pages=108–118|doi=10.1007/BF03160664 |volume=15 |issue=2|bibcode=1995Wetl...15..108G |s2cid=13053029 }}</ref><ref>{{cite journal|last1=Nummbi|first1=P.|last2=Holopainen|first2=S.|year=2014|title=Whole-community facilitation by beaver: ecosystem engineer increases waterbird diversity|journal=[[Aquatic Conservation: Marine and Freshwater Ecosystems]]|volume=24|issue=5|pages=623–633|doi=10.1002/aqc.2437|bibcode=2014ACMFE..24..623N }}</ref> In a study of [[Wyoming]] streams and rivers, watercourses with beavers had 75 times as many [[ducks]] as those without.<ref>{{cite journal |title=The Importance of Beavers to Waterfowl and Wetlands Habitats in Wyoming |author=McKinstry, M. C.|author2= Caffrey, P. |author3= Anderson, S. H. |journal=[[Journal of the American Water Resources Association]] |year=2001|doi=10.1111/j.1752-1688.2001.tb03660.x |volume=37 |issue=6 |pages=1571–1577|bibcode=2001JAWRA..37.1571M|s2cid=128410215}}</ref> As trees are drowned by rising beaver impoundments, they become an ideal habitat for [[woodpeckers]], which carve cavities that may be later used by other bird species.<ref name=Rosell/><ref name=birds/> Beaver-caused ice thawing in northern latitudes allows [[Canada geese]] to nest earlier.<ref name=ice/> |
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==== Bottom land ==== |
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Other semi-aquatic mammals, such as [[European water vole|water voles]], [[muskrats]], [[minks]], and [[otters]], will shelter in beaver lodges.<ref name=Rosell/> Beaver modifications to streams in Poland create habitats favorable to [[bat]] species that forage at the water surface and "prefer moderate vegetation clutter".<ref>{{cite journal|last1=Ciechanowski|first1=M.|last2=Kubic|first2=W.|last3=Rynkiewicz|first3=A.|last4=Zwolicki|first4=A.|year=2011|title=Reintroduction of beavers ''Castor fiber'' may improve habitat quality for vespertilionid bats foraging in small river valleys|journal=European Journal of Wildlife Research|volume=57|issue=4|pages=737–747|doi=10.1007/s10344-010-0481-y|doi-access=free}}</ref> Large herbivores, such as some [[deer]] species, benefit from beaver activity as they can access vegetation from fallen trees and ponds.<ref name=Rosell/> |
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As related above, each time this process repeats itself another layer of rich organic soil is added to the bottom of the valley. The valley slowly fills and the flat area at the bottom gets wider. Research is sparse on this topic, but it seems likely that much of the fabled bottom land in North America was created, or at least added to, by the efforts of the generations of beavers that lived there. |
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==Behavior== |
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==== Nutrient removal ==== |
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{{multiple image |
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| image1 =Beaver family upper Los Gatos Creek 2008 Mercury Freedom.jpg |
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| caption1 =North American beaver family, with the center pair grooming one another |
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| image2 =Tayside Beaver mother and kit June 5, 2010 Ray Scott.jpg |
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| caption2 =Eurasian beaver parent and kit |
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}} |
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Beavers are mainly [[nocturnality|nocturnal]] and [[Crepuscular animal|crepuscular]], and spend the daytime in their shelters. In northern latitudes, beaver activity is decoupled from the [[Circadian rhythm|24-hour cycle]] during the winter, and may last as long as 29 hours. They do not [[hibernate]] during winter, and spend much of their time in their lodges.<ref name="MacDonald"/><ref name=JohnHopkins/>{{sfn|Runtz|2015|p=76}} |
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===Family life=== |
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The removal of nutrients from the stream flow by beaver ponds is an interesting and very valuable process. Farming along the banks of rivers often increases the loads of phosphates, nitrates and other nutrients, causing problems downstream when this water is extracted for drinking. Besides silt, the beaver dam collects twigs and branches from the beavers' activity and leaves, notably in the fall. The main component of this material is [[cellulose]], a [[polymer]] of [[β-glucose]] [[monomers]] (This creates a more crystalline structure than is found in [[starch]], which is composed of [[α-glucose]] monomers. Cellulose is a type of [[polysaccharide]].) Many bacteria produce cellulase which can split off the [[glucose]] and use it for energy. Just as algae get their energy from sunlight, these bacteria get their energy from cellulose, and they form the base of a very similar food chain. However, a source of energy is not enough for growth. These bacteria are hungry for every molecule of nitrogen and phosporous they can grab. In this way, these and other nutrients are fixed into the beaver pond and the surrounding ecology, and are removed from the stream. The capture of these nutrients helps to explain the great richness of the resulting bottom land. |
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The core of beaver social organization is the family, which is composed of an adult male and an adult female in a [[Pair bond|monogamous pair]] and their offspring.<ref name="MacDonald"/><ref name=Pelagic/> Beaver families can have as many as ten members; groups about this size require multiple lodges.{{sfn|Müller-Schwarze|Sun|2003|pp=30–31}} [[Mutual grooming]] and play fighting maintain bonds between family members, and aggression between them is uncommon.<ref name=Pelagic/> |
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Adult beavers mate with their partners, though partner replacement appears to be common. A beaver that loses its partner will wait for another one to come by. [[Estrus]] cycles begin in late December and peak in mid-January. Females may have two to four estrus cycles per season, each lasting 12–24 hours. The pair typically mate in the water and to a lesser extent in the lodge, for half a minute to three minutes.{{sfn|Müller-Schwarze|Sun|2003|pp=80, 85}} |
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==== Pesticide and herbicide removal ==== |
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Up to four young, or kits, are born in spring and summer, after a three or four-month [[gestation]].<ref name="Pelagic" />{{sfn|Müller-Schwarze|Sun|2003|p=80}} Newborn beavers are [[precocial]] with a full fur coat, and can open their eyes within days of birth.<ref name="JohnHopkins" /><ref name="Pelagic" /> Their mother is the primary caretaker, while their father maintains the territory.<ref name="MacDonald" /> Older siblings from a previous litter also play a role.{{sfn|Müller-Schwarze|Sun|2003|pp=32–33}} |
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Agriculture also introduces herbicides and pesticides into our streams. Bacteria are an extremely variable lot and some of these [[toxicant]]s are metabolized and decomposed by the bacteria in the cellulose-rich bottom of a beaver dam. |
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After they are born, the kits spend their first one to two months in the lodge. Kits suckle for as long as three months, but can eat solid food within their second week and rely on their parents and older siblings to bring it to them. Eventually, beaver kits explore outside the lodge and forage on their own, but may follow an older relative and hold onto their backs.<ref name="Pelagic" /> After their first year, young beavers help their families with construction.<ref name="MacDonald" /> Beavers sexually mature around 1.5–3 years.<ref name="JohnHopkins" /> They become independent at two years old, but remain with their parents for an extra year or more during times of food shortage, high population density, or drought.{{sfn|Müller-Schwarze|Sun|2003|pp=332–333, 100–101}}<ref>{{cite journal|last1=Mayer|first1=M|last2=Zedrosser|first2=A|last3=Rosell|first3=F|year=2017|title=When to leave: the timing of natal dispersal in a large, monogamous rodent, the Eurasian beaver|journal=Animal Behaviour|volume=123|pages=375–382|doi=10.1016/j.anbehav.2016.11.020|s2cid=53183887}}</ref> |
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==== Denitrification ==== |
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===Territories and spacing=== |
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Some scientist believe that the nitrate cascade, the production of far more fixed nitrogen than the natural cycles can turn back into nitrogen gas, may be as much of a problem to our ecology as carbon dioxide production. It is likely, but not proven, that beaver dams along a stream may contribute to denitrification (the removal of nitrogen). In sewage plants, denitrification is achieved by passing the water through successive aerobic and anaerobic stages. Under a beaver dam, as the water seeps down into the soil, the oxygen is used up by the fauna in the rich organic layer. At some point all the oxygen is used up and the soil becomes anaerobic. This water eventually finds its way into the stream and into another beaver dam. This aerobic, anaerobic cycle continues all the way down the stream. |
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[[File:Castor fiber vistulanus2.jpg|thumb|left|alt=A beaver on a water bank|[[Eurasian beaver]] near its dam]] |
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Beavers typically disperse from their parental colonies during the spring or when the winter snow melts. They often travel less than {{convert|5|km|mi|abbr=on}}, but long-distance dispersals are not uncommon when previous colonizers have already exploited local resources. Beavers are able to travel greater distances when free-flowing water is available. Individuals may meet their mates during the dispersal stage, and the pair travel together. It may take them weeks or months to reach their final destination; longer distances may require several years.{{sfn|Müller-Schwarze|Sun|2003|pp=101–103}}<ref>{{cite journal|last1=McNew|first1=L. B.|last2=Woolf|first2=A.|year=2005|title=Dispersal and Survival of Juvenile Beavers (''Castor canadensis'') in Southern Illinois|journal=The American Midland Naturalist|volume=154|issue=1|pages=217–228|doi=10.1674/0003-0031(2005)154[0217:DASOJB]2.0.CO;2|jstor=3566630|s2cid=86432359 }}</ref> Beavers establish and defend [[Territory (animal)|territories]] along the banks of their ponds, which may be {{convert|1|–|7|km|abbr=on}} in length.<ref>{{cite journal|last1=Graf|first1=P. M.|last2=Mayer|first2=M.|last3=Zedrosser|first3=A.|last4=Hackländer|first4=K.|last5=Rosell|first5=F.|year=2016|title=Territory size and age explain movement patterns in the Eurasian beaver|journal=Mammalian Biology – Zeitschrift für Säugetierkunde|volume=81|issue=6|pages=587–594|doi=10.1016/j.mambio.2016.07.046|bibcode=2016MamBi..81..587G }}</ref> |
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Beavers mark their territories by constructing scent mounds made of mud and vegetation, scented with castoreum.{{sfn|Runtz|2015|p=128}} Those with many territorial neighbors create more scent mounds. Scent marking increases in spring, during the dispersal of yearlings, to deter interlopers.<ref name="Rosell 1997">{{cite journal | last1=Rosell | first1=Frank | last2=Nolet | first2=Bart A. | year=1997 | title=Factors Affecting Scent-Marking Behavior in Eurasian Beaver (''Castor fiber'') | journal=[[Journal of Chemical Ecology]] | volume=23 | issue=3 | pages=673–689 | doi=10.1023/B:JOEC.0000006403.74674.8a | bibcode=1997JCEco..23..673R | hdl=11250/2438031 | s2cid=31782872 | hdl-access=free }}</ref> Beavers are generally intolerant of intruders and fights may result in deep bites to the sides, rump, and tail.<ref name=Pelagic/> They exhibit a behavior known as the "[[dear enemy effect]]"; a territory-holder will investigate and become familiar with the scents of its neighbors and react more aggressively to the scents of strangers passing by.<ref name="Bjorkoyli 2002">{{cite journal|last1=Bjorkoyli|first1=Tore|last2=Rosell|first2=Frank|year=2002|title=A Test of the Dear Enemy Phenomenon in the Eurasian Beaver|journal=[[Animal Behaviour (journal)|Animal Behaviour]]|volume=63|issue=6|pages=1073–1078|doi=10.1006/anbe.2002.3010|hdl=11250/2437993|s2cid=53160345|hdl-access=free}}</ref> Beavers are also more tolerant of individuals that are their kin. They recognize them by using their keen sense of smell to detect differences in the composition of anal gland secretions. Anal gland secretion profiles are more similar among relatives than unrelated individuals.<ref name= "Lixing 1998">{{cite journal | last1=Sun | first1=Lixing | last2=Muller-Schwarze | first2=Dietland | year=1998 | title=Anal Gland Secretion Codes for Relatedness in the Beaver, ''Castor canadensis'' | journal=[[Ethology (journal)|Ethology]] | volume=104 | issue=11| pages=917–927 | doi=10.1111/j.1439-0310.1998.tb00041.x| bibcode=1998Ethol.104..917S }}</ref><ref>{{cite journal|last1=Sun | first1=Lixing | last2=Muller-Schwarze | first2=Dietland |year=1997|title=Sibling recognition in the beaver: A field test for phenotype matching|journal=Animal Behaviour|volume=54|issue=3|pages=493–502|doi=10.1006/anbe.1996.0440| pmid=9299035 | s2cid=33128765 }}</ref> |
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===Lodges=== |
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The ponds created by well-maintained dams help isolate the beavers' home, their ''lodge'', which is also created from severed branches and mud. The lodge has underwater entrances to make entry nearly impossible for any other animal (however, [[musk rat|muskrats]] have been seen living inside beaver lodges with the beavers who made it). A very small amount of the lodge is actually used as a living area. Contrary to popular belief, beavers actually dig out their den with an underwater entrance after they finish building the dam and lodge structure. There are typically two dens within the lodge, one for drying off after exiting the water, and another, drier one where the family actually lives. |
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===Communication=== |
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==Danger signal== |
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Beavers within a family greet each other with whines. Kits will attract the attention of adults with mews, squeaks, and cries. Defensive beavers produce a hissing growl and gnash their teeth.<ref name=Pelagic/> Tail slaps, which involve an animal hitting the water surface with its tail, serve as alarm signals warning other beavers of a potential threat. An adult's tail slap is more successful in alerting others, who will escape into the lodge or deeper water. Juveniles have not yet learned the proper use of a tail slap, and hence are normally ignored.{{sfn|Runtz|2015|pp=55–57}}{{sfn|Müller-Schwarze|Sun|2003|pp=48–49}} Eurasian beavers have been recorded using a territorial "stick display", which involves individuals holding up a stick and bouncing in shallow water.{{sfn|Runtz|2015|p=133}} |
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When startled or frightened, a swimming beaver will rapidly dive while forcefully slapping the water with its broad tail. This creates a loud 'slap', audible over large distances above and below water. This noise serves as a warning to other beavers in the area. Once a beaver has made this danger signal, all nearby beavers will dive and may not reemerge for some time. |
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==Interactions with humans== |
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==Fur trade== |
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[[File:Grey owl feeding beaver a jelly roll.jpg|right|thumb|[[Grey Owl]] feeding his beaver|alt=Black and white photo of a man feeding a beaver]] |
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Beaver pelts were used for [[barter (economics)|barter]] by [[Indigenous peoples of the Americas|Native Americans]] in the [[17th century]] to gain [[Europe]]an goods. They were then shipped back to [[Great Britain]] and [[France]] where they were made into clothing items. Widespread hunting and trapping of beavers led to their endangerment. Eventually, the [[fur trade]] fell apart due to declining demand in Europe and the takeover of trapping grounds to support the growing agriculture sector. A small resurgence in beaver trapping has occurred in some areas where there is an over-population of beaver; trapping is only done when the fur is of value, and normally the remainder of the animal is also utilized as animal feed. |
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Beavers sometimes come into conflict with humans over land use; individual beavers may be labeled as "nuisance beavers". Beavers can damage crops, timber stocks, roads, ditches, gardens, and pastures via gnawing, eating, digging, and flooding.<ref name=JohnHopkins/> They occasionally [[Beaver attack|attack]] humans and domestic pets, particularly when infected with [[rabies]], in defense of their territory, or when they feel threatened.<ref name="LSM-2016">{{cite news |last1=Андреев |first1=Александр |last2=Eng.LSM.lv |title=Diabolical beaver holds Daugavpils in its thrall |url=https://eng.lsm.lv/article/society/society/diabolical-beaver-holds-daugavpils-in-its-thrall.a179291/ |access-date=29 October 2022 |work=eng.lsm.lv |publisher=[[Public Broadcasting of Latvia]] |date=21 April 2016 |archive-date=October 30, 2022 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20221030161519/https://eng.lsm.lv/article/society/society/diabolical-beaver-holds-daugavpils-in-its-thrall.a179291/ |url-status=live }}</ref> Some of these attacks have been fatal, including at least one human death.<ref name="guardian">{{cite web|date=May 29, 2013|title=Beaver kills man in Belarus|url=https://www.theguardian.com/world/2013/may/29/beaver-kills-man-belarus|url-status=live|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20201108130526/http://www.theguardian.com/world/2013/may/29/beaver-kills-man-belarus|archive-date=November 8, 2020|access-date=November 11, 2020|work=[[The Guardian]]|agency=Associated Press}}</ref><ref name="huget">{{cite news|author=Huget, Jennifer LaRue|date=September 6, 2012|title=Beavers and rabies|newspaper=[[The Washington Post]]|url=https://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/the-checkup/post/beavers-and-rabies-whats-up-with-that/2012/09/06/5a0f2f12-f86a-11e1-a93b-7185e3f88849_blog.html|url-status=live|access-date=October 20, 2020|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20201023024353/https://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/the-checkup/post/beavers-and-rabies-whats-up-with-that/2012/09/06/5a0f2f12-f86a-11e1-a93b-7185e3f88849_blog.html|archive-date=October 23, 2020}}</ref><ref>{{cite news|url=http://www.adn.com/article/20110611/beavers-get-tough-defending-their-turf|title=Beavers get tough defending their turf|author=Shinohara, Rosemary|date=June 11, 2011|work=[[Alaska Dispatch News]]|access-date=October 20, 2020|archive-date=July 11, 2024|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240711080833/https://www.adn.com/alaska-news/article/beavers-get-tough-defending-their-turf/2011/06/12/|url-status=live}}</ref> Beavers can spread [[giardiasis]] ('beaver fever') by infecting surface waters,<ref name="beaverfever">{{cite journal|last1=Tsui|first1=C. K-M.|last2=Miller|first2=R.|last3=Uyaguari-Diaz|first3=M.|last4=Tang|first4=P.|last5=Chauve|first5=C.|last6=Hsiao|first6=W.|last7=Isaac-Renton|first7=J.|last8=Prystajecky|first8=N.|year=2018|title=Beaver Fever: Whole-Genome Characterization of Waterborne Outbreak and Sporadic Isolates To Study the Zoonotic Transmission of Giardiasis|journal= mSphere|volume=3|issue=2|doi=10.1128/mSphere.00090-18|doi-access=free|pmid= 29695621|pmc= 5917422}}</ref> though outbreaks are more commonly caused by human activity.{{sfn|Müller-Schwarze|Sun|2003|p=121}} |
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[[Flow devices]], like [[beaver pipes]], are used to manage beaver flooding, while fencing and hardware cloth protect trees and shrubs from beaver damage. If necessary, hand tools, heavy equipment, or explosives are used to remove dams.<ref>{{cite journal |title=Best Management Solutions for Beaver Problems |author=Callahan, M. |journal=Association of Massachusetts Wetland Scientists |date=April 2005 |pages=12–14|url=https://www.beaversolutions.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/04/amwx-Apr-05.pdf |archive-url=https://ghostarchive.org/archive/20221009/https://www.beaversolutions.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/04/amwx-Apr-05.pdf |archive-date=2022-10-09 |url-status=live}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|title=Beaver Damage Management|url=http://agrilife.org/txwildlifeservices/files/2016/07/fs_beaver.pdf |archive-url=https://ghostarchive.org/archive/20221009/http://agrilife.org/txwildlifeservices/files/2016/07/fs_beaver.pdf |archive-date=2022-10-09 |url-status=live|date=January 2011|website=US Department of Agriculture|access-date=December 23, 2020}}</ref> Hunting, [[trapping]], and relocation may be permitted as forms of population control and for removal of individuals.<ref name=JohnHopkins/> The governments of Argentina and Chile have authorized the trapping of invasive beavers in hopes of eliminating them.<ref name=nature/> The ecological importance of beavers has led to cities like [[Seattle]] designing their parks and [[Urban green space|green spaces]] to accommodate the animals.<ref name="Bailey">{{cite journal|last1=Bailey|first1=D. R.|last2=Dittbrenner|first2=B. J.|last3=Yocom|first3=K. P.|year=2018|title=Reintegrating the North American beaver (''Castor canadensis'') in the urban landscape|journal=WIREs Water|volume=6|issue=1|page=e1323|doi=10.1002/wat2.1323|s2cid=85513383|url=https://www.martinezbeavers.org/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2018/10/Reintegrating_the_North_American_beaver-002-1.pdf |archive-url=https://ghostarchive.org/archive/20221009/https://www.martinezbeavers.org/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2018/10/Reintegrating_the_North_American_beaver-002-1.pdf |archive-date=2022-10-09 |url-status=live}}</ref> The [[Martinez beavers]] became famous in the mid-2000s for their role in improving the ecosystem of [[Alhambra Creek]] in [[Martinez, California]].<ref>{{cite book|author=L. Riley|first=Ann|title=Restoring Neighborhood Streams – Planning, Design, and Construction|publisher=Island Press|year=2016|isbn=978-1610917407|location=Washington, DC|pages=177–178}}</ref> |
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==Beavers in culture== |
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[[Image:TZ_Beaver.jpg|thumb|A North American Beaver at the [[Toronto Zoo]]]] |
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Popular western culture typically depicts the animal positively, as a good-natured and industrious character. |
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Zoos have displayed beavers since at least the 19th century, though not commonly. In captivity, beavers have been used for entertainment, fur harvesting, and for reintroduction into the wild. Captive beavers require access to water, substrate for digging, and artificial shelters.<ref>{{cite journal|last1=Campbell-Palmer|first1=R.|last2=Rosell|first2=F.|year=2015|title=Captive Care and Welfare Considerations for Beavers|journal=Zoo Biology|volume=34|issue=2|pages=101–109|doi=10.1002/zoo.21200|pmid=25653085|doi-access=free|hdl=11250/2437934|hdl-access=free}}</ref> [[Grey Owl|Archibald Stansfeld "Grey Owl" Belaney]] pioneered beaver conservation in the early 20th century. Belaney wrote several books, and was first to professionally film beavers in their environment. In 1931, he moved to a log cabin in [[Prince Albert National Park]], where he was the "caretaker of park animals" and raised a beaver pair and their four offspring.{{sfn|Backhouse|2015|pp=64, 68–71}} |
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* Mr. and Mrs. Beaver who are important heroic characters in the classic [[fantasy novel]], ''[[The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe]]''. |
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===Commercial use=== |
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* The beaver's habits, habitat and conservation status (as of 1908) are recurring themes in ''[[The Tent Dwellers]]'', by [[Albert Bigelow Paine]]. [[Lillian Hoban]]'s ''Charlie the Tramp'' is a children's book about a young beaver and his family. |
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{{multiple image |
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|image1=Beaverbollocks.jpg |
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|alt1=see caption |
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|caption1=Depiction of a beaver hunt from a medieval [[bestiary]] with the beaver depicted as biting off its testicles |
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|image2=BeaverPelt (5118396762).jpg |
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|alt2=A beaver pelt |
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|caption2=Beaver pelts were the driving force of the [[North American fur trade]]. |
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}} |
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Beavers have been hunted, trapped, and exploited for their fur, meat, and castoreum. Since the animals typically stayed in one place, trappers could easily find them and could kill entire families in a lodge.{{sfn|Poliquin|2015|p=89}} Many pre-modern people mistakenly thought that castoreum was produced by the testicles or that the castor sacs of the beaver were its testicles, and females were [[hermaphrodite]]s. [[Aesop's Fables]] describes beavers chewing off their testicles to preserve themselves from hunters, which is impossible because a beaver's testicles are internal. This myth persisted for centuries, and was corrected by French physician [[Guillaume Rondelet]] in the 1500s.{{sfn|Backhouse|2015|p=98}}{{sfn|Poliquin|2015|pp=55, 58–62, 65}} Beavers have historically been hunted and captured using [[Deadfall trap|deadfalls]], [[Snare trap|snares]], nets, bows and arrows, spears, clubs, firearms, and leg-hold traps. Castoreum was used to lure the animals.<ref name=CIPNE/>{{sfn|Müller-Schwarze|Sun|2003|pp=150–151}} |
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Castoreum was used for a variety of medical purposes; [[Pliny the Elder]] promoted it as a treatment for stomach problems, flatulence, seizures, [[sciatica]], [[vertigo]], and [[epilepsy]]. He stated it could stop hiccups when mixed with vinegar, toothaches if mixed with oil (by administering into the ear opening on the same side as the tooth), and could be used as an [[antivenom]]. The substance has traditionally been prescribed to treat [[hysteria]] in women, which was believed to have been caused by a "toxic" womb.{{sfn|Poliquin|2015|pp=74, 76}} Castoreum's properties have been credited to the accumulation of [[salicylic acid]] from willow and aspen trees in the beaver's diet, and has a physiological effect comparable to [[aspirin]].<ref name="MacDonald"/>{{sfn|Backhouse|2015|pp=97–98}} Today, the medical use of castoreum has declined and is limited mainly to [[homeopathy]].<ref name="MacDonald"/> The substance is also used as an ingredient in perfumes and [[tincture]]s, and as a flavouring in food and drinks.<ref name="MacDonald"/>{{sfn|Poliquin|2015|p=74}} |
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* The [[North American Beaver]] (''C. canadensis'') is the [[List of national animals|national animal]] of [[Canada]]; it is depicted on the [[Nickel (Canadian coin)|Canadian five-cent piece]] and was on the first Canadian [[postage stamp]], the Three-Penny Beaver. As a [[national symbol]], the animal is a favourite choice for depicting Canadians as furry characters and was chosen to be the [[mascot]] of [[1976 Summer Olympics]] held in [[Montreal]] with the name "Amik" ("beaver" in [[Algonquin language|Algonquin]]). It is also the symbol of many units and organizations within the [[Canadian Forces]], such as on the cap badges of the [[Royal 22e Régiment]] and the [[Canadian Military Engineers]]. However, beavers are considered a [[pest (animal)|pest]] by some people. |
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Various [[Indigenous peoples of the Americas|Native American]] groups have historically hunted beavers for food,<ref name="CIPNE">{{cite web |last1=Kuhnlein |first1=H. V. |author-link=Harriet V. Kuhnlein |last2=Humphries |first2=M. H. |title=Beaver |url=http://traditionalanimalfoods.org/mammals/furbearers/page.aspx?id=6142 |access-date=December 20, 2020 |website=Centre for Indigenous Peoples' Nutrition and Environment |archive-date=October 3, 2020 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20201003121130/http://traditionalanimalfoods.org/mammals/furbearers/page.aspx?id=6142 |url-status=live }}</ref> they preferred its meat more than other [[red meats]] because of its higher calorie and fat content, and the animals remained plump in winter when they were most hunted. The bones were used to make tools.{{sfn|Backhouse|2015|p=56}}<ref name=CIPNE/> In medieval Europe, the Catholic Church considered the beaver to be part mammal and part fish, and allowed followers to eat the scaly, fishlike tail on meatless Fridays during [[Lent]]. Beaver tails were thus highly prized in Europe; they were described by French naturalist [[Pierre Belon]] as tasting like a "nicely dressed eel".{{sfn|Poliquin|2015|p=24}} |
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* There is typically a Beaver Patrol in the [[Boy Scouts of America]]'s [[Wood Badge]] adult-leadership training program. |
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Beaver pelts were used to make [[Beaver hat|hat]]s; [[felting|felters]] would remove the guard hairs. The number of pelts needed depended on the type of hat, with [[Cavalier hat|Cavalier]] and [[Capotain|Puritan]] hats requiring more fur than [[top hat]]s.{{sfn|Backhouse|2015|pp=99–101}} In the late 16th century, Europeans began to [[North American fur trade|deal in North American furs]] due to the lack of taxes or tariffs on the continent and the decline of fur-bearers at home. Beaver pelts caused or contributed to the [[Beaver Wars]], [[King William's War]], and the [[French and Indian War]]; the trade made [[John Jacob Astor]] and the owners of the [[North West Company]] very wealthy. For Europeans in North America, the fur trade was a driver of the exploration and westward exploration on the continent and contact with native peoples, who traded with them.{{sfn|Poliquin|2015|pp=92–94}}<ref>{{cite book|last=Madsen|first=Axl|title=John Jacob Astor: America's First Multimillionaire|date=January 30, 2001 |pages=2, 4, 49, 226–231|publisher=Wiley |isbn=9780471385035}}</ref><ref>{{Cite book |title=The Canadian Prairies |last=Friesen |first=Gerald |publisher=University of Toronto Press |year=1987 |isbn=0-8020-6648-8 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=SIMHAcD8LNkC&pg=PA62 |pages=62 |access-date=April 7, 2023 |archive-date=April 23, 2023 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230423112208/https://books.google.com/books?id=SIMHAcD8LNkC&pg=PA62 |url-status=live }}</ref> The fur trade peaked between 1860 and 1870, when over 150,000 beaver pelts were purchased annually by the [[Hudson's Bay Company]] and fur companies in the United States.{{sfn|Müller-Schwarze|Sun|2003|p=98}} The contemporary global fur trade is not as profitable due to conservation, [[Fur clothing#Anti-fur campaigns|anti-fur]] and [[animal rights]] campaigns.<ref name="MacDonald"/>{{sfn|Müller-Schwarze|Sun|2003|pp=150–151}} |
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* In the United States, [[Oregon]] is known as the "The Beaver State." The beaver is the state animal. It is also the mascot of [[Oregon State University]]. It is the [[List of U.S. state mammals|state mammal]] of [[New York]] (after the historical emblem of [[New Netherland]]). |
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===In culture=== |
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* Due to its engineering capabilities, the beaver serves as the mascot of the [[Massachusetts Institute of Technology]], [[California Institute of Technology]], [[Oregon State University]] and the [[University of Toronto]]. It is also an emblem for [[London School of Economics]] and the name of its student newspaper, ''[[The Beaver]].'' |
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[[File:Beaver sculpture, Centre Block.jpg|thumb|left|alt=Stone sculpture of a beaver over an entrance to the Parliament Building of Canada|Beaver sculpture over entrance to the [[Canadian Parliament Buildings|Canadian Parliament Building]]]] |
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* In the 17th century, based on a question raised by the [[Bishop]] of [[Quebec]], the [[Roman Catholic Church]] ruled that the beaver was a [[fish]]. The legal basis for the decision probably rests with the ''[[Summa Theologica]]'' of [[Thomas Aquinas]], which bases animal classification as much on habit as anatomy.<ref>[http://www.newadvent.org/summa/314708.htm ''The Summa Theologica of St. Thomas Aquinas''] II. 147:8 provides legal foundation upon which theologians argued in favour of beaver being like fish.</ref> Therefore, the general prohibition on the consumption of [[meat]] on Fridays during [[Lent]] did not apply to beaver meat.<ref>http://www.chowdc.org/Papers/Saunders%202001.html</ref><ref>{{fr}}Lacoursière, Jacques. ''Une histoire du Québec'' ISBN 2-89448-050-4 Explains that Bishop François de Laval in the 17th century posed the question to the theologians of the [[Sorbonne]], who ruled in favour of this decision.</ref> |
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The beaver has been used to represent productivity, trade, tradition, masculinity, and respectability. References to the beaver's skills are reflected in everyday language. The English verb "to beaver" means working with great effort and being "as busy as a beaver"; a "beaver intellect" refers to a way of thinking that is slow and honest. Though it typically has a wholesome image, the beaver's name has been used as a [[sexual slang|sexual term]] for the human [[vulva]].{{sfn|Poliquin|2015|pp=209–210}}<ref name="Francis"/> |
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* In the [[Cheese Shop sketch]] of ''[[Monty Python's Flying Circus]],'' a famished customer asks the proprietor of a cheese shop for any one of dozens of different kinds of cheese, including the nonexistent [[Venezuela]]n Beaver Cheese. Venezuela has no indigenous beavers. |
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[[Mythologies of the indigenous peoples of the Americas|Native American myths]] emphasize the beaver's skill and industriousness. In the mythology of the [[Haida people|Haida]], beavers are descended from the Beaver-Woman, who built a dam on a stream next to their cabin while her husband was out hunting and gave birth to the first beavers. In a [[Cree]] story, the Great Beaver and its dam caused a [[Flood myth|world flood]]. Other tales involve beavers using their tree chewing skills against an enemy.{{sfn|Poliquin|2015|pp=14–15, 130–131}} Beavers have been featured as companions in some stories, including a [[Lakota people|Lakota]] tale where a young woman flees from her evil husband with the aid of her pet beaver.{{sfn|Backhouse|2015|p=75}} |
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* [[Nickelodeon (TV channel)|Nickelodeon]] aired ''[[The Angry Beavers]]'', a popular children's television show. |
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Europeans have traditionally thought of beavers as fantastical animals due to their amphibious nature. They depicted them with exaggerated tusk-like teeth, dog- or pig-like bodies, fish tails, and visible testicles. French cartographer [[Nicolas de Fer]] illustrated beavers building a dam at [[Niagara Falls]], fantastically depicting them like human builders. Beavers have also appeared in literature such as [[Dante Alighieri|Dante Alighieri's]] ''[[Divine Comedy]]'' and the writings of [[Athanasius Kircher]], who wrote that on [[Noah's Ark]] the beavers were housed near a water-filled tub that was also used by [[mermaid]]s and otters.{{sfn|Poliquin|2015|pp=20–21, 28–32, 134}} |
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* [[Bell Canada]] also advertises using two animated beavers called Frank and Gordon. |
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The beaver has long been associated with Canada, appearing on the first pictorial postage stamp issued in the [[British North America|Canadian colonies]] in 1851 as the so-called "[[Postage stamps and postal history of Canada|Three-Penny Beaver]]". It was declared the [[national animal]] in 1975. The [[Nickel (Canadian coin)|five-cent coin]], the coat of arms of the Hudson's Bay Company, and the logos for [[Parks Canada]] and [[Roots Canada]] use its image. [[Frank and Gordon]] are two fictional beavers that appeared in [[Bell Canada|Bell Canada's]] advertisements between 2005 and 2008. However, the beaver's status as a rodent has made it controversial, and it was not chosen to be on the [[Arms of Canada]] in 1921.{{sfn|Backhouse|2015|pp=5–6}}{{sfn|Runtz|2015|pp=2–4}} The beaver has commonly been used to represent Canada in [[political cartoons]], typically to signify it as a friendly but relatively weak nation.<ref name="Francis">{{cite journal|author=Francis, Margot|year=2004|title=The Strange Career of the Canadian Beaver: Anthropomorphic Discourses and Imperial History|journal=[[Journal of Historical Sociology]]|volume=17|issue=2–3|pages=209–239|doi=10.1111/j.1467-6443.2004.00231.x}}</ref> In the United States, the beaver is the [[List of U.S. state animals|state animal]] of [[New York (state)|New York]] and [[Oregon]].{{sfn|Backhouse|2015|p=6}} It is also featured on the coat of arms of the [[London School of Economics]].{{sfn|Runtz|2015|p=2}}<!-- Please do not add any more examples of beavers as mascots or symbols. These examples are mentioned in general sources about the animals. --> |
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*[[Happy Tree Friends]] has two characters named Handy and Toothy who are beavers. |
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==See also== |
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==1911 encyclopedia text== |
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* [[Beaver drop]] |
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==References== |
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{{cleanup-combine}} |
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{{Reflist|30em}} |
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[[Image:Beavertracks.JPG|thumb|right|150px|Beaver tracks in snow, in [[Ontario]]. Hind paws approx 20 cm long.]] |
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=== Sources === |
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''The following text is taken from the [[Encyclopædia Britannica Eleventh Edition|1911 Encyclopedia Brittannica]].'' |
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{{Refbegin}} |
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* {{Cite book|last=Backhouse|first=Frances|year=2015|title=Once They Were Hats: In Search of the Mighty Beaver|publisher=[[ECW Press]]|isbn=978-1770907553|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=wXkuCQAAQBAJ&q=once+they+were+hats|access-date=March 18, 2023|archive-date=April 6, 2023|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230406145536/https://books.google.com/books?id=wXkuCQAAQBAJ&q=once+they+were+hats|url-status=live}} |
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'''Beaver''', the largest European aquatic representative of the mammalian order RODENTIA, easily recognized by its large trowel-like, scaly tail, which is expanded in the horizontal direction. |
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* {{Cite book|last1=Müller-Schwarze|first1=Dietland|last2=Sun|first2=Lixing|year=2003|title=The Beaver: Natural History of a Wetlands Engineer|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=eqIenKko3lAC&q=Beaver&pg=PP1|publisher=[[Cornell University Press]]|isbn=978-0801440984|access-date=October 15, 2020|archive-date=July 11, 2024|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240711080832/https://books.google.com/books?id=eqIenKko3lAC&q=Beaver&pg=PP1#v=snippet&q=Beaver&f=false|url-status=live}} |
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* {{Cite book|last=Poliquin|first=Rachel|year=2015|title=Beaver|publisher=[[Reaktion Books]]|isbn=978-1780234564|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=DcGkCQAAQBAJ&q=beaver+reaktion|access-date=March 18, 2023|archive-date=July 11, 2024|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240711080832/https://books.google.com/books?id=DcGkCQAAQBAJ&q=beaver+reaktion#v=snippet&q=beaver%20reaktion&f=false|url-status=live}} |
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The word is descended from the Aryan name of the animal, cf. Sanskrit ''babhru's,'' brown, the great ichneumon, Lat. ''fiber,'' Ger. ''Biber,'' Swed. ''bäver,'' Russ. ''bobr';'' the root ''bhru'' has given "brown," and, through Romanic, "bronze" and "burnish." |
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* {{Cite book|last=Runtz|first=Michael|year=2015|title=Dam Builders: The Natural History of Beavers and their Ponds|publisher=[[Fitzhenry & Whiteside]]|isbn=978-1554553242}} |
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{{Refend}} |
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The true beaver (''Castor fiber'') is a native of Europe and northern Asia, but it is represented in North America by a closely-allied species (''C. canadensis''), chiefly distinguished by the form of the nasal bones of the skull. |
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[[Image:Beaver dam in Yellowstone.jpg|thumb|left|250px|[[Yellowstone National Park]].]] |
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Beavers are nearly allied to the [[squirrel]]s (Sciuridae), agreeing in certain structural peculiarities of the lower jaw and skull. In the Sciuridae the two main bones (tibia and fibula) of the lower half of the leg are quite separate, the tail is round and hairy, and the habits are arboreal and terrestrial. In the beavers or Castoridae these bones are in close contact at their lower ends, the tail is depressed, expanded and scaly, and the habits are aquatic. |
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[[Image:Beaver dam in Tierra del Fuego.jpg|thumb|250px|[[Tierra del Fuego]].]] |
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Beavers have webbed hind-feet, and the claw of the second hind-toe double. They have poor eyesight, but a keen sense of hearing, smell, and touch. |
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In length beavers—European and American—measure about 2 ft. exclusive of the tail, which is about 10 inches long. They are covered with a fur to which they owe their chief commercial value; this consists of two kinds of hair—the one close-set, silky and of a greyish colour, the other much coarser and longer, and of a reddish brown. |
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Beavers are essentially aquatic in their habits, never travelling by land unless driven by necessity. Formerly common in England, the European beaver has not only been exterminated there, but likewise in most of the countries of the continent, although a few remain on the [[Elbe]], the [[Rhone River|Rhone]] and in parts of Scandinavia. The American species |
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is also greatly diminished in numbers from incessant pursuit for the sake of its valuable fur. |
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Beavers are sociable animals, living in streams, where, so as to render the water of sufficient depth, they build dams of mud and of the stems and boughs of trees felled by their powerful incisor teeth. In the neighbourhood they make their "lodges," which are roomy chambers, with the entrance beneath the water. The mud is plastered down by the fore-feet, and not, as often supposed, by the tail, which is employed solely as a rudder. |
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They are mainly nocturnal, and subsist chiefly on bark and twigs or the roots of water plants. |
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[[image:Beaver_dam_in_Fossil_Butte_NM-750px.JPG|thumb|left|250px|[[Fossil Butte National Monument]].]] |
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The dam differs in shape according to the nature of particular localities. Where the water has little motion it is almost straight; where the current is considerable it is curved, with its convexity towards the stream. The materials made use of are [[driftwood]], [[willow|green willows]], [[birch]] and poplars; also mud and stones intermixed in such a manner as contributes to the strength of the dam; but there is no particular method observed, except that the work is carried on with a regular sweep, and that all the parts are made of equal strength. |
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"In places," writes Hearne, "which have been long frequented by beavers undisturbed, their dams, by frequent repairing, become a solid bank, capable of resisting a great force both of ice and water; and as the willow, poplar and birch generally take root and shoot up, they by degrees form a kind of regular planted hedge, which I have seen in some places so tall that birds have built their nests among the branches." |
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Their houses are formed of the same materials as the dams, with little order or regularity of structure, and seldom contain more than four old, and six or eight young beavers. It not unfrequently happens that some of the larger houses have one or more partitions, but these are only posts of the main building left by the builders to support the roof, for the apartments have usually no communication with each other except by water. |
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[[Image:BeaverDam 8409.jpg|thumb|right|300px|[[Lassen Volcanic National Park]].]] |
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The beavers carry the mud and stones with their fore-paws and the timber between their teeth. They always work in the night and with great expedition. They cover their houses late every autumn with fresh mud, which, freezing when the frost sets in, becomes almost as hard as stone, so that neither [[wolf|wolves]] nor [[wolverine]]s can disturb their repose. |
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The favourite food of the American beaver is the water-lily (''[[Nuphar luteum]]''), which bears a resemblance to a [[cabbage]]-stalk, and grows at the bottom of lakes and rivers. Beavers also gnaw the bark of [[birch]], [[poplar]] and [[willow]] trees; but during the summer a more varied herbage, with the addition of berries, is consumed. |
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When the ice breaks up in spring they always leave their embankments, and rove about until a little before the fall of the leaf, when they return to their old habitations, and lay in their winter stock of wood. They seldom begin to repair the houses till the frost sets in, and never finish the outer coating till the cold becomes severe. When they erect a new habitation they fell the wood early in summer, but seldom begin building till towards the end of August. |
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Castoreum is a substance contained in two pear-shaped pouches situated near the organs of reproduction, of a bitter taste and slightly foetid odour, at one time largely employed as a medicine, but now used only in [[perfume]]ry. |
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Fossil remains of beavers are found in the peat and other superficial deposits of England and the continent of Europe; while in the [[Pleistocene]] formations of England and Siberia occur remains of a giant extinct beaver, ''Trogontherium cuvieri'', representing a genus by itself. |
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{{Commons|Castor|Beaver}} |
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==Notes== |
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<references/> |
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==References== |
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*[http://www.itis.usda.gov/servlet/SingleRpt/SingleRpt?search_topic=TSN&search_value=180211 ITIS 180211] 2002-12-14 |
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==Further reading== |
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{{1911}} |
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* {{Cite book|last=Goldfarb|first=Ben|year=2018|title=Eager: The Surprising, Secret Life of Beavers and Why They Matter|publisher=[[Chelsea Green Publishing]]|isbn=978-1603589086}} |
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==External |
==External links== |
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{{Wikisource|Portal:Mammals#Beaver|Beaver}} |
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{{linkfarm}} |
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* [ |
* [https://www.beaverinstitute.org/ Beaver Institute] Charity that supports beavers |
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* [http:// |
* [http://northernbushcraft.com/animalTracks/beaver/notes.htm Beaver Tracks]: How to identify beaver tracks in the wild |
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* [http://www.ecology.info/beaver-ecology.htm Ecology of the Beaver] |
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* [http://purl.galileo.usg.edu/ugafax/QL737xR6xD84 The Romance of the Beaver;] being the history of the beaver in the western hemisphere, by A. Radclyffe Dugmore. Illustrated with photographs from life and drawings by the author. Publisher: Philadelphia, J.B. Lippincott company; London, W. Heinemann [[1914]] ''(a searchable facsimile at the University of Georgia Libraries - View DjVu with Plug in, open source viewer, or Sun Java - View Layered PDF with Adobe Reader 7)' |
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* [http://www.aigas.co.uk/2007-beaver-diary-g.asp Aigas Field Centre's beaver diary] |
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* [http://www.hww.ca/hww2.asp?id=82 Hinterland Who's Who - Beaver] |
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{{Castorimorpha|C.|state=collapsed}} |
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[[Category:Fauna of the United States]] |
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[[Category:Fauna of Norway]] |
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Latest revision as of 23:36, 27 December 2024
Beaver Temporal range: Late Miocene – Recent
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North American beaver (Castor canadensis) | |
Scientific classification | |
Domain: | Eukaryota |
Kingdom: | Animalia |
Phylum: | Chordata |
Class: | Mammalia |
Order: | Rodentia |
Family: | Castoridae |
Subfamily: | Castorinae |
Genus: | Castor Linnaeus, 1758 |
Type species | |
Castor fiber[1] Linnaeus, 1758
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Species | |
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Range of the living beavers as of 2016 (including introduced C. canadensis populations in Europe and Patagonia, but missing C. fiber populations in Mongolia and northwestern China, as well as reintroduced populations in the United Kingdom)[needs update?] |
Beavers (genus Castor) are large, semiaquatic rodents of the Northern Hemisphere. There are two existing species: the North American beaver (Castor canadensis) and the Eurasian beaver (C. fiber). Beavers are the second-largest living rodents, after capybaras, weighing up to 50 kg (110 lb). They have stout bodies with large heads, long chisel-like incisors, brown or gray fur, hand-like front feet, webbed back feet, and tails that are flat and scaly. The two species differ in skull and tail shape and fur color. Beavers can be found in a number of freshwater habitats, such as rivers, streams, lakes and ponds. They are herbivorous, consuming tree bark, aquatic plants, grasses and sedges.
Beavers build dams and lodges using tree branches, vegetation, rocks and mud; they chew down trees for building material. Dams restrict water flow, and lodges serve as shelters. Their infrastructure creates wetlands used by many other species, and because of their effect on other organisms in the ecosystem, beavers are considered a keystone species. Adult males and females live in monogamous pairs with their offspring. After their first year, the young help their parents repair dams and lodges; older siblings may also help raise newly born offspring. Beavers hold territories and mark them using scent mounds made of mud, debris, and castoreum—a liquid substance excreted through the beaver's urethra-based castor sacs. Beavers can also recognize their kin by their anal gland secretions and are more likely to tolerate them as neighbors.
Historically, beavers have been hunted for their fur, meat, and castoreum. Castoreum has been used in medicine, perfume, and food flavoring; beaver pelts have been a major driver of the fur trade. Before protections began in the 19th and early 20th centuries, overhunting had nearly exterminated both species. Their populations have since rebounded, and they are listed as species of least concern by the IUCN Red List of mammals. In human culture, the beaver symbolizes industriousness, especially in connection with construction; it is the national animal of Canada.
Etymology
The English word beaver comes from the Old English word beofor or befor and is connected to the German word biber and the Dutch word bever. The ultimate origin of the word is an Indo-European root for 'brown'.[2] Cognates of beaver is the source for several European placenames, including those of Beverley, Bièvres, Biberbach, Biebrich, Bibra, Bibern, Bibrka, Bobr, Bober, Bóbrka, Bjurholm, Bjurälven, and Bjurum.[3] The genus name Castor has its origin in the Greek word κάστωρ kastōr and translates as 'beaver'.[4]
Taxonomy
Carl Linnaeus coined the genus name Castor in 1758[5] as well as the specific (species) epithet fiber for the Eurasian species.[6] German zoologist Heinrich Kuhl coined C. canadensis in 1820,[7] many scientists considered both names synonymous for one same species[8][9] until the 1970s, when chromosomal evidence became available confirming both as separate where the Eurasian has 48 chromosomes, while the North American has 40.) The difference in chromosome numbers prevents them from interbreeding.[10] Twenty-five subspecies have been classified for C. canadensis, and nine have been classified for C. fiber.[6][7]
There are two extant species: the North American beaver (Castor canadensis) and the Eurasian beaver (C. fiber). The Eurasian beaver is slightly longer and has a more lengthened skull, triangular nasal cavities (as opposed to the square ones of the North American species), a lighter fur color, and a narrower tail.[11]
Evolution
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Phylogeny of extant and extinct relatives of modern beavers based on genetics and morphology.[12][13] |
Beavers belong to the rodent suborder Castorimorpha, along with Heteromyidae (kangaroo rats and kangaroo mice), and the gophers. Modern beavers are the only extant members of the family Castoridae. They originated in North America in the late Eocene and colonized Eurasia via the Bering Land Bridge in the early Oligocene, coinciding with the Grande Coupure, a time of significant changes in animal species around 33 million years ago (myr).[14][15]
The more basal castorids had several unique features: more complex occlusion between cheek teeth, parallel rows of upper teeth, premolars that were only slightly smaller than molars, the presence of a third set of premolars (P3), a hole in the stapes of the inner ear, a smooth palatine bone (with the palatine opening closer to the rear end of the bone), and a longer snout. More derived castorids have less complex occlusion, upper tooth rows that create a V-shape towards the back, larger second premolars compared to molars, absence of a third premolar set and stapes hole, a more grooved palatine (with the opening shifted towards the front), and reduced incisive foramen. Members of the subfamily Palaeocastorinae appeared in late-Oligocene North America. This group consisted primarily of smaller animals with relatively large front legs, a flattened skull, and a reduced tail—all features of a fossorial (burrowing) lifestyle.[15]
In the early Miocene (about 24 mya), castorids evolved a semiaquatic lifestyle. Members of the subfamily Castoroidinae are considered to be a sister group to modern beavers, and included giants like Castoroides of North America and Trogontherium of Eurasia.[13][15] Castoroides is estimated to have had a length of 1.9–2.2 m (6.2–7.2 ft) and a weight of 90–125 kg (198–276 lb).[16] Fossils of one genus in Castoroidinae, Dipoides, have been found near piles of chewed wood,[13] though Dipoides appears to have been an inferior woodcutter compared to Castor. Researchers suggest that modern beavers and Castoroidinae shared a bark-eating common ancestor. Dam and lodge-building likely developed from bark-eating, and allowed beavers to survive in the harsh winters of the subarctic. There is no conclusive evidence for this behavior occurring in non-Castor species.[17]
The genus Castor likely originated in Eurasia.[18] The earliest fossil remains appear to be C. neglectus, found in Germany and dated 12–10 mya.[19] Mitochondrial DNA studies place the common ancestor of the two living species at around 8 mya. The ancestors of the North American beaver would have crossed the Bering Land Bridge around 7.5 mya.[18] Castor may have competed with members of Castoroidinae, which led to niche differentiation.[20] The fossil species C. praefiber was likely an ancestor of the Eurasian beaver.[21] C. californicus from the Early Pleistocene of North America was similar to but larger than the extant North American beaver.[22]'
Characteristics
Beavers are the second-largest living rodents, after capybaras. They have a head–body length of 80–120 cm (31–47 in), with a 25–50 cm (9.8–19.7 in) tail, a shoulder height of 30–60 cm (12–24 in), and generally weigh 11–30 kg (24–66 lb),[9] but can be as heavy as 50 kg (110 lb). Males and females are almost identical externally.[23] Their bodies are streamlined like marine mammals and their robust build allows them to pull heavy loads.[24][25] A beaver coat has 12,000–23,000 hairs/cm2 (77,000–148,000 hairs/in2) and functions to keep the animal warm, to help it float in water, and to protect it against predators. Guard hairs are 5–6 cm (2.0–2.4 in) long and typically reddish brown, but can range from yellowish brown to nearly black. The underfur is 2–3 cm (0.79–1.18 in) long and dark gray. Beavers molt every summer.[9][26]
Beavers have large skulls with powerful chewing muscles. They have four chisel-shaped incisors that continue to grow throughout their lives. The incisors are covered in a thick enamel that is colored orange or reddish-brown by iron compounds.[27][28] The lower incisors have roots that are almost as long as the entire lower jaw. Beavers have one premolar and three molars on all four sides of the jaws, adding up to 20 teeth. The molars have meandering ridges for grinding woody material.[29] The eyes, ears and nostrils are arranged so that they can remain above water while the rest of the body is submerged. The nostrils and ears have valves that close underwater, while nictitating membranes cover the eyes. To protect the larynx and trachea from water flow, the epiglottis is contained within the nasal cavity instead of the throat. In addition, the back of the tongue can rise and create a waterproof seal. A beaver's lips can close behind the incisors, preventing water from entering their mouths as they cut and bite onto things while submerged.[30][31]
The beaver's front feet are dexterous, allowing them to grasp and manipulate objects and food, as well as dig. The hind feet are larger and have webbing between the toes, and the second innermost toe has a "double nail" used for grooming.[31][32] Beavers can swim at 8 km/h (5.0 mph);[25] only their webbed hind feet are used to swim, while the front feet fold under the chest.[31] On the surface, the hind limbs thrust one after the other; while underwater, they move at the same time.[33] Beavers are awkward on land but can move quickly when they feel threatened. They can carry objects while walking on their hind legs.[24][31]
The beaver's distinctive tail has a conical, muscular, hairy base; the remaining two-thirds of the appendage is flat and scaly. The tail has multiple functions: it provides support for the animal when it is upright (such as when chewing down a tree), acts as a rudder when it is swimming, and stores fat for winter. It also has a countercurrent blood vessel system which allows the animal to lose heat in warm temperatures and retain heat in cold temperatures.[34]
The beaver's sex organs are inside the body, and the male's penis has a cartilaginous baculum. They have only one opening, a cloaca, which is used for reproduction, scent-marking, defecation, and urination.[35] The cloaca evolved secondarily, as most mammals have lost this feature, and may reduce the area vulnerable to infection in dirty water. The beaver's intestine is six times longer than its body, and the caecum is double the volume of its stomach.[36] Microorganisms in the caecum allow them to process around 30 percent of the cellulose they eat.[24] A beaver defecates in the water, leaving behind balls of sawdust. Female beavers have four mammary glands; these produce milk with 19 percent fat, a higher fat content than other rodents. Beavers have two pairs of glands: castor sacs, which are part of the urethra, and anal glands. The castor sacs secrete castoreum, a liquid substance used mainly for marking territory. Anal glands produce an oily substance which the beaver uses as a waterproof ointment for its coat. The substance plays a role in individual and family recognition. Anal secretions are darker in females than males among Eurasian beavers, while the reverse is true for the North American species.[37]
Compared to many other rodents, a beaver's brain has a hypothalamus that is much smaller than the cerebrum; this indicates a relatively advanced brain with higher intelligence. The cerebellum is large, allowing the animal to move within a three-dimensional space (such as underwater) similar to tree-climbing squirrels. The neocortex is devoted mainly to touch and hearing. Touch is more advanced in the lips and hands than the whiskers and tail. Vision in the beaver is relatively poor; the beaver eye cannot see as well underwater as an otter. Beavers have a good sense of smell, which they use for detecting land predators and for inspecting scent marks, food, and other individuals.[38]
Beavers can hold their breath for as long as 15 minutes but typically remain underwater for no more than five or six minutes.[39] Dives typically last less than 30 seconds and are usually no more than 1 m (3 ft 3 in) deep.[40] When diving, their heart rate decreases to 60 beats per minute, half its normal pace, and blood flow is directed more towards the brain. A beaver's body also has a high tolerance for carbon dioxide. When surfacing, the animal can replace 75 percent of the air in its lungs in one breath, compared to 15 percent for a human.[31][39]
Distribution and status
The IUCN Red List of mammals lists both beaver species as least concern.[41][42] The North American beaver is widespread throughout most of the United States and Canada and can be found in northern Mexico. The species was introduced to Finland in 1937 (and then spread to northwestern Russia) and to Tierra del Fuego, Patagonia, in 1946.[41] As of 2019[update], the introduced population of North American beavers in Finland has been moving closer to the habitat of the Eurasian beaver.[43] Historically, the North American beaver was trapped and nearly extirpated because its fur was highly sought after. Protections have allowed the beaver population on the continent to rebound to an estimated 6–12 million by the late 20th century; still far lower than the originally estimated 60–400 million North American beavers before the fur trade.[44] The introduced population in Tierra del Fuego is estimated at 35,000–50,000 individuals as of 2016[update].[41]
The Eurasian beaver's range historically included much of Eurasia, but was decimated by hunting by the early 20th century. In Europe, beavers were reduced to fragmented populations, with combined population numbers being estimated at 1,200 individuals for the Rhône of France, the Elbe in Germany, southern Norway, the Neman river and Dnieper Basin in Belarus, and the Voronezh river in Russia. The beaver has since recolonized parts of its former range, aided by conservation policies and reintroductions. Beaver populations now range across western, central, and eastern Europe, and western Russia and the Scandinavian Peninsula.[42] Beginning in 2009, beavers have been successfully reintroduced to parts of Great Britain.[45] In 2020[update], the total Eurasian beaver population in Europe was estimated at over one million.[46] Small native populations are also present in Mongolia and northwestern China; their numbers were estimated at 150 and 700, respectively, as of 2016[update].[42] Under New Zealand's Hazardous Substances and New Organisms Act 1996, beavers are classed as a "prohibited new organism" preventing them from being introduced into the country.[47]
Ecology
Beavers live in freshwater ecosystems such as rivers, streams, lakes and ponds. Water is the most important component of beaver habitat; they swim and dive in it, and it provides them refuge from land predators. It also restricts access to their homes and allows them to move building objects more easily. Beavers prefer slower moving streams, typically with a gradient (steepness) of one percent, though they have been recorded using streams with gradients as high as 15 percent. Beavers are found in wider streams more often than in narrower ones. They also prefer areas with no regular flooding and may abandon a location for years after a significant flood.[48]
Beavers typically select flat landscapes with diverse vegetation close to the water. North American beavers prefer trees being 60 m (200 ft) or less from the water, but will roam several hundred meters to find more. Beavers have also been recorded in mountainous areas. Dispersing beavers will use certain habitats temporarily before finding their ideal home. These include small streams, temporary swamps, ditches, and backyards. These sites lack important resources, so the animals do not stay there permanently. Beavers have increasingly settled at or near human-made environments, including agricultural areas, suburbs, golf courses, and shopping malls.[49]
Beavers have an herbivorous and a generalist diet. During the spring and summer, they mainly feed on herbaceous plant material such as leaves, roots, herbs, ferns, grasses, sedges, water lilies, water shields, rushes, and cattails. During the fall and winter, they eat more bark and cambium of woody plants; tree and shrub species consumed include aspen, birch, oak, dogwood, willow and alder.[9][50][51][24] There is some disagreement about why beavers select specific woody plants; some research has shown that beavers more frequently select species which are more easily digested,[52] while others suggest beavers principally forage based on stem size.[53] Beavers may cache their food for the winter, piling wood in the deepest part of their pond where it cannot be reached by other browsers. This cache is known as a "raft"; when the top becomes frozen, it creates a "cap".[24][9] The beaver accesses the raft by swimming under the ice. Many populations of Eurasian beaver do not make rafts, but forage on land during winter.[9]
Beavers usually live up to 10 years. Felids, canids, and bears may prey upon them. Beavers are protected from predators when in their lodges, and prefer to stay near water. Parasites of the beaver include the bacteria Francisella tularensis, which causes tularemia; the protozoan Giardia duodenalis, which causes giardiasis (beaver fever); and the beaver beetle and mites of the genus Schizocarpus.[54][55] They have also been recorded to be infected with the rabies virus.[56]
Infrastructure
Beavers need trees and shrubs to use as building material for dams, which restrict flowing water to create a pond for them to live in, and for lodges, which act as shelters and refuges from predators and the elements. Without such material, beavers dig burrows into a bank to live. Dam construction begins in late summer or early fall, and they repair them whenever needed. Beavers can cut down trees up to 15 cm (5.9 in) wide in less than 50 minutes. Thicker trees, at 25 cm (9.8 in) wide or more, may not fall for hours.[57] When chewing down a tree, beavers switch between biting with the left and right side of the mouth. Tree branches are then cut and carried to their destination with the powerful jaw and neck muscles. Other building materials, like mud and rocks, are held by the forelimbs and tucked between the chin and chest.[58]
Beavers start building dams when they hear running water, and the sound of a leak in a dam triggers them to repair it.[59] To build a dam, beavers stack up relatively long and thick logs between banks and in opposite directions. Heavy rocks keep them stable, and grass is packed between them. Beavers continue to pile on more material until the dam slopes in a direction facing upstream. Dams can range in height from 20 cm (7.9 in) to 3 m (9.8 ft) and can stretch from 0.3 m (1 ft 0 in) to several hundred meters long. Beaver dams are more effective in trapping and slowly leaking water than man-made concrete dams. Lake-dwelling beavers do not need to build dams.[60]
Beavers make two types of lodges: bank lodges and open-water lodges. Bank lodges are burrows dug along the shore and covered in sticks. The more complex freestanding, open-water lodges are built over a platform of piled-up sticks. The lodge is mostly sealed with mud, except for a hole at the top which acts as an air vent. Both types are accessed by underwater entrances.[24][61] The above-water space inside the lodge is known as the "living chamber", and a "dining area" may exist close to the water entrance.[9] Families routinely clean out old plant material and bring in new material.[62]
North American beavers build more open-water lodges than Eurasian beavers. Beaver lodges built by new settlers are typically small and sloppy. More experienced families can build structures with a height of 2 m (6 ft 7 in) and an above-water diameter of 6 m (20 ft). A lodge sturdy enough to withstand the coming winter can be finished in just two nights. Both lodge types can be present at a beaver site. During the summer, beavers tend to use bank lodges to keep cool. They use open-water lodges during the winter. The air vent provides ventilation, and newly added carbon dioxide can be cleared in an hour. The lodge remains consistent in oxygen and carbon dioxide levels from season to season.[63]
Beavers in some areas will dig canals connected to their ponds. The canals fill with groundwater and give beavers access and easier transport of resources, as well as allow them to escape predators. These canals can stretch up to 1 m (3 ft 3 in) wide, 0.5 m (1 ft 8 in) deep, and over 0.5 km (0.31 mi) long. It has been hypothesized that beavers' canals are not only transportation routes but an extension of their "central place" around the lodge and/or food cache.[51][64] As they drag wood across the land, beavers leave behind trails or "slides", which they reuse when moving new material.[24]
Environmental effects
The beaver works as an ecosystem engineer and keystone species, as its activities can have a great impact on the landscape and biodiversity of an area. Aside from humans, few other extant animals appear to do more to shape their environment.[65] When building dams, beavers alter the paths of streams and rivers, allowing for the creation of extensive wetland habitats.[66] In one study, beavers were associated with large increases in open-water areas. When beavers returned to an area, 160% more open water was available during droughts than in previous years, when they were absent.[67] Beaver dams also lead to higher water tables in mineral soil environments and in wetlands such as peatlands. In peatlands particularly, their dams stabilize the constantly changing water levels, leading to greater carbon storage.[68]
Beaver ponds, and the wetlands that succeed them, remove sediments and pollutants from waterways, and can stop the loss of important soils.[69][70] These ponds can increase the productivity of freshwater ecosystems by accumulating nitrogen in sediments.[65] Beaver activity can affect the temperature of the water; in northern latitudes, ice thaws earlier in the warmer beaver-dammed waters.[71] Beavers may contribute to climate change. In Arctic areas, the floods they create can cause permafrost to thaw, releasing methane into the atmosphere.[72][73]
As wetlands are formed and riparian habitats are enlarged, aquatic plants colonize the newly available watery habitat.[65] One study in the Adirondacks found that beaver engineering lead to an increase of more than 33 percent in herbaceous plant diversity along the water's edge.[74] Another study in semiarid eastern Oregon found that the width of riparian vegetation on stream banks increased several-fold as beaver dams watered previously dry terraces adjacent to the stream.[75] Riparian ecosystems in arid areas appear to sustain more plant life when beaver dams are present.[76] Beaver ponds act as a refuge for riverbank plants during wildfires, and provide them with enough moisture to resist such fires.[77] Introduced beavers at Tierra del Fuego have been responsible for destroying the indigenous forest. Unlike trees in North America, many trees in South America cannot grow back after being cut down.[78][79]
Beaver activity impacts communities of aquatic invertebrates. Damming typically leads to an increase of slow or motionless water species, like dragonflies, oligochaetes, snails, and mussels. This is to the detriment of rapid water species like black flies, stoneflies, and net-spinning caddisflies.[65][80][81] Beaver floodings create more dead trees, providing more habitat for terrestrial invertebrates like Drosophila flies and bark beetles, which live and breed in dead wood.[65][82][83] The presence of beavers can increase wild salmon and trout populations, and the average size of these fishes. These species use beaver habitats for spawning, overwintering, feeding, and as havens from changes in water flow. The positive effects of beaver dams on fish appear to outweigh the negative effects, such as blocking of migration.[84] Beaver ponds have been shown to be beneficial to frog populations by protecting areas for larvae to mature in warm water.[85] The stable waters of beaver ponds also provide ideal habitat for freshwater turtles.[86]
Beavers help waterfowl by creating increased areas of water. The widening of the riparian zone associated with beaver dams has been shown to increase the abundance and diversity of birds favoring the water's edge, an impact that may be especially important in semi-arid climates.[87] Fish-eating birds use beaver ponds for foraging, and in some areas, certain species appear more frequently at sites where beavers were active than at sites with no beaver activity.[65][88][89] In a study of Wyoming streams and rivers, watercourses with beavers had 75 times as many ducks as those without.[90] As trees are drowned by rising beaver impoundments, they become an ideal habitat for woodpeckers, which carve cavities that may be later used by other bird species.[65][88] Beaver-caused ice thawing in northern latitudes allows Canada geese to nest earlier.[71]
Other semi-aquatic mammals, such as water voles, muskrats, minks, and otters, will shelter in beaver lodges.[65] Beaver modifications to streams in Poland create habitats favorable to bat species that forage at the water surface and "prefer moderate vegetation clutter".[91] Large herbivores, such as some deer species, benefit from beaver activity as they can access vegetation from fallen trees and ponds.[65]
Behavior
Beavers are mainly nocturnal and crepuscular, and spend the daytime in their shelters. In northern latitudes, beaver activity is decoupled from the 24-hour cycle during the winter, and may last as long as 29 hours. They do not hibernate during winter, and spend much of their time in their lodges.[9][24][92]
Family life
The core of beaver social organization is the family, which is composed of an adult male and an adult female in a monogamous pair and their offspring.[9][31] Beaver families can have as many as ten members; groups about this size require multiple lodges.[93] Mutual grooming and play fighting maintain bonds between family members, and aggression between them is uncommon.[31]
Adult beavers mate with their partners, though partner replacement appears to be common. A beaver that loses its partner will wait for another one to come by. Estrus cycles begin in late December and peak in mid-January. Females may have two to four estrus cycles per season, each lasting 12–24 hours. The pair typically mate in the water and to a lesser extent in the lodge, for half a minute to three minutes.[94]
Up to four young, or kits, are born in spring and summer, after a three or four-month gestation.[31][95] Newborn beavers are precocial with a full fur coat, and can open their eyes within days of birth.[24][31] Their mother is the primary caretaker, while their father maintains the territory.[9] Older siblings from a previous litter also play a role.[96]
After they are born, the kits spend their first one to two months in the lodge. Kits suckle for as long as three months, but can eat solid food within their second week and rely on their parents and older siblings to bring it to them. Eventually, beaver kits explore outside the lodge and forage on their own, but may follow an older relative and hold onto their backs.[31] After their first year, young beavers help their families with construction.[9] Beavers sexually mature around 1.5–3 years.[24] They become independent at two years old, but remain with their parents for an extra year or more during times of food shortage, high population density, or drought.[97][98]
Territories and spacing
Beavers typically disperse from their parental colonies during the spring or when the winter snow melts. They often travel less than 5 km (3.1 mi), but long-distance dispersals are not uncommon when previous colonizers have already exploited local resources. Beavers are able to travel greater distances when free-flowing water is available. Individuals may meet their mates during the dispersal stage, and the pair travel together. It may take them weeks or months to reach their final destination; longer distances may require several years.[99][100] Beavers establish and defend territories along the banks of their ponds, which may be 1–7 km (0.62–4.35 mi) in length.[101]
Beavers mark their territories by constructing scent mounds made of mud and vegetation, scented with castoreum.[102] Those with many territorial neighbors create more scent mounds. Scent marking increases in spring, during the dispersal of yearlings, to deter interlopers.[103] Beavers are generally intolerant of intruders and fights may result in deep bites to the sides, rump, and tail.[31] They exhibit a behavior known as the "dear enemy effect"; a territory-holder will investigate and become familiar with the scents of its neighbors and react more aggressively to the scents of strangers passing by.[104] Beavers are also more tolerant of individuals that are their kin. They recognize them by using their keen sense of smell to detect differences in the composition of anal gland secretions. Anal gland secretion profiles are more similar among relatives than unrelated individuals.[105][106]
Communication
Beavers within a family greet each other with whines. Kits will attract the attention of adults with mews, squeaks, and cries. Defensive beavers produce a hissing growl and gnash their teeth.[31] Tail slaps, which involve an animal hitting the water surface with its tail, serve as alarm signals warning other beavers of a potential threat. An adult's tail slap is more successful in alerting others, who will escape into the lodge or deeper water. Juveniles have not yet learned the proper use of a tail slap, and hence are normally ignored.[107][108] Eurasian beavers have been recorded using a territorial "stick display", which involves individuals holding up a stick and bouncing in shallow water.[109]
Interactions with humans
Beavers sometimes come into conflict with humans over land use; individual beavers may be labeled as "nuisance beavers". Beavers can damage crops, timber stocks, roads, ditches, gardens, and pastures via gnawing, eating, digging, and flooding.[24] They occasionally attack humans and domestic pets, particularly when infected with rabies, in defense of their territory, or when they feel threatened.[110] Some of these attacks have been fatal, including at least one human death.[111][112][113] Beavers can spread giardiasis ('beaver fever') by infecting surface waters,[55] though outbreaks are more commonly caused by human activity.[114]
Flow devices, like beaver pipes, are used to manage beaver flooding, while fencing and hardware cloth protect trees and shrubs from beaver damage. If necessary, hand tools, heavy equipment, or explosives are used to remove dams.[115][116] Hunting, trapping, and relocation may be permitted as forms of population control and for removal of individuals.[24] The governments of Argentina and Chile have authorized the trapping of invasive beavers in hopes of eliminating them.[78] The ecological importance of beavers has led to cities like Seattle designing their parks and green spaces to accommodate the animals.[117] The Martinez beavers became famous in the mid-2000s for their role in improving the ecosystem of Alhambra Creek in Martinez, California.[118]
Zoos have displayed beavers since at least the 19th century, though not commonly. In captivity, beavers have been used for entertainment, fur harvesting, and for reintroduction into the wild. Captive beavers require access to water, substrate for digging, and artificial shelters.[119] Archibald Stansfeld "Grey Owl" Belaney pioneered beaver conservation in the early 20th century. Belaney wrote several books, and was first to professionally film beavers in their environment. In 1931, he moved to a log cabin in Prince Albert National Park, where he was the "caretaker of park animals" and raised a beaver pair and their four offspring.[120]
Commercial use
Beavers have been hunted, trapped, and exploited for their fur, meat, and castoreum. Since the animals typically stayed in one place, trappers could easily find them and could kill entire families in a lodge.[121] Many pre-modern people mistakenly thought that castoreum was produced by the testicles or that the castor sacs of the beaver were its testicles, and females were hermaphrodites. Aesop's Fables describes beavers chewing off their testicles to preserve themselves from hunters, which is impossible because a beaver's testicles are internal. This myth persisted for centuries, and was corrected by French physician Guillaume Rondelet in the 1500s.[122][123] Beavers have historically been hunted and captured using deadfalls, snares, nets, bows and arrows, spears, clubs, firearms, and leg-hold traps. Castoreum was used to lure the animals.[124][125]
Castoreum was used for a variety of medical purposes; Pliny the Elder promoted it as a treatment for stomach problems, flatulence, seizures, sciatica, vertigo, and epilepsy. He stated it could stop hiccups when mixed with vinegar, toothaches if mixed with oil (by administering into the ear opening on the same side as the tooth), and could be used as an antivenom. The substance has traditionally been prescribed to treat hysteria in women, which was believed to have been caused by a "toxic" womb.[126] Castoreum's properties have been credited to the accumulation of salicylic acid from willow and aspen trees in the beaver's diet, and has a physiological effect comparable to aspirin.[9][127] Today, the medical use of castoreum has declined and is limited mainly to homeopathy.[9] The substance is also used as an ingredient in perfumes and tinctures, and as a flavouring in food and drinks.[9][128]
Various Native American groups have historically hunted beavers for food,[124] they preferred its meat more than other red meats because of its higher calorie and fat content, and the animals remained plump in winter when they were most hunted. The bones were used to make tools.[129][124] In medieval Europe, the Catholic Church considered the beaver to be part mammal and part fish, and allowed followers to eat the scaly, fishlike tail on meatless Fridays during Lent. Beaver tails were thus highly prized in Europe; they were described by French naturalist Pierre Belon as tasting like a "nicely dressed eel".[130]
Beaver pelts were used to make hats; felters would remove the guard hairs. The number of pelts needed depended on the type of hat, with Cavalier and Puritan hats requiring more fur than top hats.[131] In the late 16th century, Europeans began to deal in North American furs due to the lack of taxes or tariffs on the continent and the decline of fur-bearers at home. Beaver pelts caused or contributed to the Beaver Wars, King William's War, and the French and Indian War; the trade made John Jacob Astor and the owners of the North West Company very wealthy. For Europeans in North America, the fur trade was a driver of the exploration and westward exploration on the continent and contact with native peoples, who traded with them.[132][133][134] The fur trade peaked between 1860 and 1870, when over 150,000 beaver pelts were purchased annually by the Hudson's Bay Company and fur companies in the United States.[135] The contemporary global fur trade is not as profitable due to conservation, anti-fur and animal rights campaigns.[9][125]
In culture
The beaver has been used to represent productivity, trade, tradition, masculinity, and respectability. References to the beaver's skills are reflected in everyday language. The English verb "to beaver" means working with great effort and being "as busy as a beaver"; a "beaver intellect" refers to a way of thinking that is slow and honest. Though it typically has a wholesome image, the beaver's name has been used as a sexual term for the human vulva.[136][137]
Native American myths emphasize the beaver's skill and industriousness. In the mythology of the Haida, beavers are descended from the Beaver-Woman, who built a dam on a stream next to their cabin while her husband was out hunting and gave birth to the first beavers. In a Cree story, the Great Beaver and its dam caused a world flood. Other tales involve beavers using their tree chewing skills against an enemy.[138] Beavers have been featured as companions in some stories, including a Lakota tale where a young woman flees from her evil husband with the aid of her pet beaver.[139]
Europeans have traditionally thought of beavers as fantastical animals due to their amphibious nature. They depicted them with exaggerated tusk-like teeth, dog- or pig-like bodies, fish tails, and visible testicles. French cartographer Nicolas de Fer illustrated beavers building a dam at Niagara Falls, fantastically depicting them like human builders. Beavers have also appeared in literature such as Dante Alighieri's Divine Comedy and the writings of Athanasius Kircher, who wrote that on Noah's Ark the beavers were housed near a water-filled tub that was also used by mermaids and otters.[140]
The beaver has long been associated with Canada, appearing on the first pictorial postage stamp issued in the Canadian colonies in 1851 as the so-called "Three-Penny Beaver". It was declared the national animal in 1975. The five-cent coin, the coat of arms of the Hudson's Bay Company, and the logos for Parks Canada and Roots Canada use its image. Frank and Gordon are two fictional beavers that appeared in Bell Canada's advertisements between 2005 and 2008. However, the beaver's status as a rodent has made it controversial, and it was not chosen to be on the Arms of Canada in 1921.[141][142] The beaver has commonly been used to represent Canada in political cartoons, typically to signify it as a friendly but relatively weak nation.[137] In the United States, the beaver is the state animal of New York and Oregon.[143] It is also featured on the coat of arms of the London School of Economics.[144]
See also
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Sources
- Backhouse, Frances (2015). Once They Were Hats: In Search of the Mighty Beaver. ECW Press. ISBN 978-1770907553. Archived from the original on April 6, 2023. Retrieved March 18, 2023.
- Müller-Schwarze, Dietland; Sun, Lixing (2003). The Beaver: Natural History of a Wetlands Engineer. Cornell University Press. ISBN 978-0801440984. Archived from the original on July 11, 2024. Retrieved October 15, 2020.
- Poliquin, Rachel (2015). Beaver. Reaktion Books. ISBN 978-1780234564. Archived from the original on July 11, 2024. Retrieved March 18, 2023.
- Runtz, Michael (2015). Dam Builders: The Natural History of Beavers and their Ponds. Fitzhenry & Whiteside. ISBN 978-1554553242.
Further reading
- Goldfarb, Ben (2018). Eager: The Surprising, Secret Life of Beavers and Why They Matter. Chelsea Green Publishing. ISBN 978-1603589086.
External links
- Beaver Institute Charity that supports beavers
- Beaver Tracks: How to identify beaver tracks in the wild