Recently released Scottish beaver dies - 2 more released28/06/2010 17:27:43Two more beavers have been released as part of the five-year Scottish Beaver Trial. June 2010. Two more beavers have been released in Knapdale Forest in Mid-Argyll, as part of the five-year Scottish Beaver Trial (SBT). The male and female, which were captured in Norway, bring the number of resident wild beavers in Scotland to nine. The Trial, which is a partnership project between the Royal Zoological Society of Scotland (RZSS) and the Scottish Wildlife Trust aims to determine how beavers will prosper in Scottish habitats and to assess their effect on the current Scottish environment by monitoring them over the five-year trial period. Boost for the trial
"We've done our best to minimize any stress to these animals during their release and we now hope that they will settle into their new home very quickly." Beaver released in May found dead Beaver dies in captivity
Dam has doubled pool size Prior to release, the beavers underwent an in-depth health assessment to ensure they were free of disease. They have complied with all the necessary importation checks and a Government veterinary risk-assessed period of quarantine. After additional vet examinations on the morning of the release, the beavers were declared fit and were transported from Edinburgh and released into the wild. Third release Jones explained: "To allow our Trial to provide results to inform decisions about the impact a wider beaver reintroduction might have on Scotland's environment, it is essential that we create the most natural conditions possible for our wild beavers. This includes developing a viable breeding population which we feel can be done by establishing four breeding pairs in Knapdale. The beaver story so farIn 2009 the Scottish Beaver Trial released 3 families into the Knapdale area. Not long afterwards, shots were heard and 1 adult female beaver went missing from the Creag Mor family. Subsequent to this, the juvenile female from this family went missing, and more recently the male has been taken back into captivity as he was evidently deteriorating. He has since died in captivity. The Loch Linne family also suffered, as the juvenile male died shortly after release and the juvenile female has now also disappeared. This pair have show signs of breeding this spring. A fourth pair of beavers were released in May. One of these beavers has died. Artificial lodges Prior to the release, two artificial lodges were created by the project team to provide temporary shelter until the pair can build a lodge of their own. Food and used bedding will be placed in these lodges to encourage them to settle in this new loch and make it their home. Over the course of the Trial, all beavers will be tracked closely by the project team. The Scottish Beaver Trial could determine whether or not beavers are reintroduced into the wild across Scotland. Hunted to extinction in the UK
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I note your subscriber's comment that they appreciated no reference to cost in the article on beaver re-introduction in Scotland. Conservation is the real world, not that of hairy-fairy do-gooders. Surely with any project of re-introduction of species to an area, the effect on man has to be evaluated and sadly though it may seem to others, this includes cost. I, for one, would like to know the cost of the beaver project because after all, some-one has to pay for it especially if the project is both to continue and suceed. Conservation cost money!
Posted by: | 21 Aug 2010 10:01:13
And thankfully not even a mention of the cost of the project from the editor! Lets hope they can be left in peace to help restore a habitat long missing from the British landscape.
Posted by: Phil | 29 Jun 2010 07:19:16