Trentham welcomes British beavers to boost biodiversity

The family of beavers have moved into their new home in the gardens

Beaver taking its first glimpse at Trentham Gardens
Author: Adam SmithPublished 27th Mar 2023
Last updated 27th Mar 2023

A family of very special native British beavers have been reintroduced to the historic landscape at Trentham Gardens and made the site their new permanent home.

The Eurasian beavers are known for their keystone effect and benefits they bring to ecosystem and having moved into the Grade II* listed gardens, they are expected to help improve the biodiversity of the area.

The beavers will largely be left alone to engineer their habitat, although certain trees, such as those recently planted, ornamentally valuable or used by birds for nesting and perching, will be protected with wire wrapping.

Visitors to the gardens which were designed in 1759 by Capability Brown, will be able to see the beavers at work from footpaths that run through the enclosure.

Carol Adams, Trentham's head of horticulture and biodiversity, said: "This is such an amazing opportunity to establish a keystone species back into a historic landscape.

"Our team have been preparing for this new collaborative approach to estate management, from carrying out natural coppicing of lakeside trees and shrubs to cultivating and grazing of the lake plantings and adjacent meadows."

Eurasian beavers fell and coppice trees, channel, burrow and build dams to create areas of greater water depth and are known as a keystone species because their work allows other wetland species to thrive, while their dams help to reduce flooding and keep more water present in times of drought.

They were hunted to extinction around 400 years ago for their fur, meat and a secretion used in perfumes but are now classed as a European protected species and recognised as native.

Scientists see healthy wetlands as being crucial to both the climate and biodiversity crises because of their ability to store carbon through plant growth while, as an ecosystem, they contain 40% of the world's biodiversity, the UN has said.

Dr Roisin Campbell-Palmer, head of restoration at the Beaver Trust, said: "There is no doubt historically beavers existed throughout British freshwater landscapes until their extinction by humans.

"Beavers may not have known Capability Brown but will certainly benefit from his efforts. Humans have undoubtedly drastically modified these landscapes since the beavers' last presence but what we see time and time again is the remarkable ability of this animal to return and fit back in."

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