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Beavers pave way for return of endangered water voles to Scottish rainforest

Beavers were reintroduced to Knapdale in Argyll and Bute in 2009 during the Scottish Beaver Trial.

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Water vole

Beavers reintroduced to a Scottish rainforest in 2009 may have created the “right conditions” for another native species to flourish, according to conservationists.

Water voles, once abundant in Scotland but now one of the country’s most threatened native animals, could thrive in the “complex boundary between water and land” that beavers have created in Knapdale in Argyll and Bute, since their reintroduction there 15 years ago.

The beavers’ dam-building in the forest has led to the creation of a new “edge habitat” along watercourses, where water voles can dig burrows hidden from predatory mink.

John Taylor, west region area wildlife manager for Forestry and Land Scotland (FLS), which manages the Knapdale forests, said: “Aside from flooding a few places, the biggest impact we’ve seen from the beavers is creating a new habitat along watercourses.

“They’ve increased what we call edge habitat: instead of a harsh change from water to land, the edges along the burns and lochs are softened and seasonally flooded.

“This more complex boundary between water and land could be excellent for water voles.”

He added: “One of water voles’ main predators is mink. If you have a very simple burn or loch, it’s easy for mink to find the water voles’ burrows – and the female mink is small enough to get right inside.

“The Knapdale beavers have blurred the boundaries between water and land, which means more places for water voles to hide and hopefully flourish.”

Beavers were reintroduced in Knapdale in 2009 (Heart of Argyll Wildlife Organisation/PA)

Pete Creech, wildlife ranger at the Heart of Argyll Wildlife Organisation, which is working with the FLS in the initial stage of the reintroduction of water voles, said beavers were better engineers than humans when it came to creating wetlands.

“We have a huge advantage in Knapdale that will assist the return of water voles; the engineers of their habitat have been busily creating the right conditions for the past 15 years,” he said.

“The human creation of wetlands is an extremely costly undertaking and, frankly, we’re not as good at it as beavers!”

He added that water voles were themselves “eco-engineers” that could in turn create conditions for wildflowers to flourish.

“Water voles and beavers are complementary species and, in their own way, the voles are as busy eco-engineers as their bigger cousins.

“Their nibbling of sedges and grasses provides space for a greater diversity of wildflowers, while their burrowing shifts soil nutrients to the surface, increasing their accessibility for plant growth.”

John Taylor explained that “Knapdale is truly special. We aim to balance productivity with its natural heritage while taking into account resilience to threats like climate change and disease.

“Our restoration of the rainforest since the mid-1990s created some of the best beaver habitats in the UK.

“It’s apt that the beavers themselves have carried on the work to pave the way for the reintroduction of another species like the water vole.”

Beavers, which were hunted to extinction in the 16th century, were reintroduced to Knapdale in 2009 during the Scottish Beaver Trial.

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