Historic day for beavers in England

Historic day for beavers in England

David Parkyn - David Parkyn/ Cornwall Wildlife Trust

More support needed for landowners to enable beavers’ return, say The Wildlife Trusts and Beaver Trust.

Today, The Wildlife Trusts and Beaver Trust are celebrating as beavers are now officially recognised as a native species in England and a European protected species. The new law, which came into force at midnight last night, is good news for this extraordinary mammal which can do so much to restore wetlands across Britain.

The Wildlife Trusts pioneered the reintroduction of beavers and are now calling for greater clarity and urgency from the Government in relation to the plans for the widespread return of the animals.

The Government published guidance in early September which outlines how beavers might be managed in the future. But both Beaver Trust and The Wildlife Trusts are concerned that it does not give sufficient support to landowners – and that the proposals lack ambition and detail. The charities warn that, in their current form, the plans will not deliver the widespread reintroduction of a species which scientific studies have shown can improve water quality in rivers, stabilise water flows during times of drought and flood, store carbon and boost other wildlife.

For the past three years, Essex Wildlife Trust have been supporting Spains Hall Estate with their introduction of beavers. To date, the improvement to biodiversity and positive reduction of floods has proved the usefulness of beavers in a habitat. Find out more about this project here. 

Beaver swimming with its head just above the water

Beaver swimming with its head just above the water © Russell Savory

Sandra King, Chief Executive of Beaver Trust, commented:

“Beavers bring such an astonishing array of ecosystem services to our landscape, this truly is an historic day for the species in England. It is thanks to the hard work and determination of pioneering individuals and wildlife organisations that the recovery of this once-native animal is able to celebrate this milestone.

“It remains urgent and vital that the Government delivers a clear, ambitious policy and licensing guidance to support beaver restoration in the wild. At the end of the day, if we are to welcome beavers back as a native animal our primary objective must be to target positive coexistence with beavers. A properly resourced, forward looking strategy will enable land managers and communities to do this.”

The Wildlife Trusts and Beaver Trust backed this call in a letter to Ranil Jayawardena, Secretary of State for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs. This asked Government to take five key actions to ensure beaver reintroductions can take place on a scale and at a pace which will bring maximum advantage to wider society.

These actions include:

1. Publishing an ambitious strategy and timeline for beaver reintroduction in English river catchments.

2. Reconsidering the proposals for funding beaver releases into the wild. At present these impose prohibitive levels of upfront costs on groups wanting to reintroduce beaver populations.

3. Establishing a system of financial support which will reward the farmers and landowners who provide space for beavers and their wetlands.

4. Putting in place and then resourcing a network of Beaver Management Groups across England to support farmers, landowners and local communities as new beaver populations become established.

5. Confirming the futures of existing wild living beaver populations (including the Tamar in Devon and the Stour in Kent) to add to those in the River Otter, Devon.

Ali Morse, water policy manager of The Wildlife Trusts, says:

“The Government’s recent consultation on the future of beavers in England showed significant support for their widespread reintroduction. Of more than 3,000 responses nearly 70% were positive about Defra’s plans for the return of beavers. Even among the minority who objected the most common reason given was that the pace of Government plans for their return was too slow.

“The return of beavers to rivers across England has public support and is in line with the Government's own commitments enshrined in its 25-year Environment Plan and the legally binding target of its Environment Act 2021 to halt nature’s decline. What we need now is action.”

Notes to editors

Footnotes: River Otter Beaver Trial: Science and Evidence Report here.

Consultation Outcome: summary of responses and next steps regarding the Government’s public consultation on the approach to the reintroduction of beavers in England here.

Changes affecting beavers from Oct 1st

Summary: Today (1st October) legislation comes into force across England which makes beavers a ‘European Protected Species’, and classes them as a native animal. Protected status will make it an offence to harm beavers or their habitat without a license, and classification as a native species means that measures previously available to ‘control’ beavers as a non-native species will no longer apply. (A license will still be required for beaver reintroductions.)

In detail: In July this year, Government introduced legislation to protect beavers which comes into force across England today (October 1st). The legislation does 2 things.

● It adds beavers to Schedule 2 of the Conservation of Habitats and Species Regulations 2017, meaning that beaver becomes a ‘European Protected Species’. These protections apply to species which are endangered, vulnerable, rare or otherwise at risk across Europe. Other European Protected Species present in the UK include bats, the Large Blue Butterfly, the Sand Lizard and the Natterjack Toad.

It is an offence to intentionally disturb, capture, injure, or kill a European Protected Species, or damage or destroy the species’ resting place or breeding site, without a licence.

● It also reclassifies beavers as a native species, changing how they are dealt with under section 14 of the Wildlife and Countryside Act 1981, which concerns the introduction of species to the countryside.

Schedule 9 to the Act lists species of animals and plants to which section 14 of the Act applies. It is an offense to release any of these species into the wild, but different provisions apply depending upon which part of the schedule the species is listed on. Beavers were listed under Part 1B of Schedule 9 (‘animals no longer normally present’), but will move to Part 1A of Schedule 9, which lists ‘native animals’. This means that actions available for Part 1B species, which are at odds with the requirement to protect beavers as a European Protected Species, will no longer be available. For example, the ability to issue ‘control orders’ (which require non-native species that are adversely impacting biodiversity or society to be controlled), will no longer exist when it comes to beavers. Moving beavers to part 1A puts them under the same arrangements as species including Barn Owl and Corncrake.

See what The Wildlife Trusts are doing to bring back beavers here.

The Wildlife Trusts

The Wildlife Trusts are making the world wilder and helping to ensure that nature is part of everyone’s lives. We are a grassroots movement of 46 charities with more than 870,000 members and 38,000 volunteers. No matter where you are in Britain, there is a Wildlife Trust inspiring people and saving, protecting and standing up for the natural world. With the support of our members, we care for and restore special places for nature on land and run marine conservation projects and collect vital data on the state of our seas. Every Wildlife Trust works within its local community to inspire people to create a wilder future – from advising thousands of landowners on how to manage their land to benefit wildlife, to connecting hundreds of thousands of school children with nature every year. www.wildlifetrusts.org

Beaver Trust

Beaver Trust is a climate and nature restoration charity restoring beavers to regenerate our landscapes. We provide practical solutions to help people live alongside beavers and support legislation that rebuilds ecosystems and strengthens climate resilience in a time of ecological and climate crisis. For more information visit www.beavertrust.org