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The University of Southampton
Engineering

Are reintroduced beavers harmful to fish?

Published: 23 November 2015

Populations of reintroduced and escaped Eurasian beaver currently exist in England and Scotland and concerns have been raised that beavers, and more specifically the dams that they construct, may negatively impact populations of migratory fish, particularly salmon and trout, due to impeding their movements and fragmenting important habitat.

Ecological Engineering within Engineering and the Environment
Beaver dam

There is currently no information available on the impacts of beaver dams on the movement of fish in the UK but scientists at the University of Southampton in collaboration with Scottish Natural Heritage, the Game and Wildlife Conservation Trust, and the Salmon and Trout Association aim to close this knowledge gap.

In an article published in New Scientist that reports on a meeting hosted by The Mammal Society and Devon Wildlife Trust in Exeter earlier this month, preliminary findings on the influence of beaver dams and the movements of trout in Scotland are presented.

PhD researcher Robert Needham is currently in the north of Scotland using radio telemetry to assess the distribution and movement of brown trout in a stream that has been dammed by beavers and compared the results with one nearby that has not. The information improves our understanding of how beaver dams provide habitat utilised by trout through the creation of ponds.

Professor Paul Kemp , from the University of Southampton and principal investigator on this project, said: “Beaver and fish interactions are complex. Having tagged and tracked several hundred fish it is clear that beaver ponds create excellent habitat for large trout, with trout being more than twice as abundant in the beaver dammed stream compared with the control.”

However, there can also be negative impacts. “The dams beavers build can block the movements of trout, at least temporarily, when flows are low. But, trout do appear to move past them when water levels rise after the rain,” said Professor Kemp.

Much has been said in the media about beaver impacts – negative and positive – however, this important collaborative research will be the first to shed light on this issue within a UK context.

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