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Beavers
Did you know that beavers are one of the largest rodents
in North America?
These active animals weigh between 44 to 60 pounds. They are about 3-4
feet long.
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Click photo to enlarge
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Where do beavers live?
Beavers live in ponds, lakes, rivers, marshes, and streams all
across the United States. However, they are not found in Florida
and parts of Nevada and California.
What do beavers look like?
Beavers are large brown furry rodents with small eyes, small rounded
ears, large orange teeth, and a large flat, scaly tail.
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Beavers are very busy.
They spend most of their day searching for food and trees to build their
dams and lodges. It is common to see beaver activity in the Border Country.
Beavers live near water because they have short legs and do not move well
on land. They stay in the water as much as possible to avoid predators.
Their large webbed feet allow them to swim powerfully through the water.
Why do beavers have such big teeth?
Beavers are related to mice, porcupines, rats, and squirrels. Beavers
have long, sharp teeth known as incisors that are used for gnawing. These
teeth are always growing so it is important for the beavers to keep them
trim by continuously gnawing on trees and branches. The incisors on beavers
can grow as much as 4 feet per year! Beaver teeth are so strong that they
are able to chew through large tree trunks.
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Click on photo to enlarge
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What do beavers eat?
Beavers love to eat the bark and leaves from the trees that they
fell. Their favorite trees are aspens but they will also eat birch,
alder, willow, and mountain maple. They usually prefer trees between
2-6 inches in diameter. A busy beaver can chew through a 5 inch
willow tree in 3 minutes! With the leftover wood they create dams
and lodges. A pair of beavers takes down about 400 trees per year.
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What do beaver families look like?
Beavers seem to keep the same mate for life. They mate between January
and February and the babies or kits are born 4 months later. The kits
weigh about 1 pound each and there may be anywhere from 1 to 8 kits in
a litter. The kits stay with their parents for 2 years until a new litter
is born. The kits learn to swim in the lodge within 30 minutes after they
are born. Sometimes when they get tired their Mom carries them on her
back!
Did you know that beavers are the only creatures besides
humans that have such a changing effect on the landscape?
Beavers change the landscape with the dams they build. A dam is a barrier
that stops the flow of water and forms a pond or lake. These new ponds
make it easier for beavers to access trees found along the shoreline.
A mating pair of beavers will usually set out to find a stream where they
can build a dam. They collect logs and branches in a pile to create the
dam and then use grass and mud to fill in the spaces between the branches.
Eventually the water will pool up on one side of the dam to form a pond.
Oftentimes the dams are strong enough for humans to walk across!
Where do beavers live in the winter?
Beavers live in shelters called lodges. Beavers start working on their
lodges in the fall. Some beavers build in existing lakes while others
build in the newly formed ponds that they made with the dams. The lodges
must be ready by winter to shelter the beavers away from hungry predators
such as wolves, foxes, and otters. Lodges are usually cone shaped with
underwater entrances and are built along the shore. The beavers build
from the inside out using mud, grass, and branches. Most predators find
it too difficult to break through the complex network of branches and
mud so the beavers stay protected. Beavers that live in rivers do not
usually build lodges instead they create burrows out of the mud along
riverbanks.
How do beavers stay warm in the water?
When the lakes and ponds freeze over, beavers swim in the water underneath
the ice. They have thick underfur that keeps them well insulted and a
thick layer of fat under their skin. Beavers also keep their fur waterproof
by rubbing an oily substance on their fur that is secreted from scent
glands.
What makes beavers such good swimmers?
Beavers have large webbed hind legs that act as paddles when they swim
through the water. They have a large flat tail that helps them steer through
the water. They also have clear eyelids that make it possible for them
to open their eyes underwater. These animals can stay under water for
as long as 15 minutes because of their specially adapted lungs.
Why do beavers have such large tails?
Beavers have wide, hairless, flat tails. Their tails are not only used
for steering but also for balance, warning signals, and fat storage. When
beavers chew on trees they use their tail like a kick stand to give them
support. When a beaver feels threatened by danger it will slap its tail
on the water as a warning to the predator. Beavers also store fat in their
tails for the long, cold winters.
What are some clues of beaver activity to look out for?
Beaver dams and lodges are two easily identifiable clues of beaver activity.
Another clue is to look at the trees along the shoreline to see any signs
of gnawed trees.
Beavers have a dramatic effect on the land. The dams they create provide
new habitat for fish, plants, otters, and other underwater creatures.
The new ponds also provide new water sources for moose and wolves. The
land that dries up near the dams also becomes reforested because of its
rich, fertile soil. Beavers are extremely important for our forests.
Did you know that beavers are responsible for the exploration
and settlement of Canada and large parts of the northern US?
In the 1500s, European fishermen brought beaver robes purchased from the
Indians back to Spain. The Europeans prized the beaver fur because of
its warmth and its ability to be made into felt hats. Soon there was a
quest in Europe to collect beaver skins from Canada and the US to sell
back home. In the 1600s British merchants traded with the local Cree Indians
for beaver skins. The Indians did all of the trapping and the Europeans
traded them blankets, weapons, and beads for the skins. The Europeans
hired French Canadian farm boys known as voyageurs to paddle huge birch
bark canoes from Montreal to the Indian villages to collect the beavers.
This is the historic highway that Dave will be following on his Border
Country Adventure.
Beaver populations all over North America decreased rapidly until the
1900s when regulations were set that limited the number trapped.
Great Beaver Links
Sources
Stensaas, M. 1993. Canoe country wildlife: A field guide to the North
Woods and Boundary Waters. Pfiefer-Hamilton, Duluth.
Whitaker, J.O. 1998. National Audubon Society Field Guide to North American
Mammals. Alfred A. Knopf, New York.
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