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‘Noises on camera trap' reveal first-of-their-kind babies at UK reserve. Listen
‘Noises on camera trap' reveal first-of-their-kind babies at UK reserve. Listen

Miami Herald

time3 days ago

  • General
  • Miami Herald

‘Noises on camera trap' reveal first-of-their-kind babies at UK reserve. Listen

As darkness settled over a nature reserve in the United Kingdom, a baby mammal began to fuss and whine to its parent. Unbeknownst to the family, a nearby trail camera captured their interaction. It turned out to be a 'major milestone' for conservationists. Laura Snell, a conservation officer at the Helman Tor Nature Reserve, was helping with routine monitoring efforts when some 'noises on camera trap footage' caught her attention, Cornwall Wildlife Trust said in a July 23 news release. Immediately, she suspected the sounds came from baby beavers. 'At first we weren't certain,' Snell said in the release. 'But recent footage clearly shows a small kit appearing in the corner of the frame.' A video shared on YouTube on July 22 by Cornwall Wildlife Trust shows a beaver moving around at night. Small whining sounds, almost like the fussing of a human baby, can be heard. In a second clip, a baby beaver is briefly visible in the lower right-hand corner, partially obscured by the plants. The larger beaver seems to be taking care of it. The baby beavers are 'the first confirmed wild kits at the site,' which is home to a beaver reintroduction project. Beavers were once widespread throughout the U.K. but 'were hunted to extinction in the 16th century for their fur, meat, and the oil in their scent glands, which was used in medicine and even perfumes,' Cornwall Wildlife Trust said. In hopes of undoing this local extinction, conservation groups have begun rewilding projects. Now, 'beavers are being re-introduced into different parts of Great Britain after an absence of about 400 years,' the organization said. At Helman Tor Nature Reserve, wild beavers 'mysteriously appeared' in 2024 in 'an illegal release' later dubbed a 'beaver bombing,' officials said. The newfound kits are the offspring of these beavers. 'While we don't condone the way beavers arrived at Helman Tor in 2024, it's hard not to celebrate the birth of kits,' Cheryl Marriott, a director at Cornwall Wildlife Trust, said in the release. 'It's a great sign that the beavers are thriving and the habitat they've created is healthy enough to support the next generation, but it's also just the beginning,' the organization wrote in a July 23 Facebook post. 'The Trust continues to monitor the beavers at Helman Tor as part of its Wild Beaver Project, which supports the responsible return and recovery of beavers' throughout the surrounding Cornwall region, the organization said. Helman Tor Nature Reserve is in the southwestern United Kingdom and a roughly 240-mile drive west from London.

Cornish nature reserve welcomes first beaver babies
Cornish nature reserve welcomes first beaver babies

BBC News

time5 days ago

  • General
  • BBC News

Cornish nature reserve welcomes first beaver babies

A nature reserve in Cornwall has welcomed its first beaver babies, or Wildlife Trust (CWT) confirmed the presence of the kits at Helman Tor, near Bodmin, using footage from camera kits are the offspring of parents that appeared from a "beaver bombing", an illegal release which took place in early 2024. Cheryl Marriott, from CWT, said: "While we don't condone the way beavers arrived at Helman Tor, it's hard not to celebrate the birth of kits." She said the beavers were "already transforming the landscape in remarkable ways, and this is just the beginning". The births come soon after beaver kits were also born at Lost Gardens of Heligan trust said beavers, were a "vital ally in the face of climate change" because of their dam building, which creates drought-resistant said the births were "a hopeful sign for the future of wild beavers in Cornwall" which highlighted "the impact the animals are already having at Helman Tor nature reserve".The trust said it would "continue to monitor the beavers as part of its Wild Beaver Project", which aims to reintroduce beavers around the Par and Fowey rivers.

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