England’s Wild Beavers Edition for England

Yunnan Fisher

BBC correspondent environment

ReportingUter River, Devon

These are some of the first to be released

Al -Qudahis will be released in the wilderness in England after the government agreed to re -present it.

The decision follows years of trials and will testify that the Qudahis are officially returning to the waterways.

Endangery has been searched in Britain four hundred years ago, and I have returned the Quds in the past two decades.

But some farmers are concerned that without appropriate management, large rodents can have negative effects on food production.

It is believed that about five hundred channels actually live in England, some in the wild and others in containers. Many others in Scotland, where land issues are already allowed.

They are called “Ecological System Engineers” because of how to redesign them where they live. The dams they build slow the flow of rivers and tables and the creation of habitats as other creatures can flourish. It has also been credited with reducing floods in the direction of the river.

“This is an incredibly exciting moment, a real teacher to restore nature in England,” Tony Jonpers, President of England, told me next to the Bever Dam in Devon.

“We are repeating a missing animal absent for centuries, and an animal we know will achieve huge benefits for the rest of the wildlife that has already exhausted across most of England,” he says.

Channels will be released under a natural England license system.

She says long -term plans will need to avoid effects on agriculture and food production and infrastructure.

This is something the National Farmers Union says it is vital. She wants to execute Qenads is an option if they prove it.

“Although the channels can provide some benefits,” we are concerned about the negative effects that the channel can cause on productive agricultural lands, as well as the requirements of management, costs and the risks involved. ”

“The canals can flood and water water boards, and it feeds on agricultural crops such as corn, as well as damage and falling trees such as cricket.”

Tony Junber, president of Natural England, says that the land version of the snapshot will not be approved unless certain conditions are met.

We met with Tony Junior from Natural England at the Experimental project for the Wild Beaver version in England, the Ater River gatherings in Devon. The Qudds first appeared here more than a decade ago – it is not clear where they came from. Perhaps they escaped from the packages or were illegally released, the so -called “gun bombing”.

Since then, the wildaeans have been allowed to survive, with their impact on the scene and the way they interact with the local agricultural lands that have been closely monitored.

“All this open water reaches the Qenades,” says Bitter Borgis of Devon Wildlife Trust.

“They want this water because it makes them feel safe and safe. This means that they can move their food too.”

Along the Otter River, Mr. Burgis told me that Al -Qudhas had invented the wet lands that now host types such as the great white bilones and fish coagars. The numbers of dragonflies, such as frogs and frogs, have risen. Water mice are now roaming the network of channels, tables and ponds used by the Qudds to move in the plain of flood.

Bever confidence

Some farmers are concerned about the Quds that caused damage to their crops and fields

Not everyone in the area is pleased with the idea of ​​beating dams that appeared everywhere.

Clinton Devon Estetz runs several farms in the Devon Water Assembly area, where the Wild Experience project was operated. Despite the widespread support of the Qudds, there are concerns about whether enough thinking has been given to managing their effects.

“We have also seen agricultural lands overwhelmed by water,” said John Farley, CEO of Clinton Devon Stetes. “

“There are positives with beaver and huge positives, but there are also some very important negatives, especially for small farmers.”

Bever confidence

One of the arrested channels in Scotland, is scheduled to be one of the first officially accredited edition in England.

Scotland is located several years ago on England, and has already agreed to the release of Qenads and is believed to be now more than 1500 wilderness. In some areas, the Quddas was so successful in education that they had to be transferred or the last resort was executed.

The wild version of Beavers is now expected to be in England in the next few days. “Males and females were taken from” conflict sites “in Scotland and were now undergoing medical checks before being transferred south.

Additional reports by Kevin Church.

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