Monday, February 16, 2026
ADVT 
National

B.C. team building 100 beaver 'starter homes' in the name of wetland preservation

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 27 Dec, 2024 11:26 AM
  • B.C. team building 100 beaver 'starter homes' in the name of wetland preservation

In British Columbia's real estate market, many people dream of a turnkey starter home in a prime location.

Environmental researchers are hoping the same real estate principles will encourage beavers to move into prebuilt homes in some areas of the province and help improve wetlands.

More than 70 manmade beaver dams have been installed in Interior waterways since the B.C. Wildlife Federation project launched last year with the goal of building 100 dams by the end of 2025.

Researchers want to test whether beavers will move into the dams over the next several years, lifting the water in the streams to re-wet adjacent lands while encouraging growth of plants like willow and aspen for them to eat.

Dam-building teams of up to 10 people layered locally-sourced mud and branches as well as untreated wood posts to mimic beaver dams on small streams as far east as the East Kootenays, and west to near Lillooet.

Neil Fletcher, the federation's director of conservation stewardship, said the idea is to build "starter kits" of sorts, hoping that beavers will recognize the benefits of building on what has been left for them.

"What we're doing is we're basically putting in some furniture for them to get started. It's a bit more turnkey when it comes time for them to either find their way there just naturally, or to be moved there, which is something else we're looking into too," he said. 

Fletcher said the province's beaver population has dropped over the last few hundred years thanks to the early fur trade and trapping, and many populations have never recovered.

Without beavers, he said, water levels can drop, meaning some streams won't connect to their flood plain as they naturally would.

But beavers are not returning to areas where they lived before.

Fletcher said the landscape has changed over the centuries, make it harder for them to access food and often areas don't have enough water for the beavers to feel safe.

"Beavers really suck at walking on land. They're much better in the water. So they don't like to have to go too far to get their food source. And they're a walking hamburger for coyotes, for bears, for all sorts of things that might want to eat them," he said.

"So a big part of what they need is access to food, close to streams, and then ideally a bit of a ponded area that they can see that they could set up shop there."

Fletcher acknowledges that some beavers can be a nuisance on land, but said the animals also have many benefits that have begun to be recognized over the last several decades.

He said some ranchers are interested in whether beaver dams could help get more water on the land base for their cattle. Beavers can also raise groundwater to the point where less water needs to be pumped onto farmers' fields, Fletcher said.

"There's a whole movement just in the idea that we should be living with these beavers and allowing them to occupy parts of the landscape where we can tolerate them and they can provide a tremendous amount of support to farmers," he said.

So far no beavers have moved into the dams installed as part of the pilot project, but Fletcher said it will likely take time for enough food to grow to make some of the sites feel like home.

"What we're hoping is, over the next few years, we'll establish enough food resources to make it a suitable site for relocation," he said.

MORE National ARTICLES

BoC delivers half percentage point rate cut to 3.75 per cent

BoC delivers half percentage point rate cut to 3.75 per cent
The Bank of Canada delivered a supersized interest rate cut Wednesday in response to the recent decline in inflation, bringing its key policy rate down by half a percentage point to 3.75 per cent. With annual price growth now around two per cent, the central bank says its job has shifted from lowering inflation to maintaining it around the inflation target.

BoC delivers half percentage point rate cut to 3.75 per cent

Youth stabbed at a Port Coquitlam Secondary School

Youth stabbed at a Port Coquitlam Secondary School
Police in Coquitlam are looking for witnesses after a youth was stabbed and suffered non-life-threatening injuries. Mounties say the attack happened yesterday afternoon just before 3 p-m when officers responded to a report at Terry Fox Park in Port Coquitlam.

Youth stabbed at a Port Coquitlam Secondary School

Families call for inquiry after nine Indigenous people killed in police interactions

Families call for inquiry after nine Indigenous people killed in police interactions
A group of Black and Indigenous women say they want a national public inquiry into a recent spate of police-involved deaths, after nine Indigenous people were killed in interactions with police in August and September. About two dozen people gathered on Parliament Hill on Tuesday, including the families of eight people who died. 

Families call for inquiry after nine Indigenous people killed in police interactions

Increase in youth carrying weapons

Increase in youth carrying weapons
RCMP in North Vancouver say they're seeing an increased number of youth carrying weapons in the community. Youth officers say they had more than 10 interactions with youth carrying weapons in a two-week period.

Increase in youth carrying weapons

Ottawa remembers reservist killed in Parliament Hill attack one decade later

Ottawa remembers reservist killed in Parliament Hill attack one decade later
After targeting Cirillo, the gunman made his way down the street to Parliament Hill and entered Centre Block, where he fired multiple shots before he was killed. The attack happened in the Hall of Honour while Conservative and NDP MPs were gathered in surrounding committee rooms for their weekly caucus meetings.

Ottawa remembers reservist killed in Parliament Hill attack one decade later

Death toll rises to three after atmospheric river that drenched southern B.C

Death toll rises to three after atmospheric river that drenched southern B.C
At least three deaths have been linked to torrential rain from an atmospheric river weather system that hammered British Columbia's south coast over the weekend. On Vancouver Island, police said Tuesday that emergency personnel were waiting for an opportunity to safely recover the body of a driver whose vehicle was submerged when an overflowing river washed out a road near Bamfield on Saturday.

Death toll rises to three after atmospheric river that drenched southern B.C