To learn more about beaver dams and beaver
management, download "Beavers
and their control"* (PDF, 426KB) from UNH Cooperative Extension.
Description The beaver is the largest North American
rodent, ranging in weight from 30-100 pounds. Their large webbed
hind feet are adapted for swimming, and their broad, flat, leathery
tail serves as a rudder and propeller. Although their ears are small,
beavers have excellent hearing. Beavers close their ears and nostrils
while under water. Beaver teeth, including their bright orange incisors,
grow continuously.
Range and Distribution
Beaver occur across most of North America except on the peninsula
of Florida, on the Arctic tundra, and in southwestern deserts. Trapping
nearly eliminated beaver from New Hampshire by the late 1800's.
Six beaver were released in the state between 1926 and 1930 as part
of a restocking program. By 1955, the entire state was repopulated.
Their numbers continue to increase locally throughout New England.
Habits and Habitat
Beavers are true vegetarians, eating leaves, bark, twigs, sprouts,
fruits and buds of shrubs and trees, as well as aquatic plants such
as sedges and rushes. Preferred woody plants include alder, aspen,
birch, maple and willow. Small diameter stems (<3") are
most heavily sought. Beavers typically feed within 100 yards of
the edge of a pond.
When beaver start gnawing on larger softwoods
and less favorable hardwoods, or travel long distances to feed,
it is indicative of a dwindling food supply. About 200 aspens support
one beaver for one year. Beaver cache food for the winter, submerging
tree and shrub branches next to their lodge.
Beavers are usually nocturnal but they may be
seen at dawn and dusk making repairs to their lodge or dam or gathering
food. Beavers live in colonies which usually consists of an adult
pair, the young of the year (kits), and the young of the previous
year (yearlings). The number of beavers in a colony is usually five
or six, but can be 12 or more. Two-year-olds leave the colony in
late spring to establish new colonies of their own.
Beavers are highly territorial. A colony marks
its territory, using scent mounds, preventing other beavers from
colonizing the area. They construct a large mound where scent is
deposited or they deposit scent on small piles of mud carried from
the stream bottom to the territory boundary. The territory of a
beaver colony extends about 0.5 miles along a waterway.
Beavers are monogamous and pair for life. Breeding
occurs in winter with 3-5 kits born in May or June. Litter size
may vary with the quantity and quality of food supply. Beaver do
not breed until their second or third year. Older females (5 to
13 year olds) produce more offspring.
Beavers
dam small to large slowly flowing brooks, streams, or rivers, usually
bordered by woodlands. After beavers complete the dam, they construct
a lodge in the deepest portion of the pond. If a stream is too large
for a beaver to dam, they will build dens or lodges along the banks.
An adequate food supply is essential for beaver colonization. Beaver
will colonize an area, build a series of dams and lodges, harvest
small trees within reach of the impoundment, then move on when food
resources are depleted. An abandoned beaver pond will eventually
return to the early successional stage of a brook and meadow. Beaver
flowages are important habitat for many other species including
great blue herons, osprey, kingfisher, mink, otter and muskrat.
Management
Management activities that encourage beaver also can improve waterfowl
habitat, particularly for black and wood ducks. Patch cuts around
mature aspen and birch near the edge of a wetland can regenerate
food supplies and encourage beaver to return. The installation of
beaver pipes is an effective way to control water levels and keep
beaver from flooding valuable timber stands, roads, and other areas.
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Written
by Ellen J. Snyder, Wildlife Specialist, UNH Cooperative Extension.
UNH Cooperative Extension
programs and policies are consistent with pertinent Federal and State laws and
regulations on non-descrimination regarding age, color, disability, national origin,
race, religion, sex, sexual orientation or veteran's status. College of Life Sciences
and Agriculture, County Governments, N.H. Division of Forests and Lands, Department
of Resources and Economic Development, N.H. Fish and Game Department, U.S. Department
of Agriculture, U.S. Forest Service and U.S. Fish and Wildlife Services cooperating.