
‘Very chill' wild beaver filmed on river after return of species to UK after 400 years
A wild beaver has been filmed on a river in Wales after the species became extinct in Britain about 400 years ago.
The semiaquatic rodent was previously hunted to extinction, but has made a comeback over the past two decades. There are four managed enclosures for beavers in Wales, but it remains unknown how many live in the wild at the moment.
Naturalist Iolo Williams encountered the wild beaver on the River Dyfi, near Machynlleth. He told the BBC: 'I've seen some incredible wildlife in Wales, some amazing things, but this ranks up there, not just with the best, but as the very, very best.
'The last people to see wild beavers in Wales would have been the Welsh princes, who would have hunted them. So they've been absent for hundreds of years. It's hugely significant.'
Mr Williams first saw the beaver while he was filming his BBC series Iolo's River Valleys. He said the animal 'didn't pay us any attention at all'.
"It was very chill," he said. 'We were on the opposite bank, and we thought we better be quiet, don't move around. And the beaver just saw us and it just carried on feeding and swam.'
Mr Williams said the beaver "didn't pay us any attention at all".
Locals say they have spotted beavers along that same stretch of the River Dyfi in recent years, but where they come from has remained a mystery after a nearby beaver enclosure ruled out any escapes.
The North Wales Wildlife Trust has been working on its Welsh Beaver Project since 2005 in a mission to return the animal back to the wild. While once widespread across Wales, beavers were hunted for their fur, meat and scent glands.
The trust said beavers are 'very special' because they 'play a vital role in enriching biodiversity by restoring and managing river and wetland ecosystems'.
'They are known as a 'keystone species' because their activities can benefit a wide range of other animals and plants that live in rivers and wetlands,' it added.
It is an offence in Wales to release beavers into open rivers without a licence, and Natural Resources Wales told the BBC that no licences of this type have been issued currently.
England recently approved the reintroduction of beavers into the wild, and there are said to be about 500 of them in the wilderness and in enclosures. Meanwhile, there are thought to be more than 1,500 beavers in Scotland after they were reintroduced to the wild several years ago.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


BBC News
2 hours ago
- BBC News
Dormice reintroduced at Bradgate Park to boost population
More than 20 hazel dormice have been reintroduced to Leicestershire as part of a project to boost the species' declining help them adapt, the animals will be housed in open cages in a secret location within Bradgate Park, near Newton Linford, before being released into the dormouse population has dropped by 70% nationally since 2000, and the species is now extinct in 20 English counties, according to a 2023 White, dormouse and training officer at the People's Trust for Endangered Species, said the reintroduction could provide "vital stepping stones to start a new population of dormice". "We're hopeful that by autumn, the dormice will have settled into the woodland," he added. "If we start to see litters later this year, it will mark the beginning of their return. "It's a big day for the county, as dormice haven't been seen here for a very long time." Volunteers will monitor the dormice daily over a 10-day period, topping up food and water while the animals adjust to their new this time, the dormice will remain in mesh enclosures before being released to forage for they settle in, they are expected to begin breeding and dispersing into surrounding woodland and hedgerows. Volunteer Hazel Edwards, who helped prepare the site, said: "A couple of weeks ago we started setting up large open cages in the woods so the dormice would acclimatise."From today, we'll feed and care for them daily. The cages are filled with fresh hazel twigs, water, and food. "After about 10 days, we'll open the cages, and they'll move into nesting boxes we've placed nearby. Hopefully, those will become their forever homes."Mr White added the reintroduction formed "part of a long-term effort" to bring the species back to said: "It took 100 years for numbers to fall - restoring them will take just as long."


The Guardian
2 hours ago
- The Guardian
Country diary: Little miracles at my fingertips
Fifty years ago my first countryside article was published, A Kestrel Kills in Liverpool. The little falcon, nesting on the Anglican cathedral in 1976, until recently was replaced by a peregrine. Back in the day any self-respecting wildlife writer used a heavyweight Imperial typewriter, an SLR film camera, snail mail, a landline and an extensive library of reference books. It took a week to get something filed. How times have changed. Today, with the flush of springtime attracting all manner of wee beasties, I photographed bees and beetles with my mobile phone in the Fairy Hill garden. It's been useful to track the many changes here – two years ago, I eradicated all alien species including rhododendron, leylandii and laurel. The non-natives were replaced with hornbeam, rowan and hazel, and further planting projects have paid off in spades: native pears and foxgloves, flag iris in the pond, delicate sorrel in the shade of a stone wall, and the more robust dock. So no typical borders here – and no surprise to find an iridescent green dock beetle (Gastrophysa viridula) munching into the dock. Sadly, they also enjoy sorrel, but I am hoping that they do not find the large batch of rhubarb near the compost heap – it's all a balancing act. Its taste for dock could, in fact, make this attractive beetle a widely deployed one, as dock is commonly seen as a problem, competing with other plants and causing issues if eaten by cows and horses. If experiments in Wales and Ireland are conclusive, Gastrophysa viridula could be sold to farmers as a cost-effective alternative to chemical herbicides. Meanwhile, I'm zooming in on yet more smaller beauties, many of which display the exotic and metallic colorations more usually seen in the Amazon. From a bronze shield bug that landed on my sweater looking like an extra from the Star Wars bar to a soldier beetle and the dozy cockchafer which blundered into my face at dusk. The latter was described wonderfully by my erstwhile neighbour Robert Burns in his poem The Twa Dogs, 'An' darker gloamin brought the night / The bum-clock [cockchafer] humm'd wi' lazy drone.' Under the Changing Skies: The Best of the Guardian's Country Diary, 2018-2024 is published by Guardian Faber; order at and get a 15% discount


The Independent
8 hours ago
- The Independent
Rare hazel dormice released to create Leicestershire's only known population
Conservationists have released 20 rare hazel dormice into a secret woodland location in Leicestershire to create the county's only known population. The tiny mammals were reintroduced this week to an undisclosed area of the Bradgate Park Trust estate by wildlife charity People's Trust for Endangered Species (PTES) and its partners. It comes as part of national efforts to help the endangered species come back from the brink of extinction. The native dormouse, immortalised as the sleepy guest at the Mad Hatter's Tea Party in Alice in Wonderland, has suffered declines of 70% nationally since 2000 and has vanished from 20 English counties. Annual dormouse reintroductions began in 1993 and have been managed by PTES since 2000, with 1,142 being released into 26 different woodlands in 13 counties, including six English counties where they had previously been lost. The reintroduction in Leicestershire follows the successful reintroduction of 38 dormice to the National Forest from the National Trust's Calke Abbey in Derbyshire. The conservationists say this secondary reintroduction is a vital step forward for dormouse recovery nationally and regionally. The hope is that these two populations of dormice will one day form part of a wider population spanning the whole forest. Bradgate Park Trust, which is a site of special scientific interest (SSSI) and part of a national nature reserve, was chosen with the help of local wildlife groups to ensure the woodland is suitable for dormice now and in the future. Ian White, PTES dormouse and training officer, said: 'Despite once being a common part of Britain's woodlands and hedgerows, hazel dormice have experienced a historic and catastrophic decline due to habitat loss, degradation and poor management of woodlands and hedgerows, compounded by a changing climate. 'PTES's reintroductions, alongside habitat management, landscape projects and monitoring, are paramount to their long-term survival.' James Dymond, director of Bradgate Park Trust, said: 'As a small charity, we are proud to be entrusted with the care of these rare and charming creatures. 'This reintroduction is a testament to the past woodland management efforts on the estate, and we are committed to ensuring this special habitat continues to thrive—not only for the dormice, but for a wide range of other rare species that call it home too.' Ben Devine, head of nature recovery at the Leicestershire and Rutland Wildlife Trust, added: 'This release is an exciting first step in helping dormice not only locally, but nationally too. 'Ensuring the right landscape and habitat is in place is key to ensuring continued nature recovery, and we will continue to monitor the dormice to ensure that Leicestershire's only known population thrives and one day expands beyond Bradgate Park estate.' The dormice are bred in captivity and undergo an eight-week quarantine with regular health checks before their release, to ensure only healthy animals are put into the wild. They have been released into their woodland habitat, which has been selected to make sure it meets their needs, in large wire mesh cages with food and water. Local volunteers from Bradgate Park Trust and the Leicestershire and Rutland Mammal Group will regularly check the cages and top up their food and water before the doors are opened after 10 days to allow them to start to explore their new home.