Plans to "Totally Eradicate" Tierra del Fuego's Invasive Beavers

by Kimberley D. Mok, Montreal, Canada on 06.19.08
Travel & Nature

beaver dam tierra del fuegoWho would have thought that these cute aquatic critters would be the centre of one of the largest eradication projects ever? But according to an international team of scientists, the North American beavers of the Tierra del Fuego archipelago at the southern tip of South America are wreaking such havoc on the local ecosystems that they must be eliminated if indigenous forests are to survive.

In a classic example of ecological shortsightedness, the problem began when fifty North American beavers (Castor canadensis) were introduced by the Argentine government during the 1940s in the hopes of establishing a fur industry. Since then however, without natural predators to trim their numbers, the beaver population has now exploded to 100,000 – invading almost 16 million hectares of unique, native forest. The beavers have damaged the forests so much that “that is absolutely stunning - it looks like bulldozers steamed through,” says ecologist Josh Donlan, director of Advanced Conservation Strategies, a non-profit based in Driggs, Idaho.

South American trees not co-evolved with beavers
One of the key factors to the extent of the destruction lies in the fact that South American trees do not regenerate back from their roots as North American trees do. The beaver dams here transform once-pristine streams into stagnant bogs, negatively impacting local aquatic wildlife. On top of that, once these ponds are drained out, they become breeding ground for other exotic, non-local species.

“The change in the forested portion of this biome is the largest landscape-level alteration in the Holocene - that is, approximately 10,000 years,” says Christopher Anderson of the Institute of Ecology and Biodiversity in Santiago, Chile.

Beaver control to prevent migration
Killing traps are one of the beaver control methods now being tested, in addition to adapting North American beaver control techniques using trappers, dogs, helicopters and boats. “We'll have to move in on the beavers in a rolling front, going from watershed to watershed to remove them, with a massive monitoring program behind it to make sure they have all been eradicated,” describes Anderson.

But will a program focused solely on watershed areas be effective? “The beavers only live near the water, so you don't have to go over the whole landscape,” explains Anderson. “But you have to make sure you eradicate them all - if you have even two beavers, they could repopulate the whole archipelago.”

The team’s main priority is to prevent the beavers from migrating north to Chile, where a few have already been sighted. According to forest engineer Guillermo Martínez Pastur at the Austral Center for Scientific Investigation in Ushuaia, Argentina, if Chilean forests are to be protected from the beaver threat, they “must be totally eradicated.”

::Nature

Related Links on Beavers

Animal Planet Animal Guide: Beaver
Argentina's great beaver plague (BBC)
Saving wildlife by killing it (Scientific American)

Image: hiro008 on Flickr

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Comments (5)

So humanity manages to save a forest from beavers but we can't save them elsewhere from ourselves.
As much as I love humanity we're a dreadful plague of a species.

jump to top weee says:

I would actually agree with this for once since it is adversely affecting the environment.

If they introduced panthers to California, it wouldn't exactly be a walk in the park for any of the other animals. Or lions. They are used to extremely low amounts of food and water, and when able to reproduce easily and with massive amounts of readily available food they would just explode and ruin the ecosystem.

Leave animals where they are! They are adapted to their environment and ONLY their environment! Even with the minor successes that have been made, do you want to be the one to make the big mistake like this one?

jump to top Cybercat [TypeKey Profile Page] says:

Let's import them back

jump to top Pixurungo says:

well it sounds like they got the fur trade that they were after . . .

jump to top Xan says:

the one fellow says "if they introduced panthers" mountain lion,catamount,cougar,puma,panther,basically exactly the same except color. Just so you know I am a conservationist,and a hunter,just like Audobon, Muir, Roosevelt. I think introducing non native species is stupid, the easiest way to eradicate these beaver is to bring north american trappers and hunters used to beaver, in to clean up the problem. But I think we should reintroduce grizzly bears to the sacramento valley, and the bay area of california,especially as they are the state bear

jump to top nathan says:

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