Beavers are semiaquatic mammals who live on
ponds, lakes, or streams. Most live in groups
called colonies, which together erect a home,
called a lodge, constructed of
mud and sticks. So-called bank
beavers inhabit cavities in the
sides of stream banks rather
than lodges.
Abeaver colony consists of a
family comprising the breeding
pair and their offspring from
the previous two years. Typical
colonies consist of four to eight
individual beavers. Beavers appear
to be monogamous, and
females are dominant over
males and juveniles, at least
during parts of the year. Members
of the colony work together
to maintain the lodge,
build dams, and defend their
territory against other beavers.
Beaver colonies occur in typical
densities of 0.4 to 0.8 colonies per square kilometer,
though they can occur at higher densities
when suitable habitat is plentiful.
The Beaver Life Cycle
Beavers have a single breeding season, in winter,
during which mating takes place. Females experience
a period of estrus that lasts for about two
weeks, during which they are receptive for ten to
twelve hours. Gestation lasts for about 110 days.
Litter sizes range from zero to nine, with an average
of two to four young born each year. Beavers
are born in a relatively well-developed state; their
eyes are open and they are fully furred. Young
beavers nurse from their mother for two or three
months, though beavers begin eating some solid
food at only a few weeks of age. Beavers reach sexual
maturity at 1.5 to 2 years, at which time they
are forced by their parents to leave the colony.
Beavers are herbivorous and eat the woody
parts of trees and shrubs. Favorite foods include
aspen and alder trees. Beavers will chew down
large trees, not to gain access to the large trunks,
which are impossible for beavers to move, but
rather to gain access to smaller branches growing
at the top of the tree, which the beavers then eat.
Active year round, beavers must plan ahead to
provide food for themselves during the winter.
During the warmer months, the beavers will
group branches together in the water near their
lodges. During winter, when the pond or stream
ices over, beavers swim under the ice to gain access
to these stick piles as a source of food. Abeaver
lodge is constructed with an underwater entrance.
Thus, during the winter, beavers can enter
and exit the lodge without ever coming up above
the ice.
Beavers are known as important habitat modifiers
due to their dam construction behavior. Beavers
chew down trees and use the tree trunks and
their associated branches to build dams along
streams. Dams cause water pooling and slow the
water flow behind the dam, increasing water
depth and creating suitable areas for building
lodges. Furthermore, beaver dams cause localized
flooding that can dramatically alter landscapes.
Once beavers have used all of the surrounding
vegetation, either in dam construction or as food,
they will relocate to a new area. The abandoned
beaver pond eventually fills in to become a "beaver
meadow" which supports a variety of plants
that would not otherwise occur in that location.
Physical Characteristics of Beavers
Beavers are one of the largest rodents, second in
size only to the capybara. The two species in the
family Castoridae are similar in many aspects.
Both species show little sexual dimorphism and
a normal range in body mass from twelve to
twenty-five kilograms. Both male and female beavers
have castor glands, which produce a substance
called castoreum. Beavers deposit castoreum
on piles of mud outlining the boundaries of
their territories, in essence creating a message
board for other beavers that pass by. Beavers also
have broad, flat tails which are used not so much
for packing mud, as is commonly believed, but instead
as a means of communication. Beavers
smack the water surface with their tails, producing
a loud noise that can easily be heard by other
animals. Beaver tails are also used for directional
control while swimming.
Beavers are dark brownin color, and their thick
fur coats contain a dense underfur that traps air
and thus insulates the beaver. Long guard hairs
provide a protective layer over the underfur. Their
webbed hind feet function as excellent paddles
when swimming. Forefeet are not webbed and
thus are more capable of manipulating objects.
Split claws on the first and second digit of the forefeet
are used to groom the dense fur, thus maintaining
its water repelling and insulating properties.
In North America, beavers have made a dramatic
comeback in numbers after being hunted almost
to extinction in the late nineteenth and early
twentieth centuries. In Europe, beavers have
fared less well and in some areas are listed as
threatened or endangered, due mostly to destruction
of suitable habitat.
Classification:
Kingdom: Animalia (Metazoa)
Phylum: Chordata
Subphylum: Vertebrata
Class: Mammalia
Subclass: Theria
Infraclass: Eutheria
Order: Rodentia (rodents)
Suborder: Sciurognathi (squirrel-like jaw musculature)
Family: Castoridae (beavers)
Genus and species: Castor canadensis (North American
beaver), C. fiber (European beaver)
Geographical location: North America (C. canadensis),
Europe and Asia (C. fiber)
Habitat: Ponds, lakes, and streams, except in
southern Florida and the deserts of the southwestern
United States
Gestational period: 100 to 110 days
Life span: Thirty-five to seventy years in captivity;
ten to fifteen years in the wild
Special anatomy: Castor glands in both males
and females are used for intraspecific communication;
webbed hind feet and a broad flat tail
allow for excellent swimming ability; dense,
water-repellent fur
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