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Beaver with twig

European beaver
Photo by Laurie Campbell

 

Beaver in water

European beaver
Photo by Derek Gow

Scottish Beaver Trial a 'Tremendous step forward'

Press Release 29th May 2008

Contact: Kerrigan Bell. Telephone 01309 691292; Email marketing@treesforlife.org.uk.
 

Trees for Life, the award-winning charity working to restore the Caledonian Forest in the Scottish Highlands, today welcomed the Scottish Government’s decision to allow a trial reintroduction of European beavers to Mid-Argyll.

“To see beavers living wild in Scotland after an absence of over 400 years will be a tremendous step forward,” said Trees for Life's Founder and Executive Director, Alan Watson Featherstone. “16 other European countries have successfully reintroduced beavers since 1920, so it’s excellent news that Scotland is catching up with this move to return one of our indigenous wildlife species.”

“Alongside a restored Caledonian Forest, we want to see the eventual return of the large native mammals that have disappeared together with their forest habitat. They are all essential parts of a balanced, healthy forest ecosystem.”

The beaver was hunted to extinction in Scotland in the sixteenth century. The new project will see 15 to 20 beavers from Norway reintroduced in Knapdale, Mid-Argyll.

On 16 and 17 September, Trees for Life and the Wildland Network will host a two day conference entitled ‘Wild, Free and Coming Back?’ that will examine how to achieve further reintroductions of key species to Scotland. The event will feature presentations, discussions and debate, as well as workshops, a photographic exhibition and storytelling.

For more information call Trees for Life on 0845 458 3506, email info@treesforlife.org.uk or visit http://www.treesforlife.org.uk.

Ends

 

Notes to editors

  1. The decision by the Scottish Government follows a licence application for the trial submitted in December 2007 by the Scottish Wildlife Trust and Royal Zoological Society of Scotland. The submission was made after a two-month long consultation revealed that more than 73% of respondents from Mid-Argyll supported the trial reintroduction.
  2. Trees for Life is a pioneering charity in ecological restoration. It aims to restore the Caledonian Forest to an area of 1,500 square kilometres in the Highlands west of Inverness. Today only 1% of the original Caledonian Forest remains.
  3. Since planting its first trees in 1991 in Glen Affric, Trees for Life has planted over 650,000 trees. It has won several awards for its conservation work, including UK Conservation Project of the Year in 1991.
  4. Further information about the ‘Wild, Free and Coming Back?’ conference is available from Trees for Life at: /forest/missing/reintroductions_conf.html and from the Wildland Network at: http://www.wildland-network.org.uk/wn_events.htm#wildfreeandcomingback

 

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If you have found the information on this page and/or website useful please consider making a donation, for example to our current appeal and/or becoming a member of Trees for Life, to help us further our work of restoring the Caledonian Forest. You can join or make a donation on-line via our secure server if you like, or contact Trees for Life by post, phone or email at the address below.

Published: 28th May 2008
Last updated: 25 August 2010

Trees for Life is an award winning conservation charity working to restore the Caledonian Forest
and all its species to a large contiguous area in the Highlands of Scotland.

Trees for Life is a registered charity Scottish charity No. SC021303, and a company limited by guarantee No. 143304 with its registered offices at Forres, Scotland.
VAT reg. No. 605079649
Photos © Alan Watson (unless otherwise indicated) - Banner Credits - Illustrations © Caragh McAuley

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