Today’s Solutions: May 08, 2024

Back in February, we wrote about a group of beavers that escaped captivity back in 2013 and were found years later living along a river in Devon, England. Those beavers were originally set to be exterminated, but thanks to the popular outcry, the government agreed to a scientific trial to measure the environmental impact of the beavers.

The five-year study recently concluded and showed that the beavers have alleviated flooding, reduced pollution, and boosted populations of fish, amphibians, and other wildlife. With this information, the UK government decided this week that the first beavers to live wild in England for centuries will be allowed to remain in their new home on the River Otter in east Devon.

Beavers alter the landscape and ecosystems in and around waterways, with their dam-building helping to reduce pollution and boosting local wildlife populations, including fish and amphibians, according to a study from Exeter University.

As the UK’s climate changes under global heating, droughts and devastating floods are likely to become more common, and beavers can help with both: their damming slows the speed of floods downhill when there is too much rainfall, and helps provide water storage that stops rivers running dry during droughts. The dams also filter out pollutants and stop topsoil from being washed away.

For environmentalists, the hope is that the beaver reintroduction trial will inspire the government to allow more natural solutions that can be implemented to protect the country from climate change and the flooding that comes with it.

Solutions News Source Print this article
More of Today's Solutions

USDA implements new school meal standards to reduce added sugars

The United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) announced significant changes to school meal laws, including the first time added sugars will be banned on ...

Read More

Are we entering the era of airborne protein? Introducing a global revolution ...

Finland has become the focus of a revolutionary shift in food production with the opening of the world's first large-scale factory for producing protein ...

Read More

White-tailed eagles return to southern England after 240-year hiatus

For centuries, there's been an eagle-shaped hole in the skies over England where the majestic white-tailed eagle once soared. The enormous raptor — its ...

Read More

What!? Scientists discover life 3,000 ft below Antarctic ice shelf

Scientists have been forced to rethink the limits of life on Earth after accidentally stumbling upon marine organisms living on a boulder 900 meters ...

Read More