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Class: Mammalia
Order: Rodentia
Family: Castoridae
Genus: Castor
Species: canadensis

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BEAVER CONTINUED

Range and Habitat: Forested regions of the northern hemisphere, in North America from Alaska and Canada south to Rio Grande; Europe in Scandinavia, Russia, Germany, France and Poland. Wooded areas near water where aspen, willows, cottonwood and other food trees are found.

Habits and Adaptations: Well known as the engineer of the animal world. Fells trees, build dams and lodges, digs canals. All of these activities result in securing the lodge from predators. A water level of about 1.8 m (6 ft) is necessary to allow the construction of island-like lodges. Dam becomes complex construction after kept in repair for years. Made of mud, grass, logs (15 cm, 6" thick), twigs and stones. Ponds vary from .4-4 hectares (1-10 acres). Canals are dug from feeding ground to pond for safe travel and floating of logs. Lodges of similar construction as dams average 1.5 m (5 ft) high and 6 m (20 ft) in diameter with 2 entrances under water and ice levels. Parents, yearlings and new litter live together in one lodge. Sometimes will live in den in streambank with underwater entrance and not attempt to build dam. Generally, colony works together building and repairing dam. Work and feed in late afternoon and through the night. Less active in winter, store food underwater for winter needs. Natural enemies are bear, coyote, wolf, red fox, bobcat, otter, great horned owl and goshawk, all captured on land except those taken by otter.

Diet: Bark, cambium, twigs, leaves, aquatic plants, roots of deciduous trees such as willow, alder, birch, aspen.

Breeding and Maturation: Monogamous, sexually mature at 2 years. One litter in April or May, 1 - 8 young (average 2 - 4), hair and open eyes at birth, nurse for 6 weeks. Live 15 - 20 years.

Miscellaneous: In the Pleistocene Age, giant beavers the size of black bears roamed the Old and New World. In more recent times, the beaver's range extended across northern Europe and Asia, south to the Mediterranean. Due to the value of it's fur, however, the beaver has virtually disappeared from many areas.

 

 

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