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Beavers to be reintroduced to this place for first time in 400 years

Beavers create wetlands that benefit other wildlife, soak up carbon dioxide, purify water and reduce flooding.

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European Beaver (Castor fiber), low-angle close-up shot of beaver eating Lilly roots amongst lilies in flower. (Scotland The Big Picture via SWNS)

By Elizabeth Hunter

A license has been granted to reintroduce beavers to an area of the Scottish Highlands - for the first time in 400 years.

After months of unexpected delays, permission for the reintroduction of the species to Glen Affric has been granted.

Forestry and Land Scotland (FLS) and Trees For Life have been working in partnership on the proposal since 2022, which will now see beavers in the northwest Highlands - four centuries after they were first driven to extinction in Scotland.

(Scotland The Big Picture via SWNS)

Following two years and three phases of extensive local consultations, last December, FLS applied to NatureScot for a licence to release beavers into Loch Beinn a Mheadhoin.

A family of beavers will now be released into a National Nature Reserve owned by FLS, above Beinn A’ Mheadhoin Dam in Glen Affic, potentially this autumn.

The beavers will be translocated from unsuitable farmland habitats elsewhere in Scotland, where they might otherwise be culled.

Alan McDonnell, Trees for Life’s Head of Nature Restoration, said, “This successful result for FLS’s well-considered licence application to reintroduce beavers to this famous glen is a positive step from Scotland’s biggest public landowner.

(Scotland The Big Picture via SWNS)

"FLS should be congratulated for its hard work and for showing leadership as a government agency.

“Going forward, Trees for Life’s dedicated Beaver Management Officer will be there to engage with the whole community, offering practical support to ensure that local people can enjoy and benefit from beavers being brought back to Affric, with any localised issues well-managed."

Beavers create wetlands that benefit other wildlife, soak up carbon dioxide, purify water and reduce flooding.

They can also bring economic benefits to communities through eco-tourism.

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