BEAVER
Physical characteristics and distribution
Body length: 70 – 100 cm
Weight: 20 – 35 kg
Life expectancy: 10 – 20 years
Distribution: North America, Scandinavia, Poland, Baltic States, Russia, France, Germany
Habitat: river, lake, brook
Species: European beaver and Canadian beaver endangered In Germany classified as endangered, in Austria and Switzerland as endangered.
Weight: 20 – 35 kg
Life expectancy: 10 – 20 years
Distribution: North America, Scandinavia, Poland, Baltic States, Russia, France, Germany
Habitat: river, lake, brook
Species: European beaver and Canadian beaver endangered In Germany classified as endangered, in Austria and Switzerland as endangered.
Appearance
The beaver has a fairly stocky physique. His eyes and ears are small and the latter, as well as the nostrils, he can close while diving. Even otherwise he is very well adapted to life in the water: Between the toes of the hind feet he has webbed, and the tail is covered by a hard, scaly skin and serves as a rudder. The rest of the body wears a coat that is also very practical: it is impermeable to water. At the anus, the beaver have a gland that secretes a fatty secretion, the “castoreum”. This is distributed for grooming all over the body. The animals of the Canadian species have a reddish-brown color; their European relatives, on the other hand, are light to dark brown and often completely black in Russia.
Reproduction and development
The actual mating season is between July and August. However, the fertilized egg does not develop immediately, but undergoes a so-called dormancy. As a result, the two to four cubs are born only in February or March, although the actual gestation period is only about eight weeks. After birth, the animals are blind and have a thin, white coat, but the black spots are already easily recognizable. After about five weeks, the offspring opens its eyes for the first time and is nursed for about two months. Within a year, the boys are then sexually mature. The male offspring leave the parental building, the female, however, remain mostly and integrate their chambers to the existing construction.
Lifestyle and behavior
Anyone who hears about a beaver first think of the dams and moats that pile up the little builders. The entrances to these dwellings are always under water. For the construction, they first gnaw branches and trunks hourglass-shaped until they fall over. These pile them together with mud and stones until the wood rises above the water level. In the end, they seal the construction with mud and clay. Such structures can reach heights of up to 1.5 meters, and we have already seen dams that were more than a hundred meters long. However, if a river is too wide, the animals also move into a riverbank. As excellent swimmers and divers you can dive for up to 15 minutes. They do not hibernate. Their territory inhabit them in pairs; it is marked with the castoreum.
Nutrition
Beavers feed exclusively vegetarian. They eat herbs, shrubs, young shoots, aquatic plants and tree bark. It is assumed that the medicinal effect of the glandular secretion (“castoreum”, “beaver goat”) of the animals, which was used as a remedy in the Middle Ages and which still occurs today in homeopathy, is due to the diet of the beaver Bark of the willow contains “salicylic acid”, a substance that also occurs in similar form in aspirin. Salicylic acid presumably enters the secretion via the metabolism of beaver and is still somewhat effective in this form.
Hunting style, equipment and countries
Bieber meanwhile occur in many European countries as well as in North America. In Europe, they are protected in most countries, hunting exists in Finland and Sweden. The hunt is done either on the water by boat or from the shore in promising locations. As a rule, Bieber are shot with the small ball.
Hunting trip Countries
IF YOU HAVE ANY QUESTIONS OR ARE INTERESTED IN AN OFFER TO HUNT FOR BEAVER, PLEASE CONTACT US VIA EMAIL OR CONTACT FORM.
All offered trips are arranged by us and carried out by our partners as organizers.