[6-minute read]
The story so far.
The return of beavers has been carefully planned over a long period of time. The Wildlife Trust movement has been advocating for their reintroduction for many years, including pioneering work with the animals in 2015 when Devon Wildlife Trust established a trial project in the River Otter, which steadily established 30 separate beaver families in the river network.
In October 2022, following Wildlife Trust campaigning and overwhelming public support for reintroducing this keystone species, English law was changed to classify beavers as a native species.
Until the government’s announcement in February 2025, the beavers in Devon remained England’s only licensed wild beaver population. Elsewhere, Wildlife Trusts have supported landowners to build large enclosures to house beavers and test their return to Britain, including here in Suffolk.
Why does Suffolk Wildlife Trust support the return of beavers?
Beavers lived alongside us in Britain for thousands of years before we hunted them to extinction in the 1500s. They are natural water engineers and their disappearance from our ecosystems has had far reaching consequences such as increased impacts of flooding, increased river pollution, poorer water quality, and the overall health of our natural environment.
The return of beavers can help to:
- Reduce impacts of flooding by creating pools and canals that hold water and release it slowly back into rivers and lakes;
- Create wetland habitats that increase diversity and abundance of wildlife including amphibians, aquatic insects, fish, water voles, and wetland birds;
- Improve water quality: beaver dams trap act like a natural water filter, capturing silt and pollutants therefore creating cleaner water;
- Encourage wildlife tourism and increasing people’s appreciation for - and engagement with – the natural world.
The Government recently committed to spending billions of pounds on hard infrastructure to combat flooding as well as compensating farmers for lost crops due to changing weather patterns. In contrast, releasing beavers is an affordable, nature-based solution to flooding and many other problems our rivers and floodplains face.