Premium Only Content
Documentary: Educational: Leave It To Beavers. Animal Engineers
Documentary: Educational: Leave It To Beavers. Animal Engineers
The fascinating story of beavers in North America - their history, their near extinction, and their current comeback, as a growing number of scientists, conservationists and grass-roots environmentalists have come to regard beavers as overlooked tools when it comes to reversing the disastrous effects of global warming and world-wide water shortages. Once valued for their fur or hunted as pests, these industrious rodents are seen in a new light through the eyes of this novel assembly of beaver enthusiasts and "employers" who reveal the ways in which the presence of beavers can transform and revive landscapes. Using their skills as natural builders and brilliant hydro-engineers, beavers are being recruited to accomplish everything from re-establishing water sources in bone-dry deserts to supporting whole communities of wildlife drawn to the revitalizing aquatic ecosystems their ponds provide.
Beavers are large, semiaquatic rodents in the genus Castor native to the temperate Northern Hemisphere. There are two extant species: the North American beaver (Castor canadensis) and the Eurasian beaver (C. fiber). Beavers are the second-largest living rodents after the capybaras.
Beavers build dams and lodges using tree branches, vegetation, rocks and mud; they chew down trees for building material. Dams impound water and lodges serve as shelters. Their infrastructure creates wetlands used by many other species, and because of their effect on other organisms in the ecosystem, they are considered a keystone species. Adult males and females live in monogamous pairs with their offspring. When they are old enough, the young will help their parents repair dams and lodges and may also help raise newly born offspring. Beavers hold territories and mark them using scent mounds made of mud, debris and castoreum, a liquid substance excreted through the beaver's castor sacs. Beavers can also recognize their kin by their anal gland secretions and are more likely to tolerate them as neighbors.
Historically, beavers have been hunted for their fur, meat and castoreum. Castoreum has been used in medicine, perfume and food flavoring, while beaver pelts have been a major driver of the fur trade.
-
2:13
UndeniableTruth
15 days agoColin Flaherty: Patreon Committed to Stopping Truth About Protected Groups 'Blacks'
5104 -
2:05:40
Inverted World Live
7 hours agoThe Technocratic Web of Control w/ 7SEES | Ep. 142
68K13 -
2:43:56
TimcastIRL
6 hours agoDemocrats COLLUDED With Epstein To HURT Trump, Emails BACKFIRE
235K77 -
11:32:19
Dr Disrespect
15 hours ago🔴LIVE - DR DISRESPECT - ARC RAIDERS - STELLA MONTIS QUESTS
248K18 -
5:20:41
SpartakusLIVE
9 hours agoSolos on WZ to Start then ARC?! || Friends: UNBANNED
49.1K1 -
12:58
Cash Jordan
9 hours agoMexican MOB OVERTHROWS Capital... as "Socialist President" FLOODS AMERICA with CARTELS
40.8K14 -
23:13
Jasmin Laine
11 hours agoPBO Breaks His Silence—“This Is Soviet Stuff”… and the Panel EXPLODES
31K21 -
1:17:26
Jamie Kennedy
23 hours agoCatching Up With Deep Roy: JKX Stories, Star Wars Secrets, and Total Chaos | Ep 231 HTBITY
22.9K3 -
1:28:42
ThisIsDeLaCruz
5 hours ago $3.00 earnedThe Secrets Behind Madonna’s Legendary Live Sound
24.2K7 -
1:22:15
Glenn Greenwald
9 hours agoTrump and JD Vance Weigh in on the MAGA Civil War Over Tucker; Zelensky's Top Associates Embroiled in $100 Million Corruption Scandal; FBI's Ongoing Concealment About Trump Shooter | SYSTEM UPDATE #548
129K111