Beaver Appeal
It’s been more than 400 years since wild beavers were seen in Northamptonshire but after two years of planning, storms, flooding and burst sewer pipes, we are thrilled the beavers are finally here.
Our priority will be to ensure the beavers are kept safe and healthy. We will also monitor the habitat to see how these amazing eco-engineers are making a positive impact on their surroundings.
Please donate today to help the beavers thrive at Nene Wetlands.
Beaver release video Feb 2025 (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EotXxmUnkl4)
Credit: Holly Wilkinson
Where are the beavers?
The family group of beavers are located at Delta Pit in our Nene Wetlands nature reserve, next to the popular Rushden Lakes shopping centre in Northamptonshire.
Being nocturnal, you may not be able to see the beavers but you might see evidence of them as they get to work on the willows around the lake.
We will be regularly posting video footage of them so look out on our project webpage and at our Visitor Centre at Rushden Lakes shopping centre to see what they have been up to.
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Support Northamptonshire's Beavers
FAQs
What happens to my donation?
You donation will help with our ongoing costs to keep the beavers safe and healthy. It will contribute towards veterinary bills, fence checks and repairs, camera repairs, drone monitoring and other conservation work around the site.
Any additional donations above our target are gratefully received and will go towards conservation work at Nene Wetlands.
Why are we reintroducing beavers?
As a keystone species present in ever increasing numbers within the country there is significant existing scientific research showing the positive impacts of beavers on wetlands. At Delta Pit the presence of beavers will complement and reduce the need for the existing site management by staff and contractors in the removal of willow growth around the lake edges, restoring areas of reedbed and diversifying the marginal vegetation through foraging behaviours. This will benefit the wetland birds, for which the site is designated a SSSI, by creating more roosting and feeding habitat as well as other wildlife such as invertebrates and bats.
Releasing a family of beavers into one of our most public destination reserve will provide a unique opportunity for people to observe this iconic species on their doorstep, allowing for significant public engagement both on beavers and their ecology and the wider work of the Trust.
Why Nene Wetlands?
We had a feasibility study conducted by the Beaver Trust, and Delta Pit was chosen as the most ecologically suitable site. Given it is already fenced off with no public access to provide a refuge for waterbirds and other wildlife, there should be less disturbance than other more accessible parts of the Nene Valley.
How will you make the enclosure safe?
The beaver fencing is installed to an exact specification from Natural England that has been agreed following a full site survey with any risks appropriately considered, making sure we keep the beavers safe and that they don't escape. All stock gates are designed to an approved beaver proof specification.
What do they eat?
Contrary to popular belief, beavers only eat plants - not just trees but brambles and other plants too. They will eat leaves, bark, the cellulose underneath the bark, twigs and roots but despite their eagerness to cut down trees, they do not eat the wood. Instead they use the wood to build dams and lodges.
Will they destroy trees and will they build a dam?
They don’t kill or destroy trees, they coppice them - these grow back and provide more spaces for wildlife. Beavers are often known as eco-engineers, they are only doing what our rangers would be doing on our wetland reserve to provide the best habitat for wildlife, but will be doing it far better than we can!
They are unlikely to build dams in Delta Lake: beavers usually build dams in rivers to create lagoons in which they can better protect themselves from predators and in which they often build their family lodges which are accessed from underwater. The ideal depth of water a beaver seems to seek behind any dam is around 70cm (28”) so they will probably feel no need to dam here. In fact in other areas of the world such as Telemark in Norway where studies have been carried out, no damming activity has taken place at all in similar circumstances.