Animal Diversity Web U of M Museum of Zoology ADW Home ADW Home ADW Home University of Michigan Help About Aninal Names Teaching Special Topics About Us




Structured Inquiry Search — preview

Home -> Kingdom Animalia -> Phylum Chordata -> Subphylum Vertebrata -> Class Mammalia -> Order Rodentia -> Suborder Castorimorpha -> Family Castoridae -> Species Castor fiber

Castor fiber
Eurasian beaver



2009/06/28 02:01:02.168 GMT-4

By Noah Harris

Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Subphylum: Vertebrata
Class: Mammalia
Order: Rodentia
Suborder: Castorimorpha
Family: Castoridae
Genus: Castor
Species: Castor fiber

Geographic Range

Norway, France, Poland, Germany, Eastern Europe, Siberia, and other Scandinavian countries.

Biogeographic Regions:
palearctic (native ).

Habitat

Freshwater lakes and rivers, usually near woodlands, in the Palearctic region.

These animals are found in the following types of habitat:
temperate ; freshwater .

Aquatic Biomes:
lakes and ponds; rivers and streams.

Other:
riparian .

Physical Description

Mass
13 to 32 kg
(28.6 to 70.4 lbs)


Length
80 to 110 cm
(31.5 to 43.31 in)


Castor fiber has a body length of 80 to 110 cm and a tail length of 30 to 35 cm, making it one of the world's largest rodents. Its shoulder height is 30 to 35 cm and it weighs 13 to 32 kg. The European beaver has very little sexual dimorphism; the average male weighs about 24 kg and is 90 cm long, while the average female weighs 26 kg and is 98 cm long. Beavers have stocky bodies with flattened hairless tails known as scoops. They have swimming membranes between their toes and can use both forelegs like hands. The European beaver has very prominent incisors. It has a thick coat of fuzzy and straight hair that ranges from a rich glossy brown to a yellowish brown on the upperparts, and from brown to tawny on the underparts. Its small eyes have nictitating membranes and its ears and nostrils are valvular.

Some key physical features:
endothermic ; homoiothermic; bilateral symmetry .

Sexual dimorphism: female larger.

Reproduction

Breeding interval
Breeding occurs once yearly.

Breeding season
Mating occurs in January and February and births occur between April and June.

Number of offspring
1 to 5; avg. 3

Gestation period
105 days (average)

Birth Mass
530 g (average)
(18.66 oz)
[External Source: AnAge]


Time to weaning
3 months (average)

Age at sexual or reproductive maturity (female)
2.50 to 3 years

Age at sexual or reproductive maturity (male)
2.50 to 3 years

The average gestation period of the European beaver is 105 days. Beavers have a single annual breeding season. Mating occurs in January and February and births occur between April and June. The estrous cycle of the female lasts 2 weeks and the female is receptive for 10 to 12 hours. The litter size is from 1 to 5 and the average number of babies is 3. The average birth weight is 450 g. Weaning occurs after 3 months, but independent minor food intake by babies can occur after just 2 weeks. The babies stay in the lodge for the first week or two and the mother must force them to go into the water for the first time. The young often have a hard time adjusting to the change from their mother's milk to eating bark and many do not survive this period. If they do survive, they encounter few natural threats for the remainder of their lives. Castor fiber reaches sexual maturity in 2.5 to 3 years.

Key reproductive features:
iteroparous ; seasonal breeding ; gonochoric/gonochoristic/dioecious (sexes separate); sexual ; viviparous .

Lifespan/Longevity

Extreme lifespan (wild)
17 years (high)

Extreme lifespan (captivity)
35 years (high)

Typical lifespan (wild)


The life span of the European beaver is about 10 years in the wild, but they may live up to 17 years of age. In captivity beavers have reached 35 years of age.

Behavior

Beavers are social animals and live in family groups of 5 to 8 animals. The group consists of an older couple that owns the territory and the litter from the current year and the previous years. Beavers are monogamous and the female is dominant. The territory of a family group is from .2 to 1.8 miles along a river bank or shoreline. The beavers rarely go more than 64 feet from the water. Their territories are usually permanent. The European beaver marks its territory by making scent mounds that are 30 cm high and 1 m across. The mounds are made of mud and sticks and branches. The beavers have 2 anal glands that secrete a castoreum oil. This oil has a musk odor and is deposited on the scent mounds. The oil is also used to grease the beaver's fur coat to make it water repellent. The beaver also has specialized cleaning claws on the second toe of its hind legs that are used for brushing the coat. Beavers may migrate during the fall in order to find food. They are unable to reach buds and branches high in trees, so they cut the trees down by gnawing at the trunk. When gnawing, a beaver stands upright supported by its tail. The gnawing process gives a tree trunk the well known hourglass shape. Beavers are generally nocturnal and may cut down a tree that is 16 inches in diameter in one night.

European beavers build "lodges" made of sand and clay. These lodges are usually a simple tube in the river bank that feeds into the water below the surface. If the river bank is not high enough to build a lodge, then the beaver builds a castle on the river bank. This castle is made by piling up branches and twigs and fastening them with mud. In order to keep the entrance to the lodge underwater, beavers keep the water level up by building dams. These famous waterlevel-regulating dams are built by driving thick sticks into the mud and filling the spaces with branches and mud. They can be anywhere from 16 to 96 feet in length. These dams create a good environment for many living things, including the particular trees that beavers eat.

Beavers love to dive and swim and are well adapted for these activities. Their thick water-repellant coat keeps them dry and warm while their webbed feet and flat tail are ideal for swimming. A beaver usually stays underwater for two to three minutes but can dive for as long as fifteen minutes.

Communication and Perception

European beavers communicate with each other using scent, posture, tail slaps, and several calls that sound like whistling and whining. The tail slap is used to warn others of danger. The beaver just slaps its tail against the water while it is diving to make the call.

Communicates with:
visual ; tactile ; acoustic ; chemical .

Perception channels:
visual ; tactile ; acoustic ; chemical .

Food Habits

The European beaver is strictly herbivorous. Its diet consists of hundreds of species of water and river bank plants such as tubers and the rootstocks of myrtles, cattails, and water lilies. Beavers also eat trees. They prefer aspen trees but also eat hazels, black poplars, lime trees, and other softwood barks. Alder and oak trees are never eaten and used only for constructional purposes. The large teeth and strong bite assist the beaver in biting and chewing its food. Long appendices help beavers to digest their high cellulose bark diets. Their food intake per day is about twenty percent of their body weight. Microorganisms break up the nutritional mush of bark that the beaver swallows and build up bacterial proteins that the beaver can digest. A beaver eats only a few species of trees, and if its diet changes it must make a gradual change so that the microorganisms can adjust to the new diet.

Primary Diet:
herbivore (folivore ).

Plant Foods:
leaves; roots and tubers; wood, bark, or stems.

Foraging Behaviors:
stores or caches food .

Ecosystem Roles

European beavers are keystone species in the ecosystems in which they live. Through their manipulation of aquatic systems, they provide habitat for many other species.

Key ways these animals impact their ecosystem:
creates habitat; keystone species .

Economic Importance for Humans: Negative

Beaver dams may they block river traffic. They cause extensive changes to habitats in and near streams, which may be harmful to some species of wildlife.

Economic Importance for Humans: Positive

Beavers were once hunted widely for their pelts and castoreum oil, but now that has changed as they are being placed under protection. Beaver dams create an environment where many other organisms can thrive.

Ways that people benefit from these animals:
body parts are source of valuable material.

Conservation Status

IUCN Red List: [link]:
Near Threatened.

US Federal List: [link]:
Endangered.

CITES: [link]:
No special status.

The European beaver was once widespread over Europe and Northern Asia. However, the demand for beaver pelts was high and the species was hunted to near extinction by 1860. The castoreum oil produced by the beaver was also believed to be a cure for disease and a sexual potency drug. This was another reason that beavers were hunted. The major threats to European beavers today are human reclamation of wetlands, water pollution, and hydroelectric plants. Detergents pollute rivers and lakes and damage the water repelling quality of beaver fur.

Recently many European countries are taking action to protect the beavers. Sweden imported beavers from Norway with great success. Populations are coming back in Europe with new colonies developing on the upper Rhine river and in other locations.

The Mongolian subspecies of Eurasian beavers, Castor fiber birulai is considered endangered under the U.S. Endangered Species Act.

Contributors

Noah Harris (author), University of Michigan.
Tanya Dewey (editor), Animal Diversity Web, University of Michigan Museum of Zoology.

References

Nowak, R. M. 1991. Walker's Mammals of the World. Fifth Edition. Johns Hopkins University Press, Baltimore.

Parker, Sybil P. 1990. Grzimeks Encyclopedia of Mammals Vol. 3. Mcgraw-Hill Publishing.

Burton, Maurice 1962. University Dictionary of Mammals of the World. Thomas Y. Crowell, New York.

Anderson, Sydney 1984. Orders and Families of Recent Mammals of the World. John Wiley and Sons.

2009/06/28 02:01:03.167 GMT-4

To cite this page: Harris, N. 2007. "Castor fiber" (On-line), Animal Diversity Web. Accessed July 05, 2009 at http://animaldiversity.ummz.umich.edu/site/accounts/information/Castor_fiber.html.

Disclaimer: The Animal Diversity Web is an educational resource written largely by and for college students. ADW doesn't cover all species in the world, nor does it include all the latest scientific information about organisms we describe. Though we edit our accounts for accuracy, we cannot guarantee all information in those accounts. While ADW staff and contributors provide references to books and websites that we believe are reputable, we cannot necessarily endorse the contents of references beyond our control.

Other formats: OWL

Home  ¦  About Us  ¦  Special Topics  ¦  Teaching  ¦  About Animal Names  ¦  Help

Structured Inquiry Search — preview