A World Without Beavers Is a World Without Wildlife We Love

The buck-toothed mammals are the best ecosystem engineers nature has to offer. Ben Goldfarb's exhaustive new book explains why.

Leave it to beavers . . . to fixthe environment for us.

For millennia, Castor canadensis have shaped landscapes with their dams, turning scrub into meadows andflood waters into wetlands. But the rodent’s role has long gone unappreciated. So unappreciated that in the late 1800s, beavers in the United States and Canada due to decades of fur trapping and extermination. The European species faced a similar plight, dropping to just around the same time.

But now beavers are back with a furor—to the benefit of humans and countless other species. Take it from Ben Goldfarb, science journalist, APP writer, and author of the new book .

Once the 1900s hit and thefurtrade went out of vogue, theCastor population rocketed; today, there are an estimated 15 million beavers in North American waterways. But rather than allow them to thrivein pockets, experts have schemedup ways tomove them to areas that are badly in need of beaver engineering. In 300-plusfact-packedpages, Goldfarb traces these reintroduction projectswith outrageousanecdotes of, ,” and. He also demonstrateshowcivilizations, ecosystems, and corporations are tied to the mammal’s wellbeing. One example follows theTulalip Tribes in Washington, which to channel snowmelt and runoff into salmon streams during spawning. (The fish is an integral part of the community’s culture and economy.) On the opposite coast in AcadiaNational Park, Goldfarb points out that the reintroduction of beavers has close to over a 53-year span. As one of the fastest-declining habitats, wetlands everywherecould use this kind of a boost.

And then there are the beaver-loving birds. Trumpeter Swans, which have faced across North America, like to stacktheir 11-foot nests on top of the rodents’fortresses. Farther west, Greater Sage-Grouse , and Yellow-billed Cuckoos seek shade in cottonwoods, their fat-tailed friends. In total, beavers are credited for enhancing bird diversity on three different continents. Without them, the forests would beless musical, and birding would be way more frustrating.

That said, there are plenty of folks who still thinkbeavers are a nuisance.WithEagerGoldfarbsets out to quash old misconceptions, including the we see in pop culture.(Thankfully, he spares my favorite college drink:the Bionic Beaver, a concoction of Busch Light, Hawaiian Punch, Sprite, and bottom-shelf liquor, served on the rocks, in a pitcher, at Teds in Storrs, Connecticut.) But more importantly, he bringsthe mammal’s merits to light.

Appreciation is the key to keeping beavers—and everything they've built—around in the landscape. When we don't understand our most common creatures, our world becomes smaller; we lose sight of nature's complexity and all that's irreplaceable. “While organisms have evolved to fill niches provided by nature, neither beavers norpeople are content to leave it as that,” Goldfarbwrites. “Instead we’re proactive, relentlessly driven to rearrange our environments to maximize its provision of food and shelter. We aren'tjust the evolutionary products of our habitat: We are its producers.” These are the words ofa true beaver believer.

Eager: The Suprising, Secret Life of Beavers, by Ben Goldfarb, Chelsea Green Publishing, 304pages, $24.95. Buy it online at .