The Mayor of London, Sadiq Khan, today joined, project partners Ealing Wildlife Group, Citizen Zoo, Ealing Council, Friends of Horsenden Hill and Groundwork London to release a family of five beavers into the wild at Paradise Fields in Ealing – the first beavers to be seen in West London for 400 years.
By reintroducing beavers to the site, the project made possible with funding from the Mayor of London and Amazon’s Right Now Climate Fund, aims to transform the area into a flourishing wetland. Helping to combat the impact of the climate crisis and create an improved ecosystem for plant and animal life.
Beavers were hunted to extinction in England around 400 years ago but are now being reintroduced across the country, including last year in Enfield. This is part of a wider trend of reintroductions across England in recent years, with beaver colonies now established in Kent, Cornwall, Devon, Derbyshire and Oxfordshire. Beavers are vital to helping other species to thrive, as they build dams, dig canals and create dead wood, creating and maintaining a habitat for other life to flourish such as water voles, dragonflies, amphibians, birds, reptiles and fish.
Project partners will study the beavers in their new environment and monitor the effects on water and flood levels and increased biodiversity in the area.
To date, the Mayor’s Rewild London fund has provided £2.3 million to projects across the capital and has helped to create or restore around 350 hectares of wildlife habitat - the equivalent of nearly 310 football pitches - bringing nature back into the city for all to enjoy. The latest round of Rewild London funding of £710,000 is now open for bids from community groups, boroughs and charities for schemes that will increase biodiversity and create more habitats for wildlife and plants to thrive in, making the city more resilient to the impacts of climate change.