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Beaver, in the Forest Cutting Down a Large Oak Tree
Ashe trees eaten by beavers with shavings on the ground.
A tree gnawed by a beaver in front of a pond. Concept of beaver dam construction.
Lifting a log after sunset, a large beaver rebuilds a portion of his dam after the high spring waters of Bear Creek washed out a section in Lakewood, Colorado.
Tree trunk gnawed by beaver with wood chips lying around amidst of tall grass - Usedom Island, Germany
A beaver building a dam.
Beavers cut down trees to prepare for lodging and dams for protection from predators and the elements. The photograph shows their handy work at cutting.
Damage done by a beaver to a tree trunk near a river
Beavers are expert dam builders and architects of aquatic ecosystems. Here's how they work:\n\nBuilding Dams: Beavers use their strong front teeth to cut down trees and branches, which they use to construct dams across streams and rivers. The dams create deeper water, which provides protection from predators and easier access to food. The dams also help control the flow of water, which can prevent flooding downstream.\n\nCreating Lodges: Beavers build lodges out of sticks and mud in the ponds created by their dams. The lodges have underwater entrances, which provide safety and protection from predators.\n\nFood Gathering: Beavers are herbivores, and they primarily eat bark, leaves, and twigs from trees and shrubs. They use their sharp teeth to strip bark from trees, and they store branches underwater near their lodges to eat during the winter months when food is scarce.\n\nMaintaining Dams: Beavers are constantly working to maintain and improve their dams. They patch holes and leaks with mud and sticks, and they add new material to the dam to keep the water level high.\n\nOverall, beavers are essential members of their ecosystems, as their dam building activities create habitats for a variety of other species, including fish, birds, and amphibians.
The tree trunk nibbled by beavers on the pond bank in a winter time.
Beaver in fresh snow
Rubber tree in a small plantation in a steep area outside Ella, which is the main city in the Uva Province in Sri Lanka. Rubber or latex has been a traditional crop in this area for many years.
Aspen tree shows evidence of work by beaver to fell tree
Beavers felled trees in North Surrey, British Columbia. Spring afternoon in Metro Vancouver.
Today, up to 80 beaver families are once again at home along the Havel and Spree rivers. Beavers were almost extinct in Berlin and in Europe. Meanwhile, however, the beavers have also reconquered the Berlin area.
As the Aspen trees are in peak color on the mountain side, the beavers ready the pond in the lower elevation for the winter season.
Signs of Beaver (Castor fiber) activity on a cut Tree in Flevoland, Netherlands
Tree felling scars in nature
Close up of the stump of a tree in green surroundings gnawed by beavers for construction of a dam
Traces of a beaver on a tree on the bank of the Danube river.
A tree felled by a Beaver
Beaver Dam, Lundy Canyon, Eastern Sierra, California
Big, birch tree trunk with beaver activity damage and signs on wood trunk from teeth. Tree cut by beaver fallen on ground  in winter
Beavers are busy building a dam for the winter in a Colorado lake
left over from a beavers job
A tree trunks shows beaver damage near the Thompson River in Kamloops, British Columbia. Spring morning in the Thompson-Nicola Regional District.
The tree that the beavers gnawed in a small aspenwood
Trees damaged by deer.
Sign of Beaver activity on the shores of Loch Tay in Scotland.
Heap of dried tree branches in the nature
Free Images: "bestof:Photograph of Beaver Cutting on Seven-Inch Aspen - NARA - 2128303.jpg Scope and content Original caption Beaver cutting on 7-inch Aspen 1/2 mile north of Riley"
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