Once nearly extinct, beavers are now inadvertently contributing to climate change.
Blame it on the beavers: The industrious, buck-toothed rodents are inadvertently contributing to climate change.
As temperatures warm and boreal beavers migrate north, they're creating ponds — more than 10,000 of them — that are flooding millennia-old permafrost. When thawed, permafrost can release dangerous greenhouse gasses such as carbon and methane.
University of Alaska Fairbanks researcher Ken Tape says the beavers are, in effect, creating dangerous oases around the Arctic. He's one of the authors of a recent study on beavers and permafrost.
The Unusual Connection Between Beavers, Permafrost And Climate Change
Blame it on the beavers: The industrious, buck-toothed rodents are inadvertently contributing to climate change.
As temperatures warm and boreal beavers migrate north, they're creating ponds — more than 10,000 of them — that are flooding millennia-old permafrost. When thawed, permafrost can release dangerous greenhouse gasses such as carbon and methane.
University of Alaska Fairbanks researcher Ken Tape says the beavers are, in effect, creating dangerous oases around the Arctic. He's one of the authors of a recent study on beavers and permafrost.
The Unusual Connection Between Beavers, Permafrost And Climate Change