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BEAVER

Bern slaps down Geneva beaver road signs

Authorities in Bern have infuriated an animal protection group by ordering the removal in Geneva of two road signs warning motorists of beavers.

Bern slaps down Geneva beaver road signs

The federal office of highways ruled that the signs, approved by the canton, did not conform to national standards.

They were erected earlier this year on the Route de Verbois, in the western part of Geneva, in a bid to reduce accidents involving the wild rodent.

The Contact Castor association had sought approval for the signs, featuring a red triangle and the image of a beaver, on a section of the road near a Rhône River dam used as a corridor by the animals.

The group is upset by the federal government’s decision, which it regards as overly bureaucratic.

“Accidents on the road cause many beaver deaths,” Olivier Bodmer, founder of Contact Castor, told the Tribune de Genève newspaper.

“It’s also a question of safety for motorists,” Bodmer said.

Beavers can weigh close to 30 kilograms and a collision with one can cause major damage to a vehicle, he indicated.

The signs — the first of their kind in Switzerland — were nonetheless removed earlier this month at the insistence of federal authorities.

The only wildlife warning road sign permitted by the highways office is one with a red triangle surrounding an image of a deer.

This is regardless of whether the animals in the area of the sign are other species, such as foxes, badgers, wild boars or hedgehogs.

Gottlieb Dändliker, cantonal wildlife inspector, believes the signs made sense.

“It is genetically important that families of beavers living upstream and downstream of the dam can mix,” he told the Tribune de Genève.

After becoming extinct in Switzerland, beavers were reintroduced to the country in the late 1950s.

They can now be found in several regions, apart from Geneva.

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ENVIRONMENT

Dane loses to state in appeal case over beaver damage

A landowner in rural Denmark has failed in a bid to win compensation for damage caused to his property by gnawing beavers.

Dane loses to state in appeal case over beaver damage
Photo: Mirage3/Depositphotos

Find Andersen-Fruedahl, who lives in Møborg near the towns of Lemvig and Holstebro in West Jutland, had appealed against a previous decision by a district court, in which he brought a civil law suit against the Danish Environmental Protection Agency (Miljøstyrelsen).

The property owner had asked for between 200,000 and 300,000 kroner (27,000-40,000 euros) as compensation for trees and lakes damaged by beavers.

But the Vestre Landsret higher court upheld the previous verdict in a decision reached on Tuesday, DR reports.

“I’m disappointed. We’d hoped we would win, but I knew it was unlikely, because it’s the little guy against the great powers,” Andersen-Fruedahl told DR.

Beavers munched their way through trees including Sitka spruce, firs and red beeches on Andersen-Fruedahl’s property, causing many trees to fall with ground floods occurring as a result, the landowner said.

Andersen-Fruedahl argued that it was up to the environmental agency to control the beaver colony living on his land. He said that he would speak to his lawyer about whether to take the case further.

“Perhaps we should get hold of some politicians and try to change the decision that was made long ago to allow beavers to roam freely. It’s not just me that has problems with beavers,” he said.

The Danish Nature Agency (Naturstyrelsen) in 1999 reintroduced the beaver to Denmark by releasing 18 animals in the Klosterheden Plantage nature reserve close to Andersen-Fruedahl’s land.

That small population has grown to 200 individuals today, DR writes. The animals, which gnaw through trees and build dams, remain protected under Denmark’s nature laws, meaning the state is not liable for damage they cause, according to a previous ruling by Holstebro District Court.

READ ALSO: Dane loses court case over gnawing beaver problem