After a year-long hiatus, New York City’s only known beaver has set up a new lodge at the Bronx Zoo and even cut down his own Christmas Tree

NEW YORK (December 16, 2008) – The Wildlife Conservation Society announced today that New York City’s most famous beaver, José, has come home for the holidays! After a year-long hiatus, José – the first wild beaver to return to New York in at least two centuries – is back at the zoo and has even cut down his own Christmas tree, which he is now using to construct a new lodge on the Bronx River.

Beavers were once widespread throughout the region, but were wiped out due to fur trapping.

José, named for tireless Bronx River champion Congressman José E. Serrano, was initially spotted at the zoo in early 2007. After building a lodge on the zoo grounds, José eventually moved upriver to the New York Botanical Garden in the summer of 2007 and lived there for several months before vanishing to parts unknown. Then last week, he was spotted at the Bronx Zoo nibbling on a large tree he had just cut down along the Bronx River.

“José has come home for the holidays and we couldn’t be happier,” said Bronx Zoo Director Jim Breheny. “We are delighted to have him back at the zoo and we wish him a wonderful holiday season and a Happy New Year on the Bronx River.”

The return of José is testimony to the extensive clean-up efforts spearheaded by Congressman Serrano, along with the Wildlife Conservation Society, and local groups including the Bronx River Alliance. Congressman Serrano helped secure $14.5 million in federal grants for the Bronx River's restoration since 2001, which have been used for river restoration and education efforts.

"José the Beaver may have started out in life as an upstater, but he’s turning into a Bronxite like the rest of us—tough as nails. Instead of heading to Florida for the winter, he’s coming home to the Bronx River. Like his neighbors, no matter what life throws at him, he keeps on going. Now let's hope that he finds a mate and starts a family," said Congressman Serrano.

Linda R. Cox, Executive Director of the Bronx River Alliance and Bronx River Administrator for NYC Parks & Recreation, said: “All the work we’ve done to reclaim the river is paying off. Everyone who has helped to plant a tree or investigate river conditions or clean up riverside trash should feel proud today – we’ve made José welcome in the Bronx.”

The beaver is best known as one of nature’s great engineers, able to alter its environment by felling large trees with its powerful gnawing teeth and through the construction of dams and lodges, which provide additional habitat for other species and serve to purify running water through the removal of silt.

Historically, the beaver was central to the founding of New Amsterdam, with beaver skins being the colony’s chief commodity and export. During 1626, when the Dutch purchased the island of Manhattan from Native Americans, traders shipped 7,246 beaver pelts back to the Netherlands. By 1671 (with the city renamed New York by the English), the trade in beaver skins climbed to 80,000 skins annually. Beaver pelts were even used as currency, with a single skin representing about 16 guilders. The central role of the beaver in New York City’s history is featured on the city’s official seal. Just one block south of the New York Stock Exchange in Manhattan is Beaver Street, another vestige of the rodent’s impact on the city’s founders.

In pre-colonial America, beavers in North America were thought to number more than 60 million. By 1800, they had completely vanished in the United States east of the Mississippi; by 1930, the beaver was near extinction and in need of protection. Today, the beaver has rebounded in much of its traditional range.


The Wildlife Conservation Society saves wildlife and wild places worldwide. We do so through science, global conservation, education and the management of the world's largest system of urban wildlife parks, led by the flagship Bronx Zoo. Together these activities change attitudes towards nature and help people imagine wildlife and humans living in harmony. WCS is committed to this mission because it is essential to the integrity of life on Earth. Visit: www.wcs.org


Special Note to the Media: If you would like to guide your readers or viewers to a web link where they can make donations in support of helping save wildlife and wild places, please direct them to: www.wcs.org/donation


Contact
Lind Corcoan: (1-718-220-5182; lcorcoran@wcs.org
John Delaney: (1-718-220-3275; jdelaney@wcs.org)