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Interior Wildlife Rehabilitation Society in B.C. developing framework for beaver translocation

The pilot uses tagging, cameras and field scorecards to track two rehabilitated beavers and test a process officials say could guide future relocations.

  • The Interior Wildlife Rehabilitation Society successfully translocated two orphaned beavers, Nelson and Tina, to a new Okanagan wetland habitat; monitoring data confirms the pair remains at the site a week and a half after release.
  • Nelson and Tina arrived at the Summerland facility in 2024 as orphaned kits, requiring two years of rehabilitation after they were found separately wandering outside a wetland.
  • Collaborating with Westbank First Nation and Ntityix Resources, the society assessed the site using a Beaver Restoration Assessment tool, while researchers track the beavers with Passive Integrated Transponder tags and remote cameras.
  • Eva Hartmann, founder of the Interior Wildlife Rehabilitation Society, noted that current government policy lacks a framework for individual wildlife relocation, complicating the translocation process.
  • By successfully monitoring Nelson and Tina, the society hopes to provide a scalable relocation model reflecting a shared commitment with First Nations to steward the land and support watershed health.
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Kelowna Capital News broke the news in Kelowna, Canada on Monday, June 22, 2026.
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