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Beaver could go extinct as Canadian national symbol

A Canadian senator has launched a campaign to replace the industrious beaver with the indomitable polar bear as Canada's national emblem, saying the incumbent is "a dentally defective rat."
A World Wildlife Fund photograph taken along the western shore of Hudson Bay shows a female polar bear with two cubs near Churchill Canada
A female polar bear huddles with two cubs near Churchill, Manitoba last November.Ho / World Wildlife Fund via Reuters
/ Source: Reuters

A Canadian senator has launched a campaign to replace the industrious beaver with the indomitable polar bear as Canada's national emblem, saying the incumbent is "a dentally defective rat."

Conservative Senator Nicole Eaton delivered her damning criticism in the Senate on Thursday, noting that the beavers wreak havoc on the dock at her waterfront cottage every summer.

"A country's symbols are not constant and can change over time," she said. "The polar bear, with its strength, courage, resourcefulness and dignity is perfect for the part."

The beaver became Canada's only official national animal in 1975. Trade in the beaver pelts, used to make fashionable fur hats, drove European expansion in North America in the 1600s and early 1700s.

Eaton said the ever-busy dambuilders are now a nuisance, but avoided mentioning another gnawing problem with the emblem: In modern times, its name is slang for female genitals.

Last year The Beaver, one of Canada's oldest magazines, re-christened itself Canada's History, complaining that its emails and newsletters were being blocked by Internet filters.

The magazine said market research showed younger Canadians and women were not interested in buying the publication because of its name.

As for Eaton's proposed replacement, Keith Stewart, a climate change campaigner with Greenpeace Canada, was skeptical.

"You have a Conservative senator proposing to replace the beaver with the polar bear as the symbol of Canada, yet her government's climate policy would appear to do everything possible to wipe out polar bears by the end of the century," he said.

Stewart said the debate was a distraction.

Eaton went out of her way to praise the country's treatment of polar bears.

"Contrary to unsubstantiated accusations, Canada is a world leader in its exemplary system of polar bear management," she said in the Senate. "Our approach features co-management involving aboriginal groups and government, and a strict system of quotas and tags."