Beavers Announce Their Presence with Farts

(Who knew I was part-beaver?)

A beaver in Cornwall recently achieved unexpected internet fame—not for building a dam or swimming in a stream, but for farting on camera.

The moment, captured on a night vision wildlife cam at Helman Tor Nature Reserve near St Austell, quickly turned heads.

But according to experts, the noisy toot may serve a more serious purpose in the beaver world.

Lauren Jasper, a beaver officer with the Cornwall Wildlife Trust, explained that the flatulence might be linked to scent-marking behavior. Beavers possess a gland near their tails that secretes castoreum, an oily substance used to mark territory. Jasper believes the expulsion of gas could have accompanied this scent-marking process, helping the beaver communicate its presence to others in the area.

“We set out camera traps hoping to catch footage of their natural behaviors—things like grooming, swimming, and dam-building,” Jasper told What’s The Jam.

“But what really stood out was the sound of a beaver breaking wind. It gave us all a good laugh.”

Beavers, once extinct in the UK, have been gradually reintroduced to the wild as part of ongoing conservation efforts. Their impact on ecosystems is significant—they’re considered “ecosystem engineers” for good reason. By constructing dams and creating wetlands, they help manage water flow, reduce the risk of flooding, and provide vital habitats for other wildlife.

“The wild release of beavers is a huge step toward restoring natural landscapes,” Jasper said. “They improve water quality and create diverse habitats. Their return marks a major milestone for nature’s recovery.”

While the viral video might elicit chuckles, it also draws attention to the critical role beavers play in rewilding efforts across the UK. Conservationists hope their return will support a more sustainable, biodiverse future.

In the meantime, the Cornwall Wildlife Trust can add “beaver fart caught on camera” to their growing list of footage showcasing the quirky charm—and ecological importance—of these once-vanished mammals.

Would You Wear a Device to Study Your Farts?

Researchers at the University of Maryland have created a wearable fart-tracking device, and yes, it does exactly what it sounds like. The tiny gadget clips onto your underwear and records every time you pass gas. The goal is to help scientists finally answer a surprisingly complicated question: how often do people fart in a normal day?

While the concept might sound like a punchline, researchers say the project is actually serious medical science. Right now, there is no clear baseline for what counts as a “healthy” amount of intestinal gas. Doctors often rely on patients to self-report their symptoms, which can be… unreliable.

One of the physicians involved in the research explained that more than one in five people say they experience excess gas, but there has never been an objective way to measure it.

That is where the new wearable device comes in. By collecting real data, scientists hope to better understand digestive health and what “normal” really looks like.

The device itself is about the size of a nickel and designed to be worn discreetly. Volunteers simply clip it onto their underwear and go about their day while it logs each, well, emission. Participants in the study are asked to wear it for three days so researchers can gather enough data to analyze patterns.

The effort is now expanding across the country through a project called the Human Flatus Atlas, which is collecting data from volunteers nationwide. The idea is to build the most comprehensive dataset ever assembled on human gas production. If that sounds like a weird research project, you are not alone, but the scientists involved are genuinely excited about what they might learn.

Early results have already shown that the range varies widely from person to person. Some participants pass gas as few as four times per day. Others have recorded up to 175 in a single day, which averages out to roughly one every eight minutes.

For anyone worried about where they fall on the spectrum, the researchers say the study is still in its early stages. Right now, they are simply gathering data and trying to understand how much variation exists.

The lead doctor behind the project says that uncertainty is part of what makes the research so exciting. As he put it, exploring the unknown is where some of the most interesting discoveries happen.

Even if those discoveries happen to be about farts.

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