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            Abstract Beavers (Castor canadensis) are rapidly colonizing the North American Arctic, transforming aquatic and riparian tundra ecosystems. Arctic tundra may respond differently than temperate regions to beaver engineering due to the presence of permafrost and the paucity of unfrozen water during winter. Here, we provide a detailed investigation of 11 beaver pond complexes across a climatic gradient in Arctic Alaska, addressing questions about the permafrost setting surrounding ponds, the influence of groundwater inputs on beaver colonization and resulting ponds, and the change in surface water and aquatic overwintering habitat. Using field measurements, in situ dataloggers, and remote sensing, we evaluate permafrost, water quality, pond ice phenology, and physical characteristics of impoundments, and place our findings in the context of pond age, local climate, permafrost setting, and the presence of perennial groundwater inputs. We show beavers are accelerating the effects of climate change by thawing permafrost adjacent to ponds and increasing liquid water during winter. Beavers often exploited perennial springs in discontinuous permafrost, and summertime water temperatures at spring‐fed (SF) beaver ponds were roughly 5°C lower than sites lacking springs (NS). Late winter liquid water was generally present at pond complexes, although liquid water below seasonal ice cover was shallow (5–82 cm at SF and 5–15 cm at NS ponds) and ice was thick (median: 85 cm). Water was less acidic at SF than NS sites and had higher specific conductance and more dissolved oxygen. We estimated 2.4 dams/km of stream at sites on the recently colonized (last ~10 years) Baldwin Peninsula and 7.4 dams/km on the Seward Peninsula, where beavers have been present longer (~20+ years) and groundwater‐surface water connectivity is more common. Our study highlights the importance of climatic and physiographic context, especially permafrost presence and groundwater inputs, in determining the characteristics of the Arctic beaver pond environment. As beavers continue their expansion into tundra regions, these characteristics will increasingly represent the future of aquatic and riparian Arctic ecosystems.more » « lessFree, publicly-accessible full text available September 28, 2026
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            Burrowing species rely on subterranean and subnivean sites to fulfill important life-history and behavioral processes, including predator avoidance, thermoregulation, resting, and reproduction. For these species, burrow architecture can affect the quality and success of such processes, since characteristics like tunnel width and chamber depth influence access by predators, thermal insulation, and energy spent digging. Wolverines (Gulo gulo) living in Arctic tundra environments dig burrows in snow during winter for resting sites and reproductive dens, but there are few published descriptions of such burrows. We visited 114 resting burrows and describe associated architectural characteristics and non-snow structure. Additionally, we describe characteristics of 15 reproductive den sites that we visited during winter and summer. Although many resting burrows were solely excavated in snow, most incorporated terrain structures including cliffs, talus, river shelf ice, thermokarst caves, and stream cutbanks. Burrows typically consisted of a single tunnel leading to a single chamber, though some burrows had multiple entrances, branching tunnels, or both. Tunnels in resting burrows were shorter than those in reproductive dens, and resting chambers were typically located at the deepest part of the burrow. Reproductive dens were associated with snowdrift-forming terrain features such as streambeds, cutbanks on lake edges, thermokarst caves, and boulders. Understanding such characteristics of Arctic wolverine resting and reproductive structures is critical for assessing anthropogenic impacts as snowpack undergoes climate-driven shifts.more » « less
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