The North American river otter is found throughout North America, inhabiting inland waterways and coastal areas in Canada, the
Pacific Northwest, the
Atlantic states, and states on the
Gulf of Mexico. They also inhabit the forested regions near the
Pacific coast in North America. The species is also present throughout Alaska, including the
Aleutian Islands, and the north slope of the
Brooks Range. Urbanization and pollution, though, have resulted in a reduction in the otters' range in the United States. and especially in the
Midwestern United States. Since their reintroduction to Kentucky in the early 1990s, the otters have recovered to the point that a trapping season was implemented in 2006, and the species is now found in all of the state's major waterways. In 2010, the Colorado Department of Wildlife reported the river otter, reintroduced to the state in the 1980s, was "thriving" and recommended its protection status be reconsidered. In late 2012, a river otter nicknamed Sutro Sam took up residence around the former site of the
Sutro Baths in
San Francisco, the first river otter sighting in that city since the 1950s. North American river otters occupy all Canadian provinces and territories, except until recently,
Prince Edward Island. In
Minnesota, otter populations have rebounded due to reintroduction efforts in the 1980s, improvements in water quality, habitat restoration, and harvest regulation. While river otters are most common in northern Minnesota, they can be seen in urban areas including the
Twin Cities. Historical records indicate North American river otters were once populous throughout most major drainages in the continental United States and Canada prior to European settlement. North America's largest populations were found in areas with an abundance and diversity of aquatic habitats, such as coastal marshes, the
Great Lakes region, and
glaciated areas of
New England. In addition,
riverine habitats in interior regions supported smaller otter populations. In Mexico, North American river otters lived in the
Rio Grande and
Colorado River Deltas. Although commonly called a "river otter", the North American river otter is found in a wide variety of aquatic habitats, both freshwater and coastal marine, including lakes, rivers, inland wetlands, coastal shorelines, marshes, and estuaries. It can tolerate a great range of temperature and elevations. Aquatic life ties them almost exclusively to permanent watersheds. Their main requirements are a steady food supply and easy access to a body of water, but they are sensitive to pollution and disappear from tainted areas. Like other otters, the North American river otter lives in a holt, or den, constructed in the burrows of other animals, or in natural hollows, such as under a log or in riverbanks. An entrance, which may be under water or above ground, leads to a nest chamber lined with leaves, grass, moss, bark, and hair. ==Behavior==