Pixar’s Hoppers, released March 6, 2026, features a character named after Dr. Emily Fairfax—a real beaver ecologist from the University of Minnesota. The studio hired her as a paid science consultant, sent the art team into the field to study beaver habitats, and built the film’s wetland scenes around her research. That is not standard practice for animated films. It is a signal: climate-themed stories can no longer rely on animation alone. They must pass scientific muster.
Disney Bringing In a Beaver Ecologist Signals That Climate-Themed Films Can No Longer Rely on Animation Alone and Must Pass Scientific Muster
Fairfax is an ecohydrologist and assistant professor of geography. Her research shows that beavers are keystone animals that transform entire watersheds through dam construction, creating wetlands that support diverse ecosystems and protect against wildfires, drought, and floods. According to Laughing Place, her work demonstrated that beaver-influenced areas had 89% fire avoidance rates in major Western wildfires. Pixar discovered her after she gave a webinar on beaver-created ecosystems in 2020. The collaboration led to multiple consultations and field trips. The film incorporates genuine beaver science—King George sitting on his tail (real beavers do this because their spine extends into the tail), pond scenes that match real beaver wetlands with complex channels and pools. As the San Francisco Chronicle reported, Hoppers tackles climate change and habitat protection through its narrative about a young environmental activist who integrates into a beaver community to protect their forest habitat. The film is described as making it “cool to care” about environmental issues.
Pixar has used science consultants before—Adam Summers for Finding Nemo and Finding Dory, Stuart Sumida for Soul, Elizabeth Rega and Stuart Sumida for Strange World. But Hoppers is different. It is explicitly a climate film. Its protagonist, Mabel, is a 19-year-old environmental activist fighting a developer’s highway plan. The stakes are not just visual accuracy but narrative credibility. As Variety reported, “The Wild Robot” was 2024’s only Oscar-nominated animated film to pass a “Climate Change Reality Check” test by consulting firm Good Energy—suggesting that scientific accuracy in climate storytelling remains uncommon. Disney is closing that gap. By hiring Fairfax, Pixar is saying that climate stories must be grounded in real science or risk being dismissed as greenwashing.
The film has been well-received. NPR called it Pixar’s “liveliest thing to emerge from the company in years” and a “dam good time.” The Hollywood Reporter praised its “unhinged” eco-themed comedy. It achieved Pixar’s best Rotten Tomatoes rating in nine years. The science consultant is not a footnote—it is part of the pitch. Disney is betting that parents and educators will trust a film that can point to a real beaver expert in the credits.
What This Actually Means
Disney bringing in a beaver ecologist is an admission that animation alone is no longer enough for climate stories. Audiences are savvier. Critics are harsher. Greenwashing is called out. By hiring Fairfax and naming a character after her, Pixar is building credibility into the product. The trend is clear: climate-themed films that want to be taken seriously will need to pass the same bar that documentaries and journalism face. Hoppers is the proof of concept.
Background
Who is Dr. Emily Fairfax? Dr. Emily Fairfax is an ecohydrologist and assistant professor at the University of Minnesota. She studies beaver-created ecosystems and their role in wildfire resilience, drought mitigation, and habitat restoration. She served as a paid science consultant on Pixar’s Hoppers.
Sources
Twin Cities, MPR News, Laughing Place, San Francisco Chronicle, NPR, The Hollywood Reporter