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![]() by Staff Writers Amsterdam, Netherlands (SPX) Oct 24, 2018
Urbanisation, biodiversity loss, climate change: just some of the worldwide problems 'rewilding' - i.e. restoring food chains by returning 'missing' species to the landscape - can help tackle. Researcher Liesbeth Bakker (NIOO-KNAW) has edited a theme issue of the world's oldest life sciences journal, Phil Trans B, on rewilding, together with a Danish expert. The issue is now available online. When animals become extinct or disappear from an area, their unique role in nature is often lost. "There is increasing evidence that this global wildlife loss does not only imply the loss of charismatic animals, but also the functions they have in ecosystems", argues ecologist Liesbeth Bakker. The consequences can be disastrous. Wildfires, for instance, have been an increasingly serious problem: without large herbivores to eat the plant material more of it remains, meaning more 'fuel' for such fires. "Since the world-wide expansion of modern humans began", explains Bakker, "humans have overexploited large vertebrates. From the Late Pleistocene extinctions of terrestrial megafauna to the current poaching of elephants and rhinos."
From debate to data An example of the ripple-effect caused by trophic rewilding is the reintroduction of wolves in Yellowstone National Park in the United States in the 1990s, which is even said to have changed the course of some rivers. The wolves brought down the deer/elk population, river banks suffered less erosion, and with the rivers fixed in their course more biodiversity-rich pools formed. The story has become part of the rather romantic and fashionable image attached to rewilding. But while plenty of people may dabble or express opinions, "scientific data on the effects of explicit rewilding efforts have until now remained scarce", says Bakker. The theme issue of Phil Trans B which she and Danish researcher Jens-Christian Svenning (University of Aarhus) have guest-edited is meant to change that.
Elk and bison Other examples demonstrate a similarly positive impact. Replacing ruminant livestock with non-ruminant wildlife will reduce the emission of methane - a greenhouse gas - in rangeland farming, beavers can enhance wetland plant diversity, and re-introductions of native carnivores can be an effective method for suppressing invasive carnivores and invasive herbivores. Bakker adds: "Climate change doesn't form an impediment to the reintroduction of large animals in most cases. In the Netherlands, for instance, species such as the European bison and the elk feel right at home." She hopes rewilding will become an increasingly 'transdisciplinary' field, in which scientific and practical applications keep pace with each other and there's room for ecology, sociology, geography and economics.
Successful recipe Altered land-use - e.g. providing more space for rivers to follow their natural temporal and spatial dynamics - plays an important role in recipes for successful rewilding. So does scale. "Generally, it emerges that large-scale trophic rewilding produces the best results, whereas in human-dominated, fragmented landscapes a certain level of management of ecosystems may still be needed." But even under these circumstances, concludes Bakker, "a gradual increase in naturalness of ecosystems over time is achievable." And that's even true for the Netherlands, which despite its small size and issues of overpopulation and overexploitation continues to be one of the trailblazers for rewilding.
Research Report: 'Trophic rewilding: consequences for ecosystems under global change'
![]() ![]() S.Africa divers risk all to poach marine delicacies for China diners Cape Town (AFP) Oct 19, 2018 One Saturday night in August, Deurick van Blerk, 26, climbed into his small boat off the coast of Cape Town on another of his illegal fishing expeditions. He never returned. Investigators are looking into allegations by fellow divers and his family that he was murdered, shot by a special task force during an anti-poaching operation in an increasingly violent battle between South African authorities and illegal hunters of abalone shellfish and rock lobster. Abalone is a delicacy prized in Hong Ko ... read more
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