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How bringing back lost species revives ecosystems

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How bringing back lost species revives ecosystems


Washington, December 1, 2022 - Scientists often study the grim impacts of losing wildlife to hunting, habitat destruction and climate change. But what happens when endangered animals are brought back from the brink?


Research has shown restoring so-called “keystone” species — those with an outsized impact on their environment — is vital for the health of ecosystems, and can come with unexpected benefits for humans.


Here are some notable examples from North America.


Wolves


Few species evoke the American wild as much as wolves.


Though revered by Indigenous communities, European colonists who arrived in the 1600s embarked on widespread extermination campaigns through hunting and trapping.


By the mid-20th century, fewer than a thousand gray wolves were left in the contiguous United States, down from at least a quarter million before colonisation.


Extinction was averted in the 1970s when lawmakers passed the Endangered Species Act, helping revive the apex predator in parts of its former range.


Then, in the mid-1990s, the government took wolves from Canada and reintroduced them to Yellowstone National Park.


This generated a wealth of data that scientists are still working to understand.


The new arrivals kept elk numbers down, preventing them from over-browsing vegetation that provides material for birds to build nests and beavers to build dams — a phenomenon known as a trophic cascade.


The recovered vegetation helped stop soil erosion into rivers, changing their course by reducing meandering.


While building their dams, the beavers also create deep ponds that juvenile fish and frogs need to survive.


When they embark on hunts, wolves focus on weak and diseased prey, ensuring survival of the fittest.


A recent paper even found that wolves brought back in the midwestern state of Wisconsin kept deer away from roads, reducing collisions with cars.


Amaroq Weiss, a biologist and senior wolf advocate for the Center for Biological Diversity compared ecosystems to tapestries, “and when we take out some of the threads, we weaken that tapestry,” she said.


It’s thought there are now more than 6,000 gray wolves in the contiguous United States. The main threat is legalised hunting in some states.


Buffalo


The story of the American buffalo — also known as bison — is inextricably linked to the dark history of the early United States.


From an estimated 30 million, their number plummeted to just hundreds by the late 19th century as the US government sought to wipe out plains tribe Indians whose way of life depended on the animal.


“It was an intentional genocide to remove the buffalo, to the remove the Indians and force them onto reservations,” Cody Considine of The Nature Conservancy (TNC) said.


Buffalo, he explained, are an integral part of TNC’s efforts to re-establish prairies in the Nachusa Grasslands of Illinois.


The buffalo, who were introduced there in 2014 and now number around a hundred, favour eating grass over flowering plants and legumes, which in turn allows a variety of birds, insects and amphibians to flourish.


“Some of these species without that grazing simply just disappear off the landscape due to the high competition of the grasses,” added Considine.


Sea otters


As the dominant predator of marine nearshore environments, sea otters play a hugely important role in their ecosystem.


Historically they spanned from Baja California up the West Coast up to Alaska, Russia and northern Japan, but hunting for fur in the 1700s and 1800s decimated their numbers, which were once up to 300,000.


They were thought for a while to have been completely exterminated off California, but a small surviving population of around 50 helped them partially recover to some 3,000 today. — AFP


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