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Rewilding A new approach to ecosystem management and habitat restoration Simon Oakes Philip Allan Publishers © 2016 Presentation outline • What is rewilding? • Key terms • The Environmental Kuznet curve • Ecosystem restoration, feedback and system changes • How ‘wolves changed rivers’ in Yellowstone • Rewilding initiatives in Europe • The rewilding debate Philip Allan Publishers © 2016 Key terms Keystone species An animal with a disproportionately large influence in relation to its small population size. Apex predators at the top of the food web, such as wolves, are often keystone species. Trophic cascade A series of ecological ‘knock-on effects’ which starts at the top Do you know what these terms mean? of a food chain. The reintroduction of carnivores reduces Click to reveal the definitions herbivore numbers, and so on. Ecosystem services Benefits humans gain from ecosystems, including estimates of economic value. Philip Allan Publishers © 2016 What is rewilding? The reintroduction of long-vanished apex species like wolves is the starting point. Nature is then left to ‘take its course’. Changes ripple through the food web as herbivore and autotroph populations are affected by the reintroduction of wolves or other species. This approach to management has ethical and economic advantages. Ethically, restoration can seem like ‘the right thing to do’ from viewpoints informed by religion and science alike. Economically, it may be cost-effective. Wolves control herbivore numbers and in turn protect vegetation from over-grazing. Philip Allan Publishers © 2016 In the absence of predators, herbivores may experience a ‘population explosion’. Uncontrolled growth of deer or rabbits causes vegetation loss and soil erosion. The reintroduction of carnivores mitigates these costly problems Environmental Kuznet curve This hypothesised relationship shows environmental improvement as national income rises above a certain value. Anti-pollution laws are strengthened. The growth of service and tourist industries not only means less pollution but also encourages restoration Low-income societies have a small ecological footprint prior to industrialisation. There is very little population growth or environmental damage Philip Allan Publishers © 2016 During industrialisation, environmental damage peaks. Law-making has not had time to catch up with rapid economic growth and there are insufficient pollution controls. Many people work in pollution-emitting industries. Agro-industry causes harm to biodiversity in rural areas Ecosystem restoration, feedback and system changes The feedback effects are not limited to ecosystems and food webs. Changes in animal numbers and behaviour affect the landscape too. Reintroduction of apex predator (grey wolf) Population reduction and behavioural change among herbivores (deer) Soil, slope and bankside stabilisation in river valleys Changing river processes and landforms (less meander movement) Philip Allan Publishers © 2016 Increased vegetation growth on floodplains now abandoned by deer How ‘wolves changed rivers’ in Yellowstone Wolves were reintroduced in 1995 to Yellowstone National Park in the USA after being absent for 70 years. Because there was nothing to hunt them, the number of deer had built up in Yellowstone Park during that time Frank Waßerführer/Fotolia Philip Allan Publishers © 2016 How ‘wolves changed rivers’ in Yellowstone In the past, many species were hunted to extinction without a full understanding of how this could affect ecosystem balance In Europe and the USA, removal of dangerous wolves and bears eradicated a risk to people and their cattle. But without carnivores, rabbit and deer populations quickly multiply in size. They eat all available vegetation, stripping the land bare, leading to soil erosion Despite efforts by humans to control them, the deer had managed to remove much of the vegetation in Yellowstone Philip Allan Publishers © 2016 How ‘wolves changed rivers’ in Yellowstone • The wolves also killed coyotes, and, as a result, the number of rabbits and mice began to rise, which meant more hawks, weasels, foxes and badgers. Ravens and bald eagles came down to feed on carrion (dead coyotes and deer) that the wolves left. Bears fed on it too and their population rose. The bears reinforced the impact of the wolves by killing more deer. • But while a trophic cascade was expected, the real surprise was how landform systems were affected. The wolves, even though they were few in number, radically changed the behaviour of the deer. The deer migrated away from the parts of the park where they could be trapped most easily, like the floodplain. Immediately, those places started to regenerate. In some areas, the height of the trees quintupled in just 6 years. Bare valley sides became a forest of aspens, willows and cottonwood. • In turn, the rivers began to meander less; there was less erosion, the channels narrowed and more pools and ripple sections formed. The regenerating forest stabilised the banks so that they collapsed less often, so the rivers become more fixed in their course. • The wolves, though small in number, transformed not just the ecosystem of the Yellowstone National Park but also its physical geography. • Hear the full story from George Monbiot at: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ysa5OBhXz-Q Philip Allan Publishers © 2016 Rewilding initiatives in the UK Norfolk and Cumbria (lynx) 1,300 years after Britain’s last lynx was killed, the Lynx UK Trust wants to bring it back, arguing that big cats reduce deer numbers and restore ecosystem balanc. Argyll, Scotland (beaver) Reintroduced beavers build river dams. These eventually drain to create meadows, thereby creating an important habitat for other species Isle of Mull, Scotland (whitetailed eagle) In the 1980s, a breeding programme reintroduced the white-tailed eagle after 70 years of decline. Sixteen pairs are now established on the island Isle of Arran, Scotland (seabed restoration) An example of marine rewilding, Scotland’s first nofishing zone was established in 2008. Lobsters, crabs, scallops and fish are all thriving in these ‘wild’ waters Philip Allan Publishers © 2016 The National Trust for Scotland has been able to argue that the beavers are ‘contributing to biodiversity, enhancing natural wetland processes, and promoting tourism’. Find out more at: www.rewildingbrit ain.org.uk/ The rewilding debate Rewilding is simply not possible or practical in many places. Farming unions have spoken out about farmers suffering financial loss from the reintroduction of beavers. The UK’s National Sheep Association is opposed to the lynx’s possible return. Ethical dilemmas arise too. In Holland, a rewilded area called Oostvaardersplassen attracted criticism because horses were left to die when food became scarce in winter. Animal rights groups objected to ‘nature taking its course’ there. They argued that rewilding is really a form of scientific experiment. Logically, the horses are not truly wild and so, under law, deserve humane treatment. Other critics ask: why is the end of the Pleistocene (around 14,000 years ago) used as the base line for rewilding? Further back, 115,000 years ago, the UK was home to elephants and rhinos. Why not make this the base line instead? Who has the power to make these decisions, and why? Philip Allan Publishers © 2016 Questions for discussion 1 Should predator species be reintroduced to the UK, given the risks attached? 2 Rewilding Europe aims to rewild 1 million hectares of land by 2020. Is this goal achievable and how can success be measured? 3 Is the right rewilding ‘base line’ being used? How would you feel about hill walking in a region where wolves, bears or big cats had been released? How safe would you be? Philip Allan Publishers © 2016 Who benefits most from the reintroduction of vanished predator species and who gains least? Can you make a financial case for rewilding? Further research Rewilding Britain website: http://www.rewildingbritain.org.uk/ Rewilding Europe project: https://www.rewildingeurope.com/ Guardian newspaper report on rewilding: www.tinyurl.com/p399ll9 Philip Allan Publishers © 2016 This resource is part of GEOGRAPHY REVIEW, a magazine written for A-level students by subject experts. To subscribe to the full magazine go to: http://www.hoddereducation.co.uk/geographyreview Philip Allan Publishers © 2015