Rewilding Lite: Using Traditional Domestic Livestock to Achieve Rewilding Outcomes DOI Open Access
Iain J. Gordon, F. Javier Pérez‐Barbería, Adrian D. Manning

et al.

Sustainability, Journal Year: 2021, Volume and Issue: 13(6), P. 3347 - 3347

Published: March 18, 2021

The vision of rewilding is to return ecosystems a “natural” or “self-willed” state with trophic complexity, dispersal (and connectivity) and stochastic disturbance in place. concept gaining traction, particularly Europe where significant land abandonment has taken place recent years. However, reality, the purest form (Rewilding Max) constrained by number context-specific factors whereby it may not be possible restore native species that part structure ecosystem if they are extinct (for example, mammoths, Mammuthus spp., aurochs, Bos taurus primigenius). In addition, populations/communities herbivores/predators able survive acceptable public small scale projects close areas high human density agricultural land. Therefore, restoration natural complexity regimes within requires careful consideration broader conservation needs society met. Here we highlight importance herbivory as key factor rewilding. We argue use suite livestock species, particular traditional breeds, offers opportunity, under both sharing/sparing strategies, reinstate more but still retain option for management interventions Lite). It will even gain economic returns (ecotourism, sale products) from these systems, which make them private landowners. develop our case based on advantages using landraces versus de-domestication implementation eco-shepherding tool fine mosaics agriculture/natural patches. If this approach adopted, then larger can given over conservation, because potential benefits spaces engagement farmers practices closer their traditions.

Language: Английский

Fire and biodiversity in the Anthropocene DOI
Luke T. Kelly, Katherine M. Giljohann, Andrea Duane

et al.

Science, Journal Year: 2020, Volume and Issue: 370(6519)

Published: Nov. 20, 2020

Fire's growing impacts on ecosystems Fire has played a prominent role in the evolution of biodiversity and is natural factor shaping many ecological communities. However, incidence fire been exacerbated by human activity, this now affecting habitats that have never prone or adapted. Kelly et al. review how such changes are already threatening species with extinction transforming terrestrial discuss trends causing regimes. They also consider actions could be taken conservationists policy-makers to help sustain time changing activity. Science , issue p. eabb0355

Language: Английский

Citations

469

A unified framework for plant life‐history strategies shaped by fire and herbivory DOI
Sally Archibald, Gareth P. Hempson, Caroline E. R. Lehmann

et al.

New Phytologist, Journal Year: 2019, Volume and Issue: 224(4), P. 1490 - 1503

Published: June 9, 2019

Fire and herbivory both remove aboveground biomass. Environmental factors determine the type intensity of these consumers globally, but traits plants can also alter their propensity to burn degree which they are eaten. To understand plant life-history strategies associated with fire we need describe response effect functional traits, how sort within communities, along resource gradients, across evolutionary timescales. herbivore generally considered separately, there advances made in understanding that relate herbivory, vice versa. Moreover, interact: presence one consumer affects other. Here, present a unifying conceptual framework enable tolerance persistence herbivory. Using grasses as an example, discuss flammability tolerance, palatability, grazing might organize themselves ecosystems exposed consumers, have evolved reference other strong selective processes, like aridity. Our be used predict diversity species under different regimes.

Language: Английский

Citations

146

The role of large wild animals in climate change mitigation and adaptation DOI Creative Commons
Yadvinder Malhi, Tonya A. Lander, Elizabeth le Roux

et al.

Current Biology, Journal Year: 2022, Volume and Issue: 32(4), P. R181 - R196

Published: Feb. 1, 2022

Language: Английский

Citations

122

Trophic rewilding can expand natural climate solutions DOI
Oswald J. Schmitz, Magnus Sylvén, Trisha B. Atwood

et al.

Nature Climate Change, Journal Year: 2023, Volume and Issue: 13(4), P. 324 - 333

Published: March 27, 2023

Language: Английский

Citations

104

Impacts of large herbivores on terrestrial ecosystems DOI Open Access
Robert M. Pringle, Joel O. Abraham, T. Michael Anderson

et al.

Current Biology, Journal Year: 2023, Volume and Issue: 33(11), P. R584 - R610

Published: June 1, 2023

Language: Английский

Citations

98

Trophic rewilding as a restoration approach under emerging novel biosphere conditions DOI
Jens‐Christian Svenning, Robert Buitenwerf, Elizabeth le Roux

et al.

Current Biology, Journal Year: 2024, Volume and Issue: 34(9), P. R435 - R451

Published: May 1, 2024

Language: Английский

Citations

32

Shifting baselines and the forgotten giants: integrating megafauna into plant community ecology DOI Creative Commons
Skjold Alsted Søndergaard, Camilla Fløjgaard, Rasmus Ejrnæs

et al.

Oikos, Journal Year: 2025, Volume and Issue: unknown

Published: Feb. 5, 2025

The extensive, prehistoric loss of megafauna during the last 50 000 years led early naturalists to build founding theories ecology based on already‐degraded ecosystems. In this article, we outline how large herbivores affect community ecology, with a special focus plants, through changes selection, speciation, drift, and dispersal, thereby directly impacting ecosystem diversity functionality. However, attempts quantify effects processes are markedly scarce in past contemporary studies. We expect is due shifting baseline syndrome, where ecologists omit now‐missing extinct, when designing experiments theoretical models, despite evidence that shaped physical structure, biogeochemistry, species richness studied systems. Here, can be incorporated into central models integrate megaherbivore theory ecology. As anthropogenic impacts climate nutrient levels continue, further warping ecological disconnecting distributions from optimal conditions, importance quantifying herbivore functionality, such as facilitation dispersal coexistence, increases. Our findings indicate current scientific attention disproportionate their habitat structure evolutionary trajectories, well role play restoring diverse resilient

Language: Английский

Citations

2

Introduced herbivores restore Late Pleistocene ecological functions DOI Open Access
Erick J. Lundgren, Daniel Ramp, John Rowan

et al.

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, Journal Year: 2020, Volume and Issue: 117(14), P. 7871 - 7878

Published: March 23, 2020

Large-bodied mammalian herbivores dominated Earth's terrestrial ecosystems for several million years before undergoing substantial extinctions and declines during the Late Pleistocene (LP) due to prehistoric human impacts. The decline of large led widespread ecological changes loss their functions, as driven by unique combinations traits. However, recently, humans have significantly increased herbivore species richness through introductions in many parts world, potentially counteracting LP losses. Here, we assessed extent which introduced restore lost-or contribute novel-functions relative preextinction assemblages. We constructed multidimensional trait spaces using a database all extant extinct ≥10 kg known from earliest (∼130,000 ybp) present day. Extinction-driven contractions space been offset ∼39% globally. Analysis overlap reveals that assemblages with are overall more similar those than native-only This is because 64% rather within respective continents. Many capacity influence ecosystem processes, such wildfire shrub expansion drylands. Although long source contention, our findings indicate they may, part, functions reflective past human-driven extinctions.

Language: Английский

Citations

111

Trophic rewilding: impact on ecosystems under global change DOI Open Access
Elisabeth S. Bakker, Jens‐Christian Svenning

Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B Biological Sciences, Journal Year: 2018, Volume and Issue: 373(1761), P. 20170432 - 20170432

Published: Oct. 22, 2018

Language: Английский

Citations

105

Can large herbivores enhance ecosystem carbon persistence? DOI Creative Commons
J. A. Kristensen, Jens‐Christian Svenning, Katerina Georgiou

et al.

Trends in Ecology & Evolution, Journal Year: 2021, Volume and Issue: 37(2), P. 117 - 128

Published: Nov. 17, 2021

Language: Английский

Citations

103