Looking for the legacy site? Click here
Illustration showing farmland transitioning to forested land
Written by: Challie Facemire
Illustrated by: Megan Joyce
Biodiversity: the variety of plants, animals, and all other life in an environment.
Ecosystem: a group of different plants and animals that live together and are dependent on the area in which they live.
Ecosystem process: the cycling of nutrients, energy, and other matter and gasses through an ecosystem... more
Extinction: the process of a species or group of animals becoming extinct (dying out).
Gene: a region of DNA that instructs the cell on how to build protein(s). As a human, you usually get a set of instructions from your mom and another set from your dad... more
Megafauna: large animals ... more
Pleistocene: a geological epoch that lasted somewhere between 2,580,000 to about 11,700 years ago, it fell between the Pliocene epoch and the Holocene epoch... more
Restore: bring back or reinstate, like bringing back animals or reinstating ecological processes.

Bringing Back the Wild Things

Bull elk climbing uphill in snow
A healthy bull elk in winter. Click for more detail.

Snow crunches under your feet and the wind whips around you, whistling through the tall pines. As you hike across a small island, you come to a clearing where tiny tree trunks two to three feet high stick out of the ground. These were little cedar trees, but they have been stripped of their branches and gnawed on. A cracking sound to your left breaks the silence and you jump; you turn and see a herd of skinny elk. They are in search of food, but there isn’t much left on the snowy island. The herd is too large to live off this land, and there are no wolves to help control their numbers. What if we brought back the wolves to make the land balanced and healthy again?

What is Rewilding?

Rewilding is bringing animals or plants back to an area from where they have disappeared. The point of this is to restore biodiversity and processes that have been lost in some ecosystems. For example: when bringing back wolves to an area that helps control some populations (like moose) and allows others to recover (like plants).

Placeholder
Ants, though small, are important contributors to ecosystems. Image by Kie-ker via Pixabay.

Ecosystems are healthy when they are home to biodiverse plants and animals. Each type of organism in an ecosystem helps keep the balance, from the smallest ant to the largest tree. When some types of plants and animals disappear from an ecosystem, the other plants and animals can suffer. If wolves disappear from a forest then there can be too many hooved animals like elk, which can damage the trees and rivers and drive out other animals, like beavers. Rewilding tries to bring back balance to make an area healthy again.

Bringing species back to a forest takes a lot of research and work. Scientists have to take many factors into account. They need to know if the particular species, like wolves, lived there before. They have to find out if there is a new animal that took the wolves’ spot, like coyotes or coywolves. Scientists also need to know which animals and plants are in the ecosystem and how they will react to the wolves. It’s also important to know if the food the wolves used to eat is still available in the forest. There are many other things scientists have to take into consideration as well, such as people's fear and anger toward animals like predators, and the costs of these projects.

Black Footed Ferret paused in grass and scrub brush.
The endangered black-footed ferret is an important small predator. Click for more detail. 

An area has three requirements to be able to support a re-introduction. These are: (1) large, protected reserves; (2) connectivity; and (3) keystone species. Large protected reserves are areas like National Parks where animals can find areas without people and cars. Connectivity means that animals are able to move from one reserve to another. This way, animals aren’t stuck in an area that is too small. Instead they can move from an area like a national park to a nearby national forest without crossing paths with many people. This is important to keep a variety of genes in the animal’s community. Connectivity is also important so that the animals can find enough food. Keystone species are important because they keep an area healthy and balanced. They are species that have a larger impact on the ecosystem than other species. They might provide resources to other species or keep numbers of other species in check.

Predators play a special role in many ecosystems, and they are often the keystone species. They are also usually the species that are re-introduced because people have tried to get rid of them in the past. However, other non-keystone species can be reintroduced as well. It depends on the needs of an area and what species are missing.

Types of Rewilding

Rewilding can be done in a few different ways, depending on what’s best for a specific area and the goals of the project. The most common type of rewilding is when land being used by humans is left alone and allowed to return to its natural state. This is called natural succession. It can also be called regeneration, recovery, or de-facto rewilding.

Grey wolf resting under a tree.
Wolves have been eliminated from many ecosystems. Image by Christels via Pixabay.

Another way is to add animals or plants to a forest or an area where they used to exist, like adding wolves to Isle Royale in the state of Michigan, in the USA. This is called reintroduction, or historical rewilding.

The third way is to restore species that have gone extinct, or to fill roles in the ecosystem that are currently empty. There are many different approaches to this type of rewilding. Scientists might restore species similar to the megafauna that went extinct in the late Pleistocene. The goal is to restore ecological and evolutionary functions that were lost when the original species died off roughly 13,000 years ago. This is called Pleistocene rewilding. Another approach proposes to use genetic technology to restore species like the woolly mammoth and return it to the landscape, an idea called “de-extinction.”


Howling wolf by Colfelly via Pixabay. 


You may need to edit author's name to meet the style formats, which are in most cases "Last name, First name."
https://askabiologist.asu.edu/explore/rewilding

Bibliographic details:

  • Article: Where the Rewilded Things Are
  • Author(s): Challie Facemire
  • Publisher: Arizona State University School of Life Sciences Ask A Biologist
  • Site name: ASU - Ask A Biologist
  • Date published: 24 Mar, 2020
  • Date accessed:
  • Link: https://askabiologist.asu.edu/explore/rewilding

APA Style

Challie Facemire. (Tue, 03/24/2020 - 11:55). Where the Rewilded Things Are. ASU - Ask A Biologist. Retrieved from https://askabiologist.asu.edu/explore/rewilding

American Psychological Association. For more info, see http://owl.english.purdue.edu/owl/resource/560/10/

Chicago Manual of Style

Challie Facemire. "Where the Rewilded Things Are". ASU - Ask A Biologist. 24 Mar 2020. https://askabiologist.asu.edu/explore/rewilding

MLA 2017 Style

Challie Facemire. "Where the Rewilded Things Are". ASU - Ask A Biologist. 24 Mar 2020. ASU - Ask A Biologist, Web. https://askabiologist.asu.edu/explore/rewilding

Modern Language Association, 7th Ed. For more info, see http://owl.english.purdue.edu/owl/resource/747/08/
Grey wolf howling in the woods.
Wolves once roamed most of North America. Now they are found primarily in protected areas, like National Parks, where they can't be killed so long as they stay in the park.

Be Part of
Ask A Biologist

By volunteering, or simply sending us feedback on the site. Scientists, teachers, writers, illustrators, and translators are all important to the program. If you are interested in helping with the website we have a Volunteers page to get the process started.

Donate icon  Contribute

Share this page