2015
DOI: 10.1146/annurev-environ-102014-021406
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Rewilding: Science, Practice, and Politics

Abstract: Rewilding is being promoted as an ambitious alternative to current approaches to nature conservation. Interest is growing in popular and scientific literatures, and rewilding is the subject of significant comment and debate, outstripping scientific research and conservation practice. Projects and research are found the world over, with concentrations in Europe, North America, and on tropical islands. A common aim is to maintain, or increase, biodiversity, while reducing the impact of present and past human int… Show more

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Cited by 212 publications
(200 citation statements)
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“…In looking at even wild landscapes where megafauna are long gone, imagining such landscapes as recently teeming with elephants, sabertooths, and other giant herbivores and carnivores can yield fresh perspectives on contemporary ecosystem questions, ranging from the distribution of tropical savannas and grasslands, through the natural ranges and abundance of extant animals, to the response of high latitude systems to climate change. Whether megafaunal rewilding is appropriate, acceptable, practical, or not, such a perspective challenges our thinking about what kind of nature we seek to conserve or create (33,97,98).…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…In looking at even wild landscapes where megafauna are long gone, imagining such landscapes as recently teeming with elephants, sabertooths, and other giant herbivores and carnivores can yield fresh perspectives on contemporary ecosystem questions, ranging from the distribution of tropical savannas and grasslands, through the natural ranges and abundance of extant animals, to the response of high latitude systems to climate change. Whether megafaunal rewilding is appropriate, acceptable, practical, or not, such a perspective challenges our thinking about what kind of nature we seek to conserve or create (33,97,98).…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In parts of the world, societal changes have facilitated more or less spontaneous megafauna comebacks: e.g., brown bear (Ursus arctos) and wolf (Canis lupus) (95,96). Additionally, active restoration of the ecological function of wild megafauna is increasingly being debated and implemented under the concept of rewilding (33,97,98). Where and when megafaunal rewilding is appropriate or practical, and with what species, are the subjects of much discussion (33,(98)(99)(100).…”
Section: Practical Insights and Applications For The Anthropocenementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Thus, rather than interpreting wild and domesticated as two contrasting states of being, it may be preferable to consider wild and domesticated species as representing outcomes of a dynamic process of people-nature interactions, as proposed by Harris (1989, 1996). Recently, the process of re-wilding was introduced to characterize new approaches to recreate more naturalistic environments by stimulating autonomous ecological processes in degraded environments (Jorgensen 2015; Lorimer et al 2015; Van Maanen and Convery 2016). The new interest in wild forest products in Europe may therefore be conceived of as a new phase of biocultural dynamics involving the addition of the process of re-wilding to the long history of domestication.…”
Section: Wild Forest Products As a Biocultural Phenomenonmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Whereas the concept of domestication refers to the process of gradual intensification in people – nature interactions and artificialization of production systems, the concept of re-wilding refers to the de-intensification of these interactions and the reintroduction of more naturalness in ecologically degraded areas (Jorgensen 2015; Lorimer et al 2015; Van Maanen and Convery 2016). The concept emerged in the USA and Europe in response to growing concerns on the negative ecological impacts of agricultural production systems on rural landscapes.…”
Section: Wild Forest Products As a Biocultural Phenomenonmentioning
confidence: 99%
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