Table 1.
Summary list of taxa considered for tropical rewilding, with descriptions of the factors considered in the case studies
Taxon | Previous range | Current range | Taxonomy | IUCN status and reference | Habitat | Ecological role | Reason for decline | Available stock | Costs/Risks | Benefits | Priority sites | Other comments |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Giant tortoises | Mainland Asia to Fiji | None | Meiolaniidae (several extinct fossil species endemic to multiple island groups/regions) | Extinct | Wide variety, rainforest to grassland and woodland | Seed dispersal, maintain vegetation heterogeneity | Hunting, invasive mammals, climate change | Taxon substitutions available from Galapagos Islands | May spread invasive plants, need to control rats | Partial ecological restoration, ecotourism | Uninhabited Pacific islands | Indian island reintroductions successful |
Long-beaked echidna | New Guinea, mainland Australia | New Guinea | Zaglossus bruijnii, Zaglossu sbartoni, Zaglossus attenboroughi | All species critically endangered (Leary et al. 2008a,b,c) (Leary et al. 2008a,b,c) | Subalpine, rain forest | Soil turnover, invertebrate feeder | Hunting and habitat loss | Very limited populations in zoos and New Guinea | None known | Species security | Protected Australian tropical rainforest | |
Tasmanian devil | Mainland Australia, Tasmania | Tasmania | Sarcophilus harrisii, 1 or 2 fossil species | Endangered (Hawkins et al. 2008) | Forest, moorlands, grass/woodlands | Scavenger with hunting ability | Hunting, disease, climate change, vehicles | Successful captive breeding programs, zoos | Species security, suppress feral carnivores | Mainland Australia | Captive breeding programs already successful on mainland | |
Elephants and stegodons | China to Timor | China, India, Borneo | Elephas maximus, multiple extinct species of Elephas, Palaeoloxodon, and Stegodon | Endangered and extinct (Choudhury et al. 2008) | Forest and grasslands | Seed dispersal, maintain vegetation heterogeneity | Hunting, habitat loss, climate change | Many captive elephants available | Human-elephant conflict | Dispersal of megafaunal fruits, ecotourism, national pride | Large protected forest areas in Holocene range | Individual elephants successfully released in several areas |
Orangutans | South China to Java | Borneo and Sumatra | Pongo abelii Pongo pygmaeus unknown fossil spp. | Pongo abelii critically endangered; Pongo pygmaeus endangered (Ancrenaz et al. 2008; Singleton et al. 2008) | Forests, including degraded areas | Seed dispersal | Habitat loss, hunting, climate change | Breed well in captivity, captured from deforested areas and confiscated pets | Human conflict | Ecotourism, seed dispersal, species security, individual welfare | Large protected areas in Borneo, Sumatra, maybe Peninsular Malaysia | Small scale reintroductions in historic range already underway. |
Calamian hog deer | Palawan | Calamianes Islands | Axis calamianensis | Endangered (Oliver et al. 2008) | Grasslands, open woodland and secondary forest | Browser, maintenance of environmental heterogeneity | Hunting, human settlement and agricultural expansion | Limited wild populations | Human predation | Species security, game animal | Protected areas in Palawan | |
Tapir | South China to Java | Indochina | Tapirus indicus | Endangered (Lynam et al. 2008) | Primary and secondary forest | Browsing/seed dispersal | Loss of habitat, hunting | Bred in captivity | Human predation | Species security | Borneo | |
Rhinoceroses | South China to Sundaand Luzon | India, Indochina, Java, Sumatra Borneo | Rhinoceros unicornis, Rhinoceros sondaicus, Dicerorhinus sumatrensis | Rhinoceros unicornisvulnerable (extinct from region considered); Rhinoceros sondaicus criticallyendangered; Dicerorhinus sumatrensis critically endangered (van Strien et al. 2008a,b; Talukdar et al. 2008) | Grasslands, primary forest | Grazers, browsers, seed dispersal | Hunting, | Indian available, Sumatran, Javan probably not | Possible human-wildlife conflict | Species security, ecological restoration | Well- protected forest | |
Tiger | Mainland Asia to Bali | Siberia, Sumatra, India, Indochina | Panther atigris 3 subspecies extinct | Endangered (Chundawat et al. 2011) | Mixed grass/woodland, rain forest | Apex predator | Hunting | Breeds well in captivity | Human-tiger conflict, need large prey populations | Restoration of predation, national pride, ecotourism | Large protected areas in SE Asia | Successful reintroduction in India |