| Literature DB >> 32318586 |
Carl-Gustaf Thulin1, Helena Röcklinsberg2.
Abstract
The recovery of many populations of large carnivores and herbivores in major parts of Europe and North America offers ecosystem services and opportunities for sustainable utilization of wildlife. Examples of services are hunting, meat, and skin, along with less invasive utilization such as ecotourism and wildlife spotting. An increasing number of studies also point out the ecosystem function, landscape engineering, and cascading effects of wildlife as values for human existence, biodiversity conservation, and ecosystem resilience. Within this framework, the concept of rewilding has emerged as a means to add to the wilderness through either supplementary release of wildlife species already present or reintroduction of species formerly present in a certain area. The latter involves translocation of species from other geographical areas, releases from captivity, feralization, retro-breeding, or de-domestication of breeds for which the wild ancestor is extinct. While all these initiatives aim to reverse some of the negative human impacts on life on earth, some pose challenges such as conflicts of interest between humans and wildlife in, for example, forestry, agriculture, traffic, or disease dynamics (e.g., zoonosis). There are also welfare aspects when managing wildlife populations with the purpose to serve humans or act as tools in landscape engineering. These welfare aspects are particularly apparent when it comes to releases of animals handled by humans, either from captivity or translocated from other geographical areas. An ethical values clash is that translocation can involve suffering of the actual individual, while also contributing to reintroduction of species and reestablishment of ecological functions. This paper describes wildlife recovery in Europe and North America and elaborates on ethical considerations raised by the use of wildlife for different purposes, in order to find ways forward that are acceptable to both the animals and humans involved. The reintroduction ethics aspects raised are finally formulated in 10 guidelines suggested for management efforts aimed at translocating wildlife or reestablishing wilderness areas.Entities:
Keywords: animal welfare; conservation; ecosystem service; ethics; reintroduction; restoration; rewilding
Year: 2020 PMID: 32318586 PMCID: PMC7146822 DOI: 10.3389/fvets.2020.00163
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Vet Sci ISSN: 2297-1769
Approximate minimum and current estimates of population numbers of a selection of wildlife species in Sweden.
| Moose ( | 1840 | Few (no estimates available) | ( |
| 2016 | 240,000 | ( | |
| Red deer ( | 1840 | <100 | ( |
| 2016 | 26,000 | ( | |
| Roe deer ( | 1840 | <100 | ( |
| 2016 | 300,000 | ( | |
| Wild boar ( | 1976 | 0 | ( |
| 2018 | 350,000 | H. Thurfjell, pers. comm. | |
| European beaver ( | 1922 | 0 | ( |
| 1995 | >100,000 | ( | |
| Wolf ( | 1970 | 0 | Swedish EPA |
| 2018 | 305 | Swedish EPA | |
| Brown bear ( | 1930 | 130 | Swedish EPA |
| 2013 | 2,800 | Swedish EPA | |
| Lynx ( | 1920 | Few (no estimates available) | Swedish EPA |
| 2018 | 1,200 | Swedish EPA | |
| Wolverine ( | 1960 | 100 | Swedish EPA |
| 2017 | 522 | Swedish EPA |
In addition to the large ungulates included below, 38,860 fallow deer (Dama dama) are shot on annual basis (.
Figure 1Game bags of ungulates in Sweden from 1939–2016 (The Swedish Association for Hunting and Wildlife Management—Wildlife Monitoring, www.vildata.se; 2018-07-27).