![Cover of]() Cover via Amazon
 Where The Wild Things Were from Conservation In Practice, a publication of the Society for Conservation Biology
Cover via Amazon
 Where The Wild Things Were from Conservation In Practice, a publication of the Society for Conservation Biology
This is not a new article, but still timely except for a few things that have been discovered since it was written in 2006 where I have entered a notation. I've also highlighted the sections that are pertinent to the issue of horses being North American natives - which everyone seems to 
know except those who wish to profit from 
not knowing. I decided to highlight these sections because this is a long - but interesting - read, and I've learned from experience that those who don't 
want to learn will not wade through a long piece to find something they don't want to see anyway. So, I decided to make seeing this information impossible to miss. "
Whatever you think about the "re-wilding" issue itself, you must admit, these top flight scientists certainly have 
no doubts about the horse as a native American species!
   
Feature
 Where the Wild Things Were
Where the Wild Things Were
  
THE RECENT NATURE PAPER proposing to bring cheetahs, lions, and  elephants to North America raised a wild rumpus. But are the critics  missing the point? 
By William Stolzenburg
January-March 2006 (Vol. 7, No. 1)
The conjured images were surreal, lions prowling Nebraska corn fields,  elephants stomping across North Dakota. From there the visions grew frightful, exotic and  dangerous beasts swarming the 
Great Plains, slaughtering livestock,  spreading disease, ruining rural livelihoods as far abroad as Africa.  When, last August, a group of 12 conservation-minded scientists and  scholars aired a provocative proposal in the prestigious journal 
Nature (1),  the journalists who reported it and the colleagues who publicly  pummeled it couldn’t help letting their imaginations run wild. Which was  at least part of the idea.
Under the audacious heading “Re-wilding North America,” the  paper’s authors—among them some heavyweights in the field of  conservation biology—called for restoring “large wild vertebrates into  North America,” meaning those that disappeared at the end of the last  ice age. In the two pithy pages that followed, those large wild  vertebrates were spelled out in the more-familiar terms of camels,  horses, tortoises, and—as if to make sure no one was nodding off in an  armchair—cheetahs, lions, and elephants. Yes, in the United States. For  real.
The paper was partly meant to jostle a conservation community  suspected of falling asleep at the wheel.  At that it succeeded.  In the  first week following publication, the two lead authors received more  than 1,000 letters and phone calls from three continents. They saw their  proposal aired on network TV and discussed in national newspapers and  magazines. Some of the comments were congratulatory, a good many of them  were disparaging, a handful of them were downright hateful.
But too few of the naysayers, to the authors’ disappointment,  offered much beyond wet-blanket dismissals. None seemed willing to  venture near the soul of their proposal. In their paper they had  politely pointed out that the 1492 arrival of Columbus—long considered  North America’s standard of ecological excellence—was in fact the  “discovery” of a continent already plundered of its greatest beasts. Why  not raise the standard, to that more glorious and decisive moment some  13,000 years ago, when people first set foot in North America? It was a  profoundly optimistic invitation—to elevate the very goal of  conservation—that somehow got muffled amid a chorus of scorn. Maybe it  was all just a misunderstanding arising from the little paper’s  herculean task of explaining such a giant vision in so few words.
Maybe the authors—who do indeed see a need for elephants and  lions one day to wander the plains of North America—had simply lost  their marbles. Or could it be that the would-be rewilders—in so nakedly  challenging the status quo of conservation—had unveiled a flaw too  fearsome to face?
***   
Whatever the reason, no one could say the rewilders hadn’t offered  fair warning. The idea of restoring America’s fauna to something more  closely resembling prehuman times—when sabertooths prowled and mammoths  thundered through places that would later be called Los Angeles and  Newark—has a far deeper history than its latest splash in 
Nature.  Paul S. Martin, a coauthor of the rewilding paper and an outspoken  paleoecologist from the University of Arizona, has been unabashedly  promoting such Pleistocene visions in print and in public lectures for  40 years. Even as the 
Nature bombshell was hitting the streets, a  book-length version of the rewilding proposal was quietly headed to  press in Martin’s magnum opus, 
Twilight of the Mammoths (2).    
Twilight is the autobiographical odyssey of Martin’s  renowned “overkill” hypothesis, which lays the brunt of the blame for  the late Pleistocene extinction—the abrupt disappearance of some 40  species of horses and camels, glyptodons and ground sloths, lions and  bears, mammoths and mastodons—in the spear-wielding hands of North  America’s first big-game hunters, the Clovis culture. Infused throughout  with Martin’s admiration for America’s missing megafauna, 
Twilight’s  concluding chapters are dedicated to their return. “I believe it is  time to take an approach that includes not only creatures traditionally  considered ‘at home on the range’ but also some of those not seen  roaming the Americas by any humans since the 
Clovis people,” writes  Martin. “The 
Bering Land Bridge should not be shut down forever in the  interest of imagined faunal purity.”
***   
Not everyone heard heresy in Martin’s Pleistocene preachings. In a 2004 is-sue of Conservation Biology,  Martin and Cornell doctoral candidate Josh Donlan published a paper  called “Role of ecological history in invasive species management and  conservation” (3). In it they prodded their colleagues to rethink more  seriously the pristine myth of 1492. Their paper was peppered with  Pleistocene ambitions: “In the process of returning the California  condor . . . to the Grand Canyon, should we also return the kinds of  animals the bird once fed on: equids, camelids, mountain goats, and  proboscideans?”    
Donlan’s advisor at Cornell was the evolutionary biologist Harry  Greene, by coincidence a friend and kindred spirit of Martin. Greene and  Donlan often found themselves wondering about rewilding and how such a  seemingly legitimate goal for conservation had apparently gone nowhere.  “Most people dismissed it as silliness,” says Greene. “The more we  talked about it, Josh and I decided it’s not silly. Let’s put together a  working group. Let’s thrash it out.”   
The two assembled an eclectic team of twelve—experts in  paleoecology, large mammals, community ecology, predator-prey dynamics,  invasive species, grassland ecology, the politics of conservation. Among  them, of course, was the chief messenger of overkill, Paul Martin.  There, too, was Michael Soulé, one of the spearheads of the modern  discipline of conservation biology; marine ecologist James Estes, whose  unveiling of the sea otter as a key architect of Pacific kelp forests  had become one of the classic studies in ecology; and Dave Foreman,  former congressional lobbyist and founder of the 
Rewilding Institute, a  think tank for restoring large carnivores to vacant niches of North  America.    
In September 2004, they gathered for a long weekend at Ted  Turner’s Ladder Ranch in the Chihuahuan Desert of New Mexico. Over  easels and PowerPoint and after-hours beers, they dissected the  rewilding idea and broke it down to its factual nuts and bolts, its  practical challenges and criticisms, its societal costs and benefits.    
The Ladder group agreed on several sobering premises: That  human influence had utterly pervaded the planet. That what qualifies for  wildness today is a paltry façade of the awesome Pleistocene bestiary  we stumbled upon only 13,000 years ago. That the difference between then  and now is at least partly, if not principally, our own doing and  therefore our duty to repair.
***   
Regardless of who or what was to blame, they concluded that the large  animals’ absence was to be ignored at great peril. Forests, grasslands,  and savannas had evolved in step with the Pleistocene megafauna. Their  soils had been turned by trampling hooves, their seeds widely ferried  and judiciously fertilized in herbivore dung. All but the very biggest  of those herbivores had in turn been shaped in body and habit by their  large predators. Were there no repercussions for such wholesale  megafaunal erasure? Reports from the field were already suggesting the  feared answer.    
There was northern Siberia, where about 10,000 years ago 1  million km2 of vibrant grasslands had suddenly vanished. They had been  replaced by infertile mossy tundra—a transformation that ecologist  Sergey Zimov attributes to the disappearance of a great menagerie of  Pleistocene grazers. Zimov and colleagues argue that the grassy Siberian  steppe that once fed musk oxen, mammoths, and wild horses was fed in  return by the megafauna. (4) Their manure fertilized the grasses, and  their hooves trampled the competing mosses.    
The legacy of the missing mammoths may run deeper still, to  the frozen ground. There, some 500 gigatons of carbon—more than twice  the tonnage stored in tropical forests—lies tenuously locked in ice. As  the climate now warms at breathtaking rates, Zimov foresees the  permafrost melting and those gigatons of carbon being released skyward,  feeding runaway greenhouse heating. It helps explain the urgency with  which Zimov has been leading a government-backed rewilding experiment in  Siberia. Grasslands maintain colder soils than moss-bound tundra. By  restocking the tundra with horses, musk oxen and bison, he is hoping to  win back the grasslands, to buy time against Siberia’s 500-gigaton time  bomb of carbon.     
Signs of megafauna importance have also been coming from the  sea. Most notoriously, there is an  ongoing collapse of marine mammal  populations in the North Pacific, quite possibly stemming from the  decimation of great whales (the ultimate megafauna) by industrial  whalers. This hypothesis, championed by Alan Springer and Jim Estes,  followed from corroborating lines of evidence. (5) The great whale’s  disappearance forced its chief predator, the killer whale, to seek  smaller game in the form of sea lions, seals, and sea otters, whose  numbers plummeted in stepwise fashion. From there, the ecological  cascade rumbled all the way to the bottom of the sea. As sea otters  disappeared, their prey proliferated. Sea urchins marched 
en masse,  mowing down coastal kelp forests across the Aleutians and reducing one  of the Bering Sea’s most productive ecosystems to barrens.   
The megafauna’s most shining endorsement is now on public  display in the dramatic greening of Yellowstone National Park under the  reinstated reign of the gray wolf. For 70 years following the wolf’s  extermination from the park, Yellowstone’s oases of aspens, cottonwoods,  and willows had been browsed to stubs by the world’s largest herd of  elk. Within five years of the wolves’ return in 1995, the elk were  running scared and willows were sprouting three meters high. With the  willows’ return, the beaver followed—from one colony before wolf  reintroduction to ten colonies at last count. With the new beaver ponds  have come more fish and with the streamside groves more songbirds. The  list of beneficiaries goes on, from ravens and grizzlies fattening on  wolf leftovers to the encouraging number of surviving pronghorn fawns  now that the lurking coyotes have been scattered by territorial wolves.  (6)    
These are part of a growing body of portents to the ecological  costs of doing nothing, not to mention the esthetic bankruptcy foreseen  in a world overrun with weeds. In short, the megafauna matters. Which  brought the Ladder 12 to a rather imposing quandary, that of  resuscitating a graveyard of deceased species.    
Their answer was, in a word, proxies—close relatives and  ecological equivalents that would serve as megafaunal stand-ins, that  might rekindle what the mass extinction had extinguished. The country  was already well stocked with potential candidates. Not too far from  where the Ladder 12 were sitting, some 77,000 large mammals were roaming  the Texas hill country within the expansive confines of game ranches.  Among them were camels, cheetahs, and myriad species of African  antelope. Surviving cousins of mammoths and mastodons were living in  zoos across the U.S., and there were some 16,000 working elephants in  Asia.    
Here was a means of not only restoring North America’s  megafauna but also providing a fail-safe for endangered megafauna of the  world. Wild Bactrian camels, on the verge of extinction in their last  holdout in the Gobi desert, might find new refuge in the prickly  scrublands of the Southwestern U.S.   
Here, also, was a way to essentially resume evolutionary  roles, wherein cage-bound cheetahs and lions might once again hone their  speed and wits in open pursuit of North America’s repatriated  herbivores.    
If all went well with the trial runs, perhaps one day the  fences could be moved back to accommodate grander arenas—Pleistocene  parks—in the widest unpeopled spaces of the Great Plains. Such was the  essence of the rewilders’ ultimate vision.    
Word went out in the 
Nature paper, and word quickly  came back, setting Greene and Donlan’s phones ringing and email boxes  pinging. News bureaus on both sides of the Atlantic swooped in, smelling  blood. Amid the few tepid nods of approval from the professional ranks,  the jeers resounded. “Pure fantasy.” “A terrible and absurd idea.”  “Impossible.”    
African critics savaged the American rewilders for threatening  to take away not only their animals but also their ecotourism dollars.  One even suggested they were fronting for big-money sport gunners who  shoot fenced animals. “It’s not a stretch to say that they mostly  thought we were going to come dump a bunch of ele-phants on the suburbs  of Topeka,” says Greene.   
It was as though the rewilders had floated a handful of trial  balloons and nobody had noted the blimp among them. There was no serious  scientific challenge to the rewilders’ new Pleistocene restoration  benchmark.
***   
A 12-minute talk gains us no converts, says Greene. “Sometimes  people’s first reaction is we must be stupid. But it turns out when we  give the 50-minute talk, people realize they haven’t thought about this  as much as we have. They say ‘Huh? I didn’t know there was a holarctic  lion or that cheetahs lived here 11,000 years ago.
 I didn’t know there  were five species of horses.’”    
Five weeks after the 12-minute version of “Re-wilding” appeared in 
Nature, Greene  was invited to give the full 50 minutes to a roomful of curious  biologists and conservationists in the vertebrate zoology wing of the  National Museum of Natural History in Washington, D.C.    
Greene began by passing around a fibrous sphere of dried plant  bits the size of a softball. “It is what it looks like,” said Greene.  Its original owner was a creature with the bulk of a grizzly bear,  ambling about the inner gorge of the Grand Canyon 11,000 years ago.   “It’s a Shasta ground sloth turd and it’s not a fossil.”    
This, explained Greene, was his favorite response to those  suggesting the Pleistocene was such an irrelevantly long time ago.  “Ten  thousand years ago is only a hundred centuries. It’s twice the lifespan  of the longest-living plant on Earth today. Yes, 10,000 years ago is a  lot longer than I’ll live, but it may not be so long in some other  contexts.”   
For the next 50 minutes, Greene serves up more metaphorical  handfuls of sloth dung, irreverently bursting conservation’s most  precious myths, chiding the media’s worst-informed critics, and  repeating his blasphemy: Why not Pleistocene rewilding?   
To the notion that wild horses are pests of the North American  range, Greene offers this answer. “When I moved to Berkeley in 1978, I  bought into the prevailing wisdom there, which is that [wild horses] are  the scum of the earth, that they tear up wetlands, and we should all be  given old-Model 94s and go out and shoot burros,” says Green. “It never  occurred to me to wonder why, if they’re so bad now, they weren’t bad  100 centuries ago?” It turns out the animal the Spaniards brought to  North America in the 1500s is very closely related to the animal that  once played a key role in dispersing seeds of Pleistocene savannas, says  Greene, which makes today’s wild horse literally the native returned. (Ed. note: Recent DNA discoveries have revised the date of the last horses in North America to about 7,500 years ago and possibly even later. New DNA studies have proven that the last North American horses were Equus caballus - the same species as the Spaniards returned.)
To one of the more resounding objections, that the African lion  doesn’t belong here, Greene suggests that the African lion is a myth.  DNA tests show that the king of beasts that so famously presides over  African savannas is likely a subspecies of a more cosmopolitan cat—let’s  call it the holarctic lion—that once ranged across the northern  hemisphere. If conservationists can restock the U.S. with seven  subspecies of peregrine falcon from around the world, why can’t they  reinstate the holarctic lion?    
 “Here are some other common criticisms,” Greene says, flashing a quote on the screen.    
“Haven’t you people heard of rabbits and cane toads?”  (Referring to the textbook catastrophes that followed introduction of  South American cane toads and European rabbits to Australia, both of  which ended up sweeping the continent like plagues.)   
Greene adopts a comically incredulous tone: “I’m 
astonished to  hear biologists say this to me. I know that there were no placental  mammals in Australia, let alone rabbits, until very recently. And not  only were there no cane toads in Australia, there were no 
bufonids !  We’re not talking about something like that, we’re talking about  organisms whose very close relatives or conspecifics were in this  country 100 centuries ago.”    
Throughout his presentation, Greene conveys a bittersweet mix  of vindication and disappointment with regard to the lameness of his  colleagues’ objections, their blindness to rewilding’s inherent  optimism. But even as he struggles to explain how the scientific  discussion has so uncannily skirted the science, it soon becomes clear  that science was never really the issue.    
Greene flashes another  familiar doubt on the screen: “People  won’t tolerate wolves and grizzlies; they surely won’t tolerate  elephants and lions.” Here Greene has finally run out of hopeful  retorts. “It might be this is an insurmountable problem.”   
It turns out rewilding has laid far more than science on the  table. It has challenged the topmost survivor among the megafauna to  consider lightening up its 13,000-year death grip on dominance. It has  opened new and frightening territory.    
When all is done, Greene asks for questions. Nothing but  softballs are returned. The conversation is courteous, playful,  apparently supportive of bringing home the Pleistocene megafauna. But  then again, this is the National Museum of Natural History, where all  the elephants and lions down the hall are stuffed.    
Literature Cited   
1. Donlan, J. et al. 2005. Re-wilding North America. 
Nature 436(7053):913-914.
2. Martin, P.S. 2005. 
Twilight of the mammoths: Ice age extinctions and the rewilding of America. University of California Press. 
3. C. J. Donlan and P.S. Martin. 2004. Role of eco-logical history in invasive species management and conservation. 
Conservation Biology 18(1):267-269. 
4. Zimov, S.A. 2005. Pleistocene park: Return of the mammoth’s ecosystem.  
Science 308:796-798.
5. Springer, A.M. et al. 2003. Sequential megafaunal collapse in the  North Pacific Ocean: An ongoing legacy of industrial whaling? 
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 100:12223-12228.
Smith, D.W., R.O. Peterson, and D.B. Houston. 2003.  Yellowstone after wolves. 
BioScience 53(4):330-340.   
About the Author   
William Stolzenburg is a freelance journalist researching the ecological impacts of top predators.