How wild animals can help control the climate crisis.


Rewilding planet by carefully encouraging wolves, wildebeest and whales could help control carbon emissions.

Rewilding has the potential to supercharge climate mitigation, says the Global Rewilding Alliance, an umbrella group for organisations working to restore ecosystems. Saturday 19 March is World Rewilding Day, and the focus this year is on the critical importance of wild animals for the climate. Rewilding landscapes with wolves and wildebeest could be even more important than planting trees.

Highland cattle in long grass by lake.
Herbivores such as Highland cattle help to redistribute seeds and nutrients. Photograph: Danny Van Eijk/Getty Images/EyeEm

Adding the right animals to the right landscape can help to rebalance the ecosystem and maximise the amount of carbon that can be stored. For example, introducing herbivores such as Highland cattle to upland areas can help to redistribute seeds and nutrients over wide areas and promote plant growth. But too many herbivores can result in overgrazing, so carnivores are vital too. Get the balance right and the carbon benefits are huge: an estimated 10% of US carbon emissions from the burning of fossil fuels could be mopped up by North American boreal forests, if they contained the correct balance of wolves, moose and trees.

Predators such as wolves help to keep herbivore numbers in check and prevent overgrazing. Photograph: Jacqueline Batrus

It’s not just on land that animals can help. Ocean predators such as whales devour prey in deep water and excrete nutrients at the surface, promoting phytoplankton production that draws down carbon dioxide. The take-home message: we’re going to need wolves as well as wind turbines to stand any chance of capping global heating at 1.5C.

The Thousands of Serengeti Wildebeest That Drown Each Year Serve a Greater Purpose


It’s the largest, most spectacular animal migration on our planet. Every year, some 1.2 million wildebeest trample through the Serengeti and the perilous Mara River crossings where thousands of them succumb to the river rapids.

Ecologists know that animal migration, especially on grand scales, affects land ecosystems. But now for the first time they have measured the ecological contribution of mass drownings in the iconic Kenyan river. What they have found is an astonishing example of the circle of life that sustains the natural world.

When immense numbers of wildebeest embark on their annual migration across the savannas of East Africa, the stream of animals takes some 200,000 zebra and antelope along for the trip.

You have probably seen a natural documentary depiction of this epic pilgrimage, especially its most dramatic part around the Mara River where the animals have to make several crossings. Most of them brave the waters with success, but unlucky ones are often shown drowning or being eaten by crocodiles.

All those carcasses eventually pile up in the river, and are slowly consumed by the various creatures that inhabit the ecosystem, both in the river, on land and in the skies.

A team lead by ecologist Amanda Subalusky from the Cary Institute of Ecosystem Studies wondered about the crazy amount of biomass these drownings must represent.

“We used historical reports from 2001 to 2010 and field surveys from 2011 to 2015 to quantify the frequency and size of wildebeest mass drownings in the Kenyan portion of the Mara River,” the team writes in the paper.

Armed with data from field surveys and biochemical analysis, they calculated the fate of an animal carcass as it drowns and enters the river ecosystem.

The researchers found that, on average, 6,200 wildebeest drown each year in the Kenyan portion of Mara River, amounting to 1,100 tons of biomass.

“To put this in perspective, it’s the equivalent of adding ten blue whale carcasses to the moderately-sized Mara River each year. This dramatic subsidy delivers terrestrial nitrogen, phosphorus, and carbon to the river’s food web,” says one of the team, ecologist Emma Rosi.

The team used cameras to track scavenger birds, and a common aquatic ecosystem nutrient tracking method, stable isotope analysis, which allowed them to trace the nutrients from the drowned animals all the way down the food chain.

It turns out that each mass drowning represents a massive boon to the local river ecosystem, feeding everyone in the river. Only a small proportion – some 2 percent – of the wildebeest feast is eaten by crocs.

On land, up to 9 percent of the corpses are devoured by several vulture species. But the biggest winners are the various species of common fish in the river. When carcasses are abundant, they will make up half of the diet for these fish.

And once the drowned bodies have been picked clean, the bones end up leaching even more nutrients into the waters, continuing to feed the ecosystem for years to come.

As dramatic as it is to have thousands of animals go down in the turbulent waters every year, ultimately the gain for the ecosystem is much greater than the loss to the herd.

“These mass drownings have little impact on the wildebeest herd, comprising only 0.5 percent of the total herd size, but they provide huge short-term and long-term sources of nutrients to the Mara River,” write the researchers.

As humans have encroached on animal habitats, mass migration routes have altered. The researchers point out that loss of widespread drownings could be responsible for fundamentally altering river ecosystems.

But each year, the wildebeest still travel across the Serengeti plains, with unlucky ones still drowning in troves, providing sustenance to myriad river creatures long after their death.

“What is happening there is a window into the past, when large migratory herds were free to roam the landscape, and drownings likely played an important role in rivers throughout the world,” says Subalusky.

Source: PNAS.