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Using recent baselines as benchmarks for megafauna restoration places an unfair burden on the Global South
Using recent baselines as benchmarks for megafauna restoration places an unfair burden on the Global South
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Using recent baselines as benchmarks for megafauna restoration places an unfair burden on the Global South
Using recent baselines as benchmarks for megafauna restoration places an unfair burden on the Global South

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Using recent baselines as benchmarks for megafauna restoration places an unfair burden on the Global South
Using recent baselines as benchmarks for megafauna restoration places an unfair burden on the Global South
Journal Article

Using recent baselines as benchmarks for megafauna restoration places an unfair burden on the Global South

2022
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Overview
The potential for megafauna restoration is unevenly distributed across the world, along with the socio‐political capacity of countries to support these restoration initiatives. We show that choosing a recent baseline to identify species' indigenous range puts a higher burden for megafauna restoration on countries in the Global South, which also have less capacity to support these restoration initiatives. We introduce the Megafauna Index, which considers large mammal's potential species richness and range area at the country level, to explore how the responsibility for megafauna restoration is distributed across the world according to four scenarios using various temporal benchmarks to define species' indigenous range – current, historical (1500 AD), mid‐Holocene and Pleistocene. We test how the distribution of restoration burden across the world correlates with indicators of conservation funding, human development and governance. Using a recent or historical baseline as a benchmark for restoration puts a higher pressure on African and south‐east Asian countries while lifting the responsibility from the Global North, where extinctions happened a long time ago. When using a mid‐Holocene or Pleistocene baseline, new opportunities arise for megafauna restoration in Europe and North America, respectively, where countries have a higher financial and societal capacity to support megafauna restoration. These results contribute to the debate around benchmarks in rewilding initiatives and the ethical implications of using recent baselines to guide restoration efforts. We suggest that countries from the Global North should reflect on their responsibility in supporting global restoration efforts, by both increasing their support for capacity building in the Global South and taking responsibility for restoring lost megafauna at home.