Reintroduction Programs (2024)

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Reintroduction programs, by which animals raised or rehabilitated in AZA-accredited zoos or aquariums are released into their natural habitats, are powerful tools used for stabilizing, reestablishing, or increasingin-situanimal populations that have suffered significant declines. Reintroductions may include animals that have spent some of their early life-stages being cared for in a “headstart” program that gives them a greater chance of survival than those born in the wild, those brought in for rehabilitation from illness or injury, those movedfrom one area for release elsewhere, or thosethat are offspring of animals that have had several generations cared for by AZA-accredited institutions.

Examples of AZA Reintroduction Programs

Asian wild horse: Equus ferus przewalskii, also known as takhi and Przewalski’s horse, roamed the grassland steppes of Europe and Asia for millennia. But by the late 1960’s, it was driven to extinction in the wild due to human persecution, grazing competition, and high mortality from harsh winters. Over the next several decades, zoos worldwidebred rescued individuals and worked with in-country partners to reintroduce the descendants back to the wild. Today, there are more than 500 Asian wild horses running free in Mongolia and China. In 2014, the Asian Wild Horse SSP launched the True Wild Horse Initiative to supportin situresearch and conservation efforts for Asian wild horses.

Black-footed Ferrets: In 1987, 18 of the remaining black-footed ferretswere placed into the care of AZA-accredited institutions as well as partner organizations and agencies. Due to the efforts of the AZA Black-footed Ferret SSP Program and their partners, these animals have successfully reproduced and thousands have been reintroduced into their historic range since 1991.Learn moreabout this species’ road to recovery.

California Condors: In 1982, only 22 California condors existed in the wild. Conservation breeding and management of these animals in AZA-accredited institutions, overseen by the California Condor SSP, increased this population to almost 200 birds within 20 years. By 2014, their population totaled 425 animals, including 219 living in the wild. To learn more about the condor'sex-siturearing efforts visit theSan Diego Zoowebsite. Visit theUSFWS Endangered Species Programto view a video of thissuccess story.

Ohio River Basin Freshwater Mussels: Freshwater mussels are an imperiled group of North American animals with an estimated 43% of the species found in the Ohio River basin.In 2001, theColumbus Zoo and Aquarium,the Wilds,Ohio State University,Ohio Department of Natural Resources Division of Wildlife,U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, and the Columbus Recreation and Parks Department founded the Freshwater Mussel Conservation and Research Center. This Center has developedinnovative conservation methods which haveyielded the exceptional propagation, culture, translocation, and reintroduction ofnumerous state and federally listed freshwater mussel species back into Ohio’s streams, rivers, and lakes.

Golden Lion Tamarin: In 2003, the previously Critically Endangered golden lion tamarin was downlisted by the IUCN to Endangered after nearly thirty years of conservation efforts involving the Golden Lion Tamarin Conservation Program (GLTCP) at theSmithsonian National Zoological Parkand theAssociação Mico-Leao-Douradoin Rio de Janeiro. New populations were established in Brazil’s União Biological Reserve through the translocation of 47 individuals in six isolated groups from their original isolated habitats. This reintroduction program has also contributed to the protection of 3,100 hectares of forests within the tamarins’ range.

Karner Blue Butterfly: While healthy populations of the federally endangered Karner blue butterfly remain in a handful of its historic range states, the species disappeared from Ohio in 1992. In 1998, the Toledo Zoological Gardens became the first institution to breed the Karner blue butterfly for reintroduction into the wild at restored sites and later offered assistance to the Detroit Zoological Park with releasing butterflies to a site in southeast Michigan.

Oregon Spotted Frog: In 2014, the Oregon spotted frog was listed as Threatened under the Endangered Species Act, after having been lost from almost 80% of its historic range.TheVancouver Aquarium Marine Science Centre,working with the Oregon Spotted Frog Recovery Team in Canadaon a headstart program, bred this species for the first time in 2010 and released tadpoles and metamorphs into native habitat. Other partners, led by theWashington Department of Fish and Wildlife,are engaged in its recovery in the United States, includingtheOregon Zoo,Northwest Trek WildlifePark,Point Defiance Zoo & Aquarium, andWoodland Park Zoo.

Palila: The palilais an endangered Hawaiian honeycreeper species that has suffered population declines due to the destruction of the dry forests it inhabits. Efforts to expand the palila population back to its historic range at Pu'u Mali have included successful releases of birds bred at the Keauhou Bird Conservation Center as part of the Hawaii Endangered Bird Conservation Program run by San Diego Zoo Global, as well translocation of wild birds by the US Geological Survey.

Red Wolf: Red wolf populations had declined significantly by the 1960s due to intensive predator control programs and loss of habitat. 14 wolves out of a remnant population found along the Gulf Coast of Texas and Louisiana became the founders of a successful breeding program involving AZA-accredited institutions and the AZA Red Wolf SSP.

Wyoming Toad: The Wyoming toad was officially classified as Extinct in the Wild in 1994, when only oneex-situpopulation remained. Thispopulation was brought into the care of AZA-accredited institutions and, under the supervision of the Wyoming Toad SSP, it successfully managed to produce tadpoles and toadlets that continue to be reintroduced into the wild. AZA institutions and their partners continue to conduct regular releases of this species, as wild populations of the Wyoming toad are not yet self-sustaining.

More Reintroduction Projects

To learn about other reintroduction projects AZA-accredited zoos and aquariums are studying, developing, or conducting, explore theConservation and Research Database. For reintroduction-related research projects, select “Research” as the project category, “Species and/or Habitat Conservation” as the keyword category, and “Reintroduction and Translocation” as the keyword. For field projects, select “Field Conservation” as the project category, “Ex Situ-Related” as the keyword category, and “Reintroduction” as the keyword.

Reintroduction-related Resources

AZA, theU.S. Fish and Wildlife Service(USFWS),and theInternational Union for the Conservation of Nature's Species Survival Commission (IUCN/SSC)play key roles in advancing the science of reintroduction programs in whichAZA Animal Programs or its accredited institutions participate. Numerous reference materials and tools have been developed to advance the science and success of reintroductions.

AZA Guidelines for Reintroduction of Animals

AZAasserts that the scientific and ethical complexity of reintroduction necessitates guidelines for those who plan, conduct, fund, regulate and publicize reintroductions and in 1992developed a bibliographythat identified avariety of documents addressing reintroduction guidelines. These guidelines are often contradictory and AZA has suggested that sincere consideration be given to all bibliographic sources and guidelines during the planning stages of reintroduction, and that reintroduction be regarded as science, with surveys of the pertinent literature, interdisciplinary participation, formulation of testable hypotheses and goals, thorough documentation, rapid publication of results, and review of the program by independent referees be incorporated.Read more about theAZA Guidelines for Reintroduction of Animals.

IUCN/SSC Reintroduction Specialist Group

TheReintroduction Specialist Group (RSG)promotes the reintroduction of viable populations of animals and plants back to their natural ecosystems, contributing to conservation efforts worldwide. The RSG manages a network of global voluntary members to provide reintroduction practitioners with tools such as reintroduction guidelines, networking resources, and publications to provide a means for distributing information on reintroduction projects. Practitioners are encouraged to explore the RSG’s website for the mostcurrent resources about reintroduction and other conservation translocation efforts.

Avian Reintroduction and Translocation Database

In 2008, Lincoln Park Zoological Gardensestablished anAvian Reintroduction and Translocation Database(ARTD) to centralize information about the avian species, release sites, and release events that take place around the world. The database describes every aspect of the reintroduction effort for each species including the variables that impact the efficacy of releases, species biology and ecology, habitat suitability, demography, and genetics.

Reintroduction Programs (2024)

FAQs

Reintroduction Programs? ›

Some reintroduction programs use plants or animals from captive populations to form a reintroduced population. When reintroducing individuals from a captive population to the wild, there is a risk that they have adapted to captivity due to differential selection of genotypes in captivity versus the wild.

What is an example of reintroduction? ›

For example, the U.S. National Park Service reintroduced wolves into Yellowstone National Park beginning in the mid-1990s, dramatically stabilizing some aspects of the food web and ecosystem.

How many zoos have reintroduction programs? ›

AZA members are working to increase wild populations of species in our care through 117 reintroduction programs, including more than 50 reintroduction programs for species listed as threatened or endangered under the Endangered Species Act at AZA-accredited zoos and aquariums.

How does reintroduction work? ›

Reintroductions are achieved through the release of animals from captive populations or by moving animals from one area of the wild to another.

What is reintroduction in zoos? ›

Reintroduction programs, by which animals raised or rehabilitated in AZA-accredited zoos or aquariums are released into their natural habitats, are powerful tools used for stabilizing, reestablishing, or increasing in-situ animal populations that have suffered significant declines.

Why are reintroduction programs important? ›

Wildlife reintroductions and translocations have become an essential tool for restoring species and maintaining global biodiversity.

What is an example of a predator reintroduction program? ›

For example, the U.S. National Park Service reintroduced wolves into Yellowstone National Park in the 1990s. The wolves had a big effect on the ecosystem and food web. The elk population decreased. With fewer elk, there was a lot more plant growth.

Do zoos ever let animals go? ›

Contrary to commonly held views, no gorilla, polar bear, rhino, elephant, tiger, panda, or chimpanzee born at a zoo will ever be released to the wild. In fact, some wild animals have been poached from the wild en masse for a lifetime of captivity in zoos to fill their quota of animals people want to see.

What animals have been reintroduced into the wild? ›

Other reintroductions over the past 30 years include the red kite and the bittern, the pool frog and the natterjack toad, the sand lizard and the smooth snake, wild boar, pine marten, chequered skipper butterfly, the enigmatic ladybird spider, and, of course, the Eurasian beaver.

How does PETA view reintroduction? ›

PETA does not support predator-reintroduction programs for myriad reasons. Animals can very often escape artificial boundaries and become a “nuisance,” leading to their being poisoned, hit by cars, or shot. In failed attempts to escape, they might become entangled in barbed wire or be shocked by electric fences.

Can animals go back to the wild after being in a zoo? ›

“Yes, in a lot of cases it is still impossible, especially if the animals have been traumatised or were very young when captured. And you need to be very careful about introducing diseases to a wild population. But for some animals, if we proceed scientifically and thoughtfully, it can be done.”

What is the difference between restoration and reintroduction? ›

Thus ecological restoration is returning an ecosystem back to the way it was, reintroduction is returning a species back to where it used to live, and rewilding is returning a managed area back to the wild.

What happens to old animals in zoos? ›

When they grow older, and therefore less attractive to patrons, they will often be sold or killed. Animals who breed frequently, such as deer, tigers, and lions, are sometimes sold to game farms and ranches where hunters pay to kill them.

Why can't captive tigers be released? ›

The problem is that captive animals have not had to hunt for their own food and therefore would need some training to become self-sufficient and able to hunt wild game. And if animals do have medical issues due to inbreeding it would reduce their fitness and hunting ability.

What happens to extra animals in zoos? ›

Babies are great crowd-pleasers, but when the babies grow up, they don't attract the same number of people, so zoos often sell them off in order to make room for younger animals. The unwanted adult animals are sometimes sold to “game” farms where hunters pay to kill them; some are killed for their meat and/or hides.

What is the meaning of reintroduction? ›

: to introduce (someone or something) again. efforts to reintroduce the animals into the wild. They'd been touring hard, reintroducing themselves to audiences nearly a decade after going their separate ways.

What reintroduction means? ›

/ˌriː.ɪn.trəˈdʌk.ʃən/ [ C or U ] the act of putting something into use after it has not been used for some time; the act of putting something in a place where it has not been for some time: They are opposed to the re-introduction of the unpopular tax.

What species have we brought back? ›

Ten animals we have saved from extinction
  • Peregrine falcon (Falco peregrinus) ...
  • Mallorcan midwife toad (Alytes muletensis) ...
  • Sea otter (Enhydra lutris) ...
  • Fen orchid (Liparis loeselii) ...
  • Blue whale (Balaenoptera musculus) ...
  • Island night lizard (Xantusia riversiana) ...
  • Rodrigues fruit bat (Pteropus rodricensis)

Have any species been brought back from extinction? ›

There are benefits and drawbacks to the process of de-extinction ranging from technological advancements to ethical issues. The Pyrenean ibex, also known as the bouquetin, was the first and only animal to date to have survived de-extinction past birth.

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