An assessment of future rewilding potential in the United Kingdom

Author:

Brown C.12ORCID,Prestele R.1,Rounsevell M.134

Affiliation:

1. Institute of Meteorology and Climate Research, Atmospheric Environmental Research (IMK‐IFU) Karlsruhe Institute of Technology Garmisch‐Partenkirchen Germany

2. Highlands Rewilding Limited The Old School House Drumnadrochit UK

3. Institute of Geography and Geo‐ecology Karlsruhe Institute of Technology Karlsruhe Germany

4. School of Geosciences University of Edinburgh Edinburgh UK

Abstract

AbstractRestoring ecosystems is an imperative for addressing biodiversity loss and climate change, and achieving the targets of the Kunming–Montreal Global Biodiversity Framework. One form of restoration, rewilding, may have particular promise but may also be precluded by requirements for other forms of land use now or in the future. This opportunity space is critical but challenging to assess. We explored the potential area available for rewilding in Great Britain until the year 2080 with a multisectoral land‐use model with several distinct climatic and socioeconomic scenarios. By 2080, areas from 5000 to 7000 km2 were either unmanaged or managed in ways that could be consistent with rewilding across scenarios without conflicting with the provision of ecosystem services. Beyond these areas, another 24,000–42,000 km2 of extensive upland management could provide additional areas for rewilding if current patterns of implementation hold in the future. None of these areas, however, coincided reliably with ecosystems of priority for conservation: peatlands, ancient woodlands, or wetlands. Repeatedly, these ecosystems were found to be vulnerable to conversion. Our results are not based on an assumption of support for or benefits from rewilding and do not account for disadvantages, such as potential losses of cultural landscapes or traditional forms of management, that were beyond the modeled ecosystem services. Nevertheless, potential areas for rewilding emerge in a variety of ways, from intensification elsewhere having a substantial but inadvertent land‐sparing effect, popular demand for environmental restoration, or a desire for exclusive recreation among the wealthy elite. Our findings therefore imply substantial opportunities for rewilding in the United Kingdom but also a need for interventions to shape the nature and extent of that rewilding to maintain priority conservation areas and societal objectives.

Funder

German Academic Exchange Service London

Publisher

Wiley

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