Rewilding in Southeast Asia: Singapore as a case study

Author:

Lamperty Therese12ORCID,Chiok Wen Xuan1,Khoo Max D. Y.3,Amir Zachary4,Baker Nick5,Chua Marcus A. H.67ORCID,Chung Yi Fei38ORCID,Chua Yen Kheng3,Koh Joshua J.‐M.6,Lee Benjamin P. Y.‐H.3,Lum Shawn K. Y.1,Mendes Calebe P.49,Ngiam Jonathan3,ODempsey Anthony10,Png Kenny G. C.1,Sovie Adia R.4,Tan Lorraine3,Teo Robert3,Thomas Noel3,Tianjiao Li3,Tze‐Ming Bryan Lim3,Loo Adrian H. B.3,Wardle David A.1,Luskin Matthew Scott141112

Affiliation:

1. Asian School of the Environment Nanyang Technological University Singapore

2. Department of Biology University of Washington Seattle Washington, DC USA

3. National Parks Board Singapore Botanic Gardens Singapore

4. Centre for Biodiversity and Conservation Science University of Queensland Brisbane Australia

5. Ecology Asia

6. Department of Biological Science National University of Singapore Singapore

7. Lee Kong Chian Natural History Museum National University of Singapore Singapore

8. School of Applied Science, Republic Polytechnic Singapore

9. Natural Sciences & Science Education National Institute of Education Singapore

10. Nature Society, The Sunflower Singapore Singapore

11. Forest Global Earth Observatory—Center for Tropical Forest Science Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute Seattle Washington, DC USA

12. School of Biological Sciences University of Queensland Brisbane Australia

Abstract

AbstractRe‐establishing extirpated wildlife—or “rewilding”—is touted as a way to restore biodiversity and ecosystem processes, but we lack real‐world examples of this process, particularly in Southeast Asia. Here, we use a decade of aggregated camera trap data, N‐mixture occupancy models, and input from local wildlife experts to describe the unassisted recolonization of two native large herbivores in Singapore. Sambar deer (Rusa unicolor) escaped from captivity (in private or public zoos) in the 1970s and contemporary camera trap data show they have only colonized nearby forest fragments and their abundance remains low. Wild pigs (Sus scrofa), in contrast, naturally recolonized by swimming from Malaysia in the 1990s and have rapidly expanded their range and abundance across Singapore. While wild pigs have not recolonized all viable green spaces yet, their trajectory indicates they soon will. We also note that a third ungulate, the muntjac deer (Muntiacus muntjak), was captured in camera trapping in 2014 and 2015 but was never recorded afterward despite increased sampling effort, and thus we do not focus on their presumably unsuccessful recolonization. The divergent rewilding trajectories between sambar deer and wild pigs suggest different conservation outcomes and management requirements. Sambar deer may restore lost plant–animal interactions such as herbivory and seed dispersal without requiring significant management. Wild pigs, in contrast, have reached high numbers rapidly and may require active management to avoid hyperabundance and negative ecological impacts in regions, such as Singapore that lack both hunting and large predators.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Nature and Landscape Conservation,Environmental Science (miscellaneous),Ecology,Global and Planetary Change

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