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BlackChampagne -- no longer new; improvement also in question.: ...Where the Pronghorns and the Cheetahs Play?



Wednesday, August 17, 2005  

...Where the Pronghorns and the Cheetahs Play?


Concept that seems outright wacky at first, but then gradually grows on you. Some "scientists" are looking to transplant various wild African animal species into the vast American interior. And they're not talking about birds or mice or something no one would really notice. They're talking lions and herdbeasts and such.
The idea of transplanting African wildlife to this continent is being greeted with gasps and groans from other scientists and conservationists who recall previous efforts to relocate foreign species halfway around the world, often with disastrous results.

But the proposal's supporters say it could help save some species from extinction in Africa, where protection is spotty and habitats are vanishing. They say the relocated animals could also restore the biodiversity in North America to a condition closer to what it was before humans overran the landscape more than 10,000 years ago.

Most modern African species never lived on the American prairie, the scientists acknowledge. But some of their biological cousins like mastodons, camels and saber-toothed cats, roamed for more than 1 million years alongside antelope and herds of bison until Ice Age glaciers retreated and humans started arriving.

The rapid extinction of dozens of large mammal species in North America — perhaps due to a combination of climate change and overhunting — triggered a landslide of changes to the environmental landscape. Relocating large animals to vast ecological parks and private reserves would begin to repair the damage, proponents say, while offering new ecotourism opportunities to a withering region.

...

The scientists' discussion expanded to consider long-extinct Pleistocene species that have modern counterparts elsewhere in the world.

For example, a larger American cheetah once stalked pronghorn on these lands, with both species evolving special features that enabled them to accelerate to 60 mph. Today, pronghorns rarely are chased, except by the occasional pickup truck.

In Africa, modern cheetahs are being exterminated as vermin, with fewer than 2,000 remaining in some countries. Relocation could help both species retain important traits, the plan's proponents say.
Whlie it's just never going to happen with lions in the wild, given that they, you know, eat people, I could see them living in some sort of game park with high fences and such. Poaching would be a problem, with every redneck in the state wanting to come and take a few pot shots from the back of their pickup, roaming free in some park in Utah or New Mexico would certainly be an upgrade from the "pacing behind bars" life lions suffer in the hands of so many private collectors and small zoos. And the idea of cheetahs roaming the wild and running down antelope or perhaps jack rabbits is certainly attractive.
Comments:

I don't have to mention the toads, foxes and rabbits of Australia, do I?


 

Yeah, and the article did, but there's a big difference between smaller animals that can take over the food chain, and big alpha predators. It's not like the lions or cheetahs are going to spread throughout the entire country and displace all of the native predators; in most cases there are no native predators, since man has hunted the wolves into extinction, and the few remaining mountain lions aren't running down their prey on the open plains anyway. Generally speaking, the world's eco systems have a vast overabundance of prey animals, since man has killed off so many of the higher level predators.


 

"with both species evolving special features that enabled them to accelerate to 60 mph"

Did they evolve wheels or what?


 

Hell yeah. The midwest could definitely use a few big cats to liven the place up. It would certainly add some excitement on those long interstate drives.

Cows and corn... and cheetahs!


 

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