What is rewilding?

Together, we can bring the wild back.

Rewilding is exactly what it sounds like.

Rewilding means helping nature heal. Rewilding means giving space back to wildlife and returning wildlife back to the land, as well as to the seas. Rewilding means the mass recovery of ecosystems and the life-supporting function they provide.

Rewilding also means changing the way we think. Humans are part of the wild. We are one species among many, bound together in an intricate web of life that ties us to the atmosphere, the weather, the tide, the soils, the freshwater, the oceans, and all living creatures on the planet. The Earth is our home. Together, we can protect and restore it.

Rewilding occurs in three key ways.

  • Habitat Restoration

    We return degraded or fragmented habitats to their natural state by removing barriers, such as dams or fences, and letting the wild shape the landscape. Habitat restoration may also involve reestablishing natural water flows, reforestation, and restoring wetlands or grasslands.

  • Species Reintroduction

    We restore balance to the wild by returning native species to ecosystems where populations have either disappeared or been severely reduced. Species reintroductions are often supported by conservation breeding programs. 

  • Ecological Management

    Active land management supports ecosystems in various stages of recovery and helps ensure the successful reintroduction of species. Human beings are part of the wild, and critical to its protection.

  • Learn More

    We don’t need to reinvent the planet; we need to rewild it.

    The solution to our carbon emissions problem isn’t a new technology that sucks carbon from the air. It’s an ancient one—nearly 4 billion years old, in fact. It is the wild.

    Global Charter for Rewilding the Earth

    A charter developed by the global conservation community for the 11th World Wilderness Congress, with contributions from Re:wild.

    What is biodiversity?

    Biodiversity — the diversity of life on Earth, and a missing link in the climate conversation.