Positive Wildlife News 2025

Protected area: New national park declared in Quezon to protect biodiversity

President Ferdinand Marcos has declared a 29.6 hectare parcel of land in San Francisco, Quezon as a protected area under the National Integrated Protected Areas System.

In Republic Act 12229 signed on July 23, the protected area will be known as the “San Francisco Protected Landscape” and will be classified as a national park.

“It is hereby declared the policy of the State to secure for the Filipino people of present and future generations, the perpetual existence of all native plants and animals through the declaration of protected areas under the National Integrated Protected Areas System within the classification of national park as provided in the Constitution,” the law said.

Protected area: New national park declared in Quezon to protect biodiversity
 
Vaccine breakthrough for deadly elephant virus

Researchers have made a breakthrough in the development of new vaccine to prevent a deadly virus that affects young elephants.

The vaccine, produced by an international research team, aims to prevent the severe disease caused by elephant endotheliotropic herpesvirus (EEHV), which is currently a leading cause of death in young Asian elephants.

In trials that involved adult elephants at Chester Zoo, the vaccine was found to be safe and, crucially, to activate part of the immune system that helps fight viruses.

Prof Falko Steinbach from the UK Animal and Plant Health Agency (APHA) and the University of Surrey, said this was "a landmark moment in our work to protect Asian elephants".
 
Green turtle bounces back from brink in conservation 'win'

The green turtle has been rescued from the brink of extinction in what scientists are calling a major conservation victory.

Once hunted extensively for turtle soup, its eggs as a delicacy and decorative shells, the ancient mariner saw its numbers plummet and has been listed as endangered since the 1980s.

Now, thanks to decades of global conservation efforts - from protecting eggs and releasing hatchlings on beaches to reducing accidental capture in fishing nets - new data shows green turtle populations are rebounding.

"We must use this win as a catalyst to achieve numerous other wins," said Dr Nicolas Pilcher of the Marine Research Foundation, a non-profit based in Sabah, Malaysia.
 
Global conservation body takes first step to protect ocean’s twilight zone

Global conservation body takes first step to protect ocean’s twilight zone
  • Delegates at the IUCN World Conservation Congress in Abu Dhabi voted to adopt a motion urging precautionary measures to protect the ocean’s mesopelagic zone.
  • The nonbinding motion calls for prospective activities such as fishing in the mesopelagic zone, deep-sea mining and geoengineering to be guided by the best available science and approached with caution.
  • Both conservationists and industry representatives expressed support for the motion, highlighting the mesopelagic zone’s ecological importance and potential as a sustainable resource.
The mesopelagic zone, sometimes called the “twilight zone,” is home to an immense biomass of fish — 600 million metric tons, according to one estimate. Species inhabiting this zone include lanternfish, pearlsides and squid, which are crucial food sources for predators like dolphins, tunas, marlins and sharks. Research suggests this vast zone also plays an essential role in regulating the climate by facilitating a process called the “biological pump” that moves carbon from the atmosphere into the deep ocean for long-term storage.

For now, a commercial mesopelagic fishing industry remains largely speculative. Launching it would require overcoming difficulties in locating, catching and processing mesopelagic fish. Still, there’s considerable enthusiasm for finding a way to make it work. While mesopelagic fish have been pursued for possible human consumption, there is a particular interest now in harvesting them for fertilizers or aquaculture feed.

Until now, efforts to protect the ocean’s twilight zone have been limited. The United States enacted protections for certain mesopelagic fish off its West Coast in 2016, and East Coast in 2017, but few other countries have taken comparable action. In contrast, nations like Norway and Iceland have run trial mesopelagic fisheries in recent years, and the European Union (EU) has invested about $17 million in research programs to assess the feasibility of fishing in the twilight zone.

The new IUCN motion not only calls for the protection of mesopelagic ecosystems, but for taking a precautionary approach to potentially harmful activities, such as fishing, deep-sea mining and geoengineering — none of which have yet started on a commercial level. For instance, it calls for these activities to be regulated and assessed based on a scientific understanding of mesopelagic communities, any unregulated or adversely impactful activities to be stopped and regular reporting of catch and bycatch levels. It also calls for the use of management measures, such as marine protected areas, to protect the structure and function of mesopelagic communities; for collaborative research, monitoring and strategic environmental assessments; and for policymakers to champion the “importance of mesopelagic communities in climate change policies and actions.” Last but not least, it calls for the IUCN to support and promote these actions.

What this motion does not call for is an outright pause or block on any and all activities that might impact this ocean zone, unlike other IUCN motions, such as one passed at the 2021 World Conservation Congress that called for a moratorium on deep-sea mining.

Chris Dorsett, vice president of conservation at the Washington, D.C.-based NGO Ocean Conservancy, whose organization and two other U.S. NGOs helped draft the motion, said that while the vote is nonbinding, it represents a “great step in raising awareness” about the mesopelagic ecosystem and the need to protect it.

Dorsett added that future protections for the mesopelagic zone could emerge via national legislation within individual countries’ exclusive economic zones, or through regional fishery management organizations in international waters. He said the motion’s adoption at this time was “exciting” since it followed the ratification of the Biodiversity Beyond National Jurisdiction (BBNJ) treaty, also known as the high seas treaty, on Sept. 19, which he said could bolster future protection of the twilight zone.

“What the BBNJ treaty does is put some good tools in the toolbox, like environmental impact assessments for proposed activities, as well as the ability to implement area-based protections,” Dorsett said. “Our hope is that these tools can be used to address existing management gaps.”

The motion passed with 713 votes in favor from governments, NGOs and Indigenous groups, and 46 votes against. Sonsoles San Román, an IUCN communications officer, told Mongabay via email that the IUCN would “not provide country breakdowns or details of what IUCN Members voted individually.”

 
The 2025 Snow Leopard Population Assessment of India (SPAI) carried out jointly by the Nature Conservation Foundation (NCF) and the Himachal Pradesh Forest Department estimated 83 snow leopards — almost double when compared with the last survey report published in 2021 — in Himachal Pradesh.

  • The estimated snow leopard population in Himachal Pradesh is 83 adults, a 62.7% rise from the earlier count of 51 in the 2021 survey.
  • Population density ranges from 0.16 to 0.53 snow leopards per 100 sq km, with the highest densities in Spiti Valley, Pin Valley, Upper Kinnaur, and Tabo.
  • The SPAI study used large-scale camera trapping at six representative sites spanning 26,000 sq km of habitat and identified 44 unique adult snow leopards.
  • Two new mammal species, Pallas’s cat and the woolly flying squirrel, were recorded for the first time in the state during this assessment.
  • The fieldwork of the study was completed in less than a year.
Source: Population Estimate of Snow Leopards in Himachal Under SPAI
 
Irreplaceable 6.5-hectare forest protected for future generations of Aussies

For months, experts had feared the rare ancient forest could have been destroyed.

A speck of ancient forest, feared to be at imminent risk of destruction, is on the verge of being protected for future generations of Australians.

Described as “magical”, the 6.5-hectare fragment of NSW Mid North Coast bush is remarkable because it remains intact and has never been harvested for timber. Earlier this month, conservationists were becoming increasingly concerned it could be bulldozed because a company owned by the NSW Government had earmarked the wider area for harvesting this year.

Located at the edge of the 1,000-hectare Viewmont State Forest, the wilderness is blessed with towering eucalypts that are home to species threatened with extinction, including koalas and yellow-bellied gliders.

Irreplaceable 6.5-hectare forest protected for future generations of Aussies

Was so fantastic that the Great Koala National Park (NSW, Australia) is now officially declared a national park and protecting the thousands of species (some endemic)living in it and its multiple ecosystem.

To quote Jordan Shanks better known as Friendlyjordies, from his youtube video: This is Why I Make Videos, about the awesom news:

''..this has got to be one of the biggest environmental victories in Australian history...This is of course the Great Koala National Park being passed. That is 180,000 hectares of prime koala habitat being set off until the sun turns into a red dwarf ...it's all gravy for koalas from now on. This is a massive environmental accomplishment in terms of New South Wales environmental victories. This would have to be up there with (former NSW premier) Bob Carr signing off on 100 national parks in a single day. So, we are talking about easily the biggest environmental win since the '90s, possibly even since the 1970s under Neville Wran (former NSW premier too)...We are talking about hundreds of thousands of other hectares of land that are being linked up to the Great Koala National Park...linking up all of these vital ecosystems so that they all lapse in to one another. That's what's really crucial about this. It's not just this park, although it is massive. It's all the other parks that ensures the healthy transition of animals and pollination all linking up together, in an environmental ecosystem that locks up to make sure that New South Wales maintains its environmental health for generations to come. This is a huge win for the climate as well, obviously, because you are keeping in all of this pristine land that is now just going to act as a permanent carbon sink. And the other one that nobody ever really mentions when it comes to this is massive wind for water protections as well. We are talking about pristine streams going all through this. We are talking about an area of land that acts sort of as this sponge...This is huge. Not just for koalas. Of the thousand species that are on the endangered list, a huge chunk of those are now protected because of this massive win. Hats off to Penny Sharpe, environmental labor minister of New South Wales, for not only negotiating this, but pushing for it for the last 10 years...''

It appears all up the wider area that is protected as a result is like 476,000 hectares! So great.

Great Koala National Park boundary stops mid north coast timber logging
 
Last edited:
Mexico adopts protections for Atlantic sharks

Mexico recently adopted national regulations protecting several threatened shark species in the Atlantic from being caught or retained as bycatch. Shark conservationists welcome the protections but say they are long overdue, coming years after the country’s commitments to a multilateral fishery regulator.

Mexican fisheries catch a significant number of various shark species in the Atlantic and Pacific oceans. The new rules are meant for longline fisheries operating within all the waters managed under the International Commission for the Conservation of Atlantic Tunas (ICCAT), including the Gulf of Mexico and the Caribbean Sea. These fisheries are now prohibited from retaining on board, storing, transshipping, disembarking or offering for sale five types of sharks, either whole or in part.

These are the vulnerable bigeye thresher (Alopias superciliosus) and silky shark (Carcharhinus falciformis), the critically endangered oceanic whitetip shark (Carcharhinus longimanus), the endangered shortfin mako (Isurus oxyrinchus), and hammerhead sharks (genus Sphyrna) — with the exception of the endangered bonnethead (Sphyrna tiburo).

The new regulations are based on ICCAT recommendations, the government said in a press release.

ICCAT is responsible for the management of tuna and similar species in the Atlantic Ocean and adjacent seas. While ICCAT’s recommendations are legally binding for member states, including Mexico, each country must adopt them into its national laws to become locally enforceable. The recent Mexican regulations enshrine ICCAT recommendations that were made between 2009 and 2021.

Iris Ziegler, head of fisheries policies and ocean advocacy at the German Foundation for Marine Conservation, told Mongabay the new regulations, while good, fail to include some important species, such as manta rays (genus Mobula) and whale sharks (Rhincodon typus), which ICCAT has also recommended for protection.

Ziegler noted the new regulations apply only to “larger longline vessels,” without defining what “larger” means. In contrast, the ICCAT recommendations apply to all vessels targeting tuna-like species, including purse seine vessels and gillnetters, she said.

Mexico adopts protections for Atlantic sharks

Nuns, scientists & microchips: An alliance to save Mexico’s achoque salamanders

Sister Ofelia Morales Francisco has cared for the critically endangered achoque salamander (Ambystoma dumerilii) for nearly 20 years. She and her team have mastered the amphibians’ complex reproductive biology, raising generation after generation in tanks that have become an unexpected ark.

This species, the achoque (pronounced ah-choke-eh), is known from only one lake on the planet, Lake Pátzcuaro in Mexico’s central Michoacán state. Scientists estimate that fewer than 150 adults remain in the wild. However, the monastery boasts a colony of around 300 salamanders, representing the largest known captive population in the world.

Scientists from Chester Zoo in the United Kingdom recognized that the monastery’s thriving colony offered an opportunity. They collaborated with Mexican conservationists to determine whether small, rice-sized identification chips could be implanted in captive achoques without harming the animals.

The microchips could enable conservationists to identify individual wild salamanders during catch-and-release health checks. With a quick scan, researchers can access information including sex, health status and approximate age for each animal.

According to their results, published in the Journal of Zoo and Aquarium Research, the microchips stayed in place in 97.5% of salamanders over more than 175 days, with no negative health effects.

“We were chipping them with the nuns watching protectively,” Adam Bland, assistant team manager for amphibians at Chester Zoo, said in a press release. “It’s a real demonstration of how anyone can be involved in conservation. People from all different backgrounds are working to save this species.”

Because of their “weird biology,” Bland said, “amphibian species have been known to absorb microchips into their body and excrete them or push them back out through their permeable skin over time. Every species is unique, and marking techniques for amphibians often have to be species specific. It’s also crucial that the process doesn’t affect the animals’ health.”

The microchipping technique developed by the research team allows salamanders to be tagged quickly with minimal handling stress. The chip is implanted within a skinfold, where gravity keeps it in place after the animal returns to water. The entry site closes and heals without requiring tissue adhesive or aftercare, and salamanders showed no significant loss or behavioral changes in the months following chip implantation, according to the study.

The Dominican sisters at the Monastery of Our Lady of Health have used achoques to produce a traditional cough syrup for generations, with some sources indicating the practice dates back 150 years. The syrup, believed to treat respiratory ailments such as coughs, asthma and anemia, became the convent’s main source of income, selling for about 200 pesos (approximately $10) per bottle.

When wild salamander populations crashed in the 1980s due to pollution and overfishing in the lake, the sisters realized both the species and their convent’s livelihood were at stake. In response, they began formalizing their conservation breeding program.

“The nuns have developed skills in a combination of working it out themselves as they have likely been breeding the species longer than other collections, and they have also had support from the University and Centro Regional de Investigaciones Pesqueras,” Bland told Mongabay.

“The best way to get them to copulate is by mating a male with three females,” Sister Ofelia Morales Francisco told AFP. “We have to raise the offspring very carefully, because they try to eat each other.”

Their breeding facility consists of two rooms filled with tanks housing hundreds of salamanders at a time. The nuns feed the salamanders organic earthworms and change water using a nearby well.

“This is probably the first time a religious community has been involved with amphibian conservation,” Gerardo Garcia of Chester Zoo told National Geographic. “They have a fresh environment, freshly harvested food, and they have a fully dedicated staff. It’s just what they need.”

The salamanders’ only natural home, Lake Pátzcuaro, sits at 2,035 meters (6,675 feet) above sea level and is considered potentially one of the most studied and important lakes in Mexico, harboring several species found nowhere else on Earth.

The lake sits in an endorheic drainage basin, meaning water flows in but never flows out. So, what enters the lake stays in the lake.

The study attributes salamander decline mainly to pollution from sewage, fertilizer runoff, soil erosion from deforestation and the shrinking lake.

“Amphibians are indicator species: they have permeable skin, so any toxins in the environment are likely to have a rapid negative impact on their wellbeing; their survival depends on good water quality,” Bamford said in the press release. “By monitoring and protecting achoque, we’re also protecting the lake.”

Nuns, scientists & microchips: An alliance to save Mexico’s achoque salamanders
 
New environmental DNA test could help rare hammerhead sharks fight extinction

A test developed by a Florida International University scientist can detect small, elusive hammerheads without ever setting eyes on them—a critical new tool for species fighting for survival.

In a recent study published in Frontiers in Marine Science, FIU marine biologist Diego Cardeñosa, who is affiliated with FIU's Institute of Environment and the Global Forensic and Justice Center, demonstrates the test's effectiveness, showing how it can help scientists locate and protect these endangered species.

Small-bodied hammerhead sharks like the scalloped bonnethead, scoophead and Pacific bonnethead have been pushed to the brink by overfishing, leaving so few that scientists have struggled to study them. With their lives and habitats largely unknown, conservation efforts have fallen behind—until now. Cardeñosa's new environmental DNA (eDNA) test could change the fate of these critically endangered sharks.

"Just by screening different locations along their distribution range from Mexico to Northern Peru, we can identify high-priority areas where conservation resources might be needed," Cardeñosa said. "The short-term goal is to find these three species, as they're likely among the most critically endangered coastal sharks in the world."

Cardeñosa believes these hammerhead sharks were once abundant—long before overfishing depleted their numbers. They inhabit shallow, remote coastal habitats where scientific monitoring is limited and fisheries management is weak. Colombia's Uramba/Bahía Málaga National Natural Park, the site of his research, may be one of the last refuges where researchers can still find them.

"You can drop a hook and line there, and within 10 minutes, catch one or two of these species," he said. Elsewhere, sightings are nearly nonexistent: The scalloped bonnethead was last recorded in Mexico in 1994, and the scoophead in 2007. In Honduras, one of these species was only recently discovered after decades without a trace.

For Cardeñosa, the urgency goes beyond ecosystem roles.

"A lot of these are some of the most derived or newest shark species on the evolutionary scale," he said. "If they disappear, we're also losing a piece of our planet's evolutionary history. Extinction is forever, and that's enough reason for me to do something."

New environmental DNA test could help rare hammerhead sharks fight extinction

Ukraine's massive nature project is helping veterans and land recover

Forests, rivers and meadows in Ukraine are considered sacred spaces and important to resilience. As Ukrainians have dealt with the constant stress of war, nature has been a place to reconnect.

Ukraine has also been at the forefront of large-scale nature restoration in Europe in recent years. The country is planning two new national parks: Budzhak Steppes National Natural Park (in the Odessa region in the south) and the Great Carpathians National Park (in the south-west). And a project called Rewilding Ukraine has begun restoring some 13,500 hectares of wetlands and steppe (unforested grasslands)—that's almost twice as big an area as Manhattan in the US.

This is serious rewilding. Compare this scale to that to one of the best known examples of rewilding in England, for instance—the Knepp Castle estate in west Sussex which involves some 3,500 acres (1416 hectares).

Rewilding these areas of Ukraine has involved the release of over 240 animals of different species, including kulan (wild donkeys), steppe marmots, eagle owls, fallow deer and even hamsters which are native to the region and the building of two breeding platforms for Dalmatian pelicans.

Interventions such as the removal of 200 meters of man-made dams surrounding Ermakiv Island are allowing beavers to thrive and the natural ecosystem to rebalance. There are benefits for the local human populations too, as flooding in villages and towns is reduced.

An initiative known as Nature for Veterans was launched in 2025 with the aim of helping soldiers and their families find emotional restoration from the horrors of war by immersing them in these newly revitalized areas of south-west Ukraine, far from the frontline.

Ukraine's massive nature project is helping veterans and land recover
 
For the first time in several years, a vaquita calf has been spotted and photographed during an aerial survey.

While the population is still in extreme danger of extinction, surveys did seem to record that the remaining individuals are clustered in the core area of their refuge zone, which suggests these animals may still be forming social groups instead of existing purely as isolated individuals.
 
Barn owls have strong breeding season

Barn owlets in part of Cornwall had a particularly strong breeding season this year, with 21 owlets successfully fledged, the National Trust has said.

Rangers working with the West Cornwall Ringing Group said they recorded an average of 3.3 chicks per box in West Penwith, compared to 2.4 elsewhere in the wider area. Although below the long-term average of 4.3, the figures were described as "successful" by the charity, and driven by collaboration after a challenging spring that reduced prey numbers.

Shaun Boyns, ranger in the West Cornwall countryside team said "Barn owls are a great indicator species - when they're thriving, it's a sign the wider ecosystem is healthy too."

The charity said the results showed what was possible when there was a "strong partnership between farmers, rangers and conservation groups".

It said it had also been an unusually successful year for bats too, especially at Godolphin near Helston, where nine species had been recorded.

Bird numbers also rose across west Cornwall, with a reported 80% of surveyed sites showing an increase in bird species - Godolphin stood out again as a top performer.

The National Trust said these findings "reflect a bigger story... managing land for wildlife helps both nature and people, and it hopes to build on this success across Cornwall".

West Penwith sees a successful season for barn owls
 
Rare parrots return to Atlantic Forest fragment after decades of silence

Twenty brilliantly colored red-browed amazons took flight over a reserve holding one of the few remaining intact swaths of Atlantic Forest in Brazil. The green-and-red parrots had been missing from Alagoas state for generations. In January 2025, the birds returned home.

Researchers say releasing the red-browed amazons (Amazona rhodocorytha) will help the species rebound and restore a dying ecosystem. Only 3% of the Atlantic Forest remains in Alagoas, according to Luiz Fábio Silveira, deputy director of the University of São Paulo’s Museum of Zoology, making it one of the most threatened ecosystems on Earth.

The Atlantic Forest fragments in Alagoas are failing because the animals that spread seeds have disappeared. According to Silveira, without these creatures, trees that depend on animals to spread their seeds are dying and being replaced by trees whose seeds travel on the wind.

The release into a thousand-hectare forest reserve in Coruripe, outside of the state capital, Maceió, is part of the Project for the Evaluation, Recovery and Conservation of Endangered Birds (ARCA), which Silveira leads.

The birds were pushed to near-extinction by “the synergy between capturing the last birds for illegal trade and severe deforestation in the remaining forests,” Silveira said, “which led to a lack of places for nesting and feeding.”

The release earlier this year took place in a forest reserve in the municipality of Coruripe that’s owned by sugarcane company Usina Coruripe and recognized as a Biosphere Reserve by the Brazilian government. It represents one of the best-protected sites in the state, according to Silveira.

The reserve also holds the largest population of brazilwood (Paubrasilia echinata), the tree that gave Brazil its name, outside of Bahia state. Yet even in this protected area, without seed-spreading animals, the natural processes that maintain forest health have broken down.

The 20 parrots released in January came from rescue centers and a conservation foundation. None had lived in the wild before, so they spent two years in a large aviary within the forest, learning to recognize natural foods and to adjust to rainfall patterns. The birds went through behavioral tests to assess their social skills, general behavior and fear of new things, Silveira said. Ten birds failed these tests and remain in captivity for breeding.

Since most forest fragments are privately owned by sugar and alcohol mills and are too small for the government to designate as national parks, the researchers worked with the Public Prosecutor’s Office and local groups to convert these areas into Private Natural Heritage Reserves (RPPNs), according to Silveira.

After persuading notary offices to waive registration fees that typically range in the thousands of dollars for establishing an RPPN, the project has protected more than 5,000 hectares (about 12,400 acres) of Atlantic Forest in Alagoas, Silveira said.

In addition to the red-browed amazons, other species restoration projects are underway here, including for the Alagoas curassow (Mitu mitu), a turkey-sized bird that’s been declared extinct in the wild for the past 30 years; it was reintroduced here from a captive population in 2019. The reserve also hosts reintroduced populations of the solitary tinamou (Tinamus solitarius), a ground-dwelling bird, and the red-footed tortoise (Chelonoidis carbonarius).

The project has sparked public enthusiasm. The Alagoas curassow became the official state bird, inspiring carnival celebrations, street races and murals, according to Silveira.

The reintroductions running on a budget of $500,000 per year, with the money coming from FAPESP, BluestOne, Usina Coruripe, the National Council for Scientific and Technological Development (CNPq) and private donors, according to Silveira.

“The population is beginning to have these animals back in their daily lives, and they’re starting to feel a great pride in their return,” Silveira said. “The residents of these regions, instead of wanting these animals in their homes [as pets], prefer to see them in the wild.”

Rare parrots return to Atlantic Forest fragment after decades of silence

Protecting Vietnam’s vast caves may have sparked a wildlife comeback

The discovery of the world’s biggest cave (at least by one measure) drew global attention. International tourism took off, spearheaded by Vietnamese tour company Oxalis Adventure, which employed Hồ and the Limberts as consultants. By 2013, Oxalis was organizing multiday expeditions through Sơn Đoòng and various other caves in the vicinity. The media frenzy also prompted some controversial proposals: In 2014, a Vietnamese conglomerate suggested building a 10-kilometer-long (6-mile) cable car to bring mass tourism to the cave. Academics, conservationists, business leaders and environmental activists in Vietnam all voiced strong opposition, and the local authorities ultimately shelved the plans.

The cave’s chambers were as wide as an airplane hangar and taller than the Great Pyramid of Giza. Two ceiling collapses had birthed flourishing subterranean jungles, home to great hornbills (Buceros bicornis) and particolored flying squirrels (Hylopetes alboniger). When the Limberts surveyed the cave, which Hồ christened Sơn Đoòng, it confirmed what they suspected: it contained the largest known cave chamber cross-section in the world.

“When it comes to conservation, the national park has made significant progress,” says Tín Đoàn, a senior lecturer at Northumbria University in the U.K. and an advocate for sustainable tourism. Originally from the same Annamite mountain range as Phong Nha-Kẻ Bàng National Park — though around 300 km (190 mi) south — Đoàn studied tourism and sustainability in Australia and the U.S. before completing his Ph.D. in New Zealand. Throughout his time in academia, he’s kept a keen eye on the national park’s development.

“In terms of doing tourism, they have caves that appeal to different market segments,” he says. “It’s very strategic.” Sơn Đoòng hooks attention, but restricted numbers and a high price tag mean that most visitors check out the other caves in the area — like Hang Én, thought to be the world’s third-largest cave, and Paradise Cave, with raised wooden walkways suitable for less intrepid visitors and families.

The transformation of Phong Nha-Kẻ Bàng National Park’s visitor economy, Đoàn says, is a rare sustainable tourism success story. As strengthened conservation measures curbed illegal activity, hundreds of men from the area set aside their hunting gear for caving equipment, finding work as tour guides and porters. UNESCO put Phong Nha-Kẻ Bàng National Park on its World Heritage List in 2003, and by the time it expanded the area in 2015, illegal hunting and logging had fallen sharply. Structured, sustainable careers fostered by tourism replaced the lost jobs.

After 15 years of stringent conservation efforts, both Thín and Limbert say that wildlife populations are rebounding. “When we were surveying Sơn Đoòng, we rarely saw any primates,” Limbert says. “Now, we see big groups of Hatinh langurs [Trachypithecus hatinhensis] on nearly every trip.”

These charcoal-black monkeys with salt-and-pepper beards and messy mohawks were once hunted for their meat and purported medicinal properties. They’re endemic to Vietnam and Laos and are listed as endangered on the IUCN Red List. More elusive animals in the park include the saola (Pseudoryx nghetinhensis), an antelope-like bovine with straight sharp horns and a black-and-white patterned head. So rarely seen that it borders on legend, the saola is often referred to as the “Asian unicorn.”

National parks in Vietnam lack the resources to measure wildlife population numbers, but increased sightings of endemic species indicates a comeback, and Oxalis has begun incorporating this into some of its tours. In 2022, it launched the Hang Ba Deep Jungle Expedition, which visits six caves over four days in one of the most remote corners in the national park. Instead of looking for wildlife, Limbert says, visitors study animal tracks and look at photos taken by camera traps. “It’s more of an expedition than a tour, with a maximum of six tourists. We insist everyone is quiet, we ask them to wear darker clothing and we keep away from the animals.”

Though not opposed to Oxalis positioning wildlife as part of the appeal of their tours, Đoàn maintains the measured critical thinking of an academic. “It’s hard to know if it’s a good idea to include wildlife elements [in the tours] because we don’t know the full story … are these animals returning, or is it that the animals were always there and we weren’t aware?”

Đoàn also points to Laos, which he says has failed to make the same strides in combating poaching as Vietnam. Without good data, he says, how can we know that animals aren’t arriving in Vietnam after being driven away by hunters in Laos?

Limbert echoes Đoàn’s concerns for what’s happening on the Laotian side of the border, but remains optimistic for the future. In 2025, UNESCO expanded its recognition area again to include both Phong Nha-Kẻ Bàng National Park and Hin Nam No National Park in Laos, forming a transboundary natural World Heritage Site. Plans are already underway to increase conservation efforts in this remote part of Laos, and Limbert is mustering a team to help diffuse knowledge and experience across the border.

Protecting Vietnam’s vast caves may have sparked a wildlife comeback
 
30-year 'snapshot' of Pacific Northwestern birds shows their surprising resilience

A 30-year "snapshot study" of birds in the Pacific Northwest is showing their surprising resilience in the face of climate change. The project started when School of Biological Sciences Assistant Professor Benjamin Freeman found a study by Louise Waterhouse detailing birds in the mountains near Vancouver three decades ago. What followed was an ecological scavenger hunt: Freeman revisited each of the old field sites, navigating using his local knowledge and Waterhouse's hand-drawn maps.

Freeman, who grew up in Seattle, mainly studies the ecology of tropical birds—but the discovery of Waterhouse's paper made him curious about research closer to home. The results were surprising: over the last three decades, most of the bird populations in the region were stable and had been increasing in abundance at higher elevations.

The study, "Pacific Northwest birds have shifted their abundances upslope in response to 30 years of warming temperatures," was published in the journal Ecology this fall. In addition to lead author Freeman, the team also included Harold Eyster (The Nature Conservancy), Julian Heavyside (University of British Columbia), Daniel Yip (Canadian Wildlife Service), Monica Mather (British Columbia Ministry of Water, Lands and Resource Stewardship), and Waterhouse (British Columbia Ministry of Forests, Coast Area Research).

"It is great news that most birds in the region are resilient, and by doing this work, we can focus on the species that do need help, like the Canada Jay, which is struggling in this region," Freeman says. "Studies like this help us focus resources and effort."

Conducting the fieldwork was a detective game, Freeman says. Each day, he would wake up at four in the morning to locate and visit the research areas—often navigating trails, open forest, and rough terrain on foot.

This area of the Pacific Northwest is punctuated with old-growth stands of trees—sections of forest that have never been logged or altered. "These areas feel like islands," Freeman shares. "They feel ancient and untouched, but even in pristine habitats, birds are still responding to climate change."

By comparing the two "snapshots," the team showed that while temperatures have increased over the last 30 years, most bird populations in the region haven't declined—but they have become more abundant at higher elevations. "It's encouraging," Freeman says. "Thirty years of warming has led to changes, but for the most part, these bird populations are mostly stable or improving."

One reason for this resilience could be the stability that old growth forests provide, and Freeman suggests that conserving wide swaths of mountain habitat might help birds thrive as they continue to adapt, while still supporting populations at lower elevations. The study also helps identify which bird species need additional support, like the Canada Jay—a gray and white bird known for following hikers in pursuit of dropped snacks.

It's just one piece of Freeman's larger research goal—he aims to do this type of snapshot research in many different places to identify general patterns, especially differences in temperate versus tropical environments.

"In the tropics, most bird species are vulnerable, with only a few resilient species. In the Pacific Northwest, we saw the opposite," he says. "A pattern is emerging: temperate zones show more resilience, tropics more vulnerability."

30-year 'snapshot' of Pacific Northwestern birds shows their surprising resilience

France’s largest rewilding project takes root in the Dauphiné Alps

In the foothills of the western Alps in southeastern France, horned alpine ibex roam the limestone cliffs of a smaller mountain range known as the Dauphiné Alps, a region once home to thriving populations of wild horses, bison, roe deer, gray wolves, Eurasian lynx, and four species of vultures. In June of this year, the nonprofit Rewilding Europe announced the landscape as its 11th restoration site, making it France’s largest rewilding project.

The term “rewilding” emerged in the 1990s, but it’s only in the past decade that the approach has grown in popularity worldwide. Generally, rewilding is a restoration method that prioritizes conserving or reintroducing historically present species, including those wiped out locally, to boost overall biodiversity. For Rewilding Europe, this approach allows nature to flourish in a way that will make ecosystems more resilient to climate change. It also means creating economic opportunities for the people who live in these ecosystems.

“A fixed approach to nature doesn’t really work anymore,” Fabien Quétier, head of landscapes for Rewilding Europe, told Mongabay. He said rewilding is about restoring core ecosystem functions by encouraging the establishment of herbivores to maintain the forests, scavengers to mitigate disease from carcasses, and aquatic mammals like otters and beavers to maintain rivers. The project is currently focusing on ungulates such as wild horses and cattle, historical predators such as wolves and lynx, and vultures.

One of the reasons Rewilding Europe selected the French Alps for rewilding is that the region already had a head start. In the second half of the 20th century, humans started to reintroduce once-depleted species such as roe deer (Capreolus capreolus), a popular hunting species; chamois (Rupicapra rupicapra), a mountain goat; and alpine marmots (Marmota marmota), a main prey species for golden eagles (Aquila chrysaetos). Over time, these species attracted the natural comeback of other animals, including keystone species — those that have an outsized role in maintaining ecosystem balance — such as dam-building Eurasian beavers (Castor fiber) and gray wolves (Canis lupus), an apex predator.

The history of human impact on the landscape goes back to the 1700s, when locals cleared much of the forests for agriculture, livestock grazing and firewood. As the Industrial Revolution kicked off in the 1800s, however, people started moving to cities, vacating the land, Quétier said. Decades of natural regeneration followed, with native tree species growing back on their own, and historical predators such as wolves making their way back over the Alps from Italy by the 1990s.

The natural comeback of the region’s wildlife signaled to locals that it was ripe for a dedicated rewilding effort. So, a group of friends decided to nominate the Dauphiné Alps as an official rewilding site in 2019 — France’s first. After a two-year feasibility study, Rewilding Europe designated a director, started raising funds, and officially launched the project earlier this year.

Roughly 60% of the Dauphiné Alps are forested, Raynaud said, and of this, nearly half are public forests. The rest is private property, meaning that for the project to succeed, Raynaud and his team need to collaborate with landowners.

One way they plan to do that is by reintroducing wild horses and cattle, such as Polish konik ponies and Scottish Galloway cows. These herbivores naturally graze the land, keeping plant growth under control, and they also disturb the soil by mixing up nutrients, breaking branches and spreading seeds that will become mature trees several years from now — without the need for humans to directly plant trees.

The Dauphiné Alps are characterized by three main vegetation zones, Quétier said: a lowland altitudinal belt with Mediterranean oaks; a montane belt with beech (genus Fagus), silver firs (Abies alba), Scots pine (Pinus sylvestris) and black pine (Pinus nigra) that stabilize the slopes; and a subalpine belt with Norway spruce (Picea abies) and mountain pine (Pinus uncinata).

Among the region’s most iconic animals is the alpine ibex (Capra ibex), a wild mountain goat with long, curved horns that was hunted nearly to extinction, save for one small population in Italy. The species was brought back to the Dauphiné Alps in the late 1980s, to Vercors Regional Natural Park. It’s also considered a keystone species, along with the Eurasian lynx (Lynx lynx), a locally endangered species that’s no longer present in the Alps but lives in the nearby Chartreuse mountain range. Rewilding France said it wants to reintroduce lynx within the next couple of years. This medium-sized wildcat is a historical predator, keeping populations of small herbivores in check without the need for hunting. That ensures the herbivores don’t wipe out all the tree species that provide good timber.

Eurasian brown bears (Ursus arctos arctos) are another keystone species that once roamed the French Alps before they were hunted to local extinction in the 1940s. While reintroducing them would help the ecosystem, Rewilding France doesn’t plan to do so because there’s no public support for such a move, Raynaud told Mongabay.

Locals had a similar aversion to the reintroduction of four vulture species in France: the bearded (Gypaetus barbatus), griffon (Gyps fulvus), cinereous (Aegypius monachus) and Egyptian (Neophron percnopterus) vultures. All are now found across the Dauphiné Alps, thanks to dedicated captive-breeding efforts, where newborn animals are raised in captivity and later released into the wild to rebuild populations.

Vultures now serve as one of the region’s largest tourist attractions, said Gaёl Foilleret, a biologist with the nonprofit Vautours en Baronnies who isn’t directly involved with Rewilding France. Explaining to people how vultures get rid of carcasses that might otherwise contaminate rivers with bacteria and traces of lead from bullets helps people understand their value, he said. Foilleret recently founded a museum about vultures to further educate locals and visitors.

The project involves more than just wildlife reintroductions, Quétier said. Over the next few years, they plan to restore the natural flows of channelized rivers with gravel beds and vegetation that will soak up excess water during periods of heavy rainfall, to avoid flooding in downstream towns. Meandering rivers that snake through the landscape also help direct more water absorption underground to the water table, an important source of drinking water.

Other benefits of rewilding abound, Raynaud added. Restoring the landscape protects towns from erosion. Fostering pollinators helps crops grow better. And decaying wood hosts species that prey on pests.

The economic benefits of rewilding are just as important, Raynaud and Quétier said; otherwise, it would be difficult to get locals on board. The return of popular game species opens opportunities for controlled hunting, for instance. Meanwhile, timber species offer opportunities to harvest and sell wood. The project’s first rewilding site is a 60-year conservation easement of 500 hectares (about 1,200 acres) of public forest, 25% of which is a no-extraction zone; other areas are still open to extraction. There’s also a market for wild-grown mushrooms, while recreation, such as skiing, can bring in profits for small towns.

France’s largest rewilding project takes root in the Dauphiné Alps
 
European rollers (Coracias garrulus) had a good breeding season in southeast Slovakia in 2025. 36 breeding pairs could be counted. This species went temporary local extinct in Slovakia in 2010 and returned only in 2020. Since then, they are supported by site management and new nesting boxes. In this season, two pairs moved north of river Latorica, expanding species range a little. New boxes are planned also for southwestern Slovakia where currently no pairs breed.

Population went like this:
2020 - 6 pairs
2021 - 7 pairs
2022 - 15 pairs
2023 - 18 pairs
2024 - 29 pairs
2025 - 36 pairs
source 1 source 2
 
How Indonesian communities rescued the Bali starling from the brink of extinction

One of the world’s rarest birds has rebounded from near extinction after Indigenous communities on the Indonesian island of Bali committed to protect it under traditional laws, Mongabay contributor Heather Physioc reported.

The Bali starling (Leucopsar rothschildi) is a songbird with striking white plumage and a cobalt-blue face. In 2001, just six birds were known to live in the wild. By 2021, there were roughly 520.

“All the people in our village are working together to secure this species,” said Made Sukadana, chair of an organization working to increase tourism in Bali’s Tengkudak village. “We plant fruit trees for the Bali starling and support a dedicated, passionate bird person who monitors daily.”

But that wasn’t always the case. Decades of aggressive poaching driven by the pet trade devastated the wild population, overwhelming conservation efforts by both NGOs and the Indonesian government.

For example, the Tegal Bunder Breeding Center released 218 birds into Bali Barat National Park over the course of 18 years, yet the wild population continued to plummet. Many of the released birds lingered near release sites and became easy targets for poachers. Others remained dependent on humans or didn’t survive in the wild.

In the 1990s, traffickers were paying up to 40 million rupiah (about $4,500 at the time) for a pair of Bali starlings, more than a park ranger’s annual salary, making it easy to pay off officials. Even increased patrols by rangers couldn’t stem the losses; 78 birds were ultimately stolen from the breeding center.

The turning point came in 2006, when the island of Nusa Penida, about 20 kilometers (12 miles) southeast of Bali, was identified as an ex-situ sanctuary for the bird. Though the bird is endemic to Bali, local veterinarian Bayu Wirayudha, founder of Friends of the National Parks Foundation, said he believed the neighboring island would provide a safe conservation site against poaching. After in-person meetings with all the villages on Nusa Penida, the communities collectively agreed to turn the island into a refuge for the Bali starling.

The sanctuary on Nusa Penida was a success. Former poachers have become bird guides as ecotourism flourishes on the island. Visitors include bird-watching groups and National Geographic expeditions. Antipoaching compliance improved by nearly 1,200%. As the species’ recovery improved, the villages of Tengkudak, Bongan and Sibangkaja villages on the Bali mainland joined in, also introducing community protections to safeguard the starling.

How Indonesian communities rescued the Bali starling from the brink of extinction
 
I'm happy to announce an update to the prior story about plans to relocate Javan rhinos: the Indonesian Navy Marines have successfully trapped, transported and begun acclimatising the first Javan Rhinoceros as part of this project!

(quick side note: the story has been released in indonesian, but can be translated and reads fairly well)

Taman Nasional Ujung Kulon on Instagram: "PRESS RELEASE Pertama Kali dalam Sejarah: Badak Jawa Ditranslokasi dengan Dukungan Transportasi KAPA K-61 Marinir TNI Angkatan Laut Dunia konservasi Indonesia kembali mencatat sejarah baru. Untuk pertama kalinya, satu individu Badak Jawa (Rhinoceros sondaicus) bernama Musofa ditranslokasi dari habitat alaminya menuju kawasan konservasi khusus Javan Rhino Study and Conservation Area (JRSCA) di Taman Nasional Ujung Kulon (TNUK). Proses translokasi yang dinamai “Operasi Merah Putih” ini menandai langkah monumental dalam upaya penyelamatan spesies endemik Indonesia yang sangat terancam punah. Kegiatan ini berlandaskan Perjanjian Kerjasama (PKS) antara Kementerian Kehutanan dan Tentara Nasional Indonesia. Selain itu, melibatkan Kodam III Siliwangi, Pangkalan TNI Angkatan Laut Banten, khususnya dukungan penuh Batalyon Kapa 1 Marinir TNI Angkatan Laut menjadi kunci dalam misi konservasi berisiko tinggi. Operasi Merah Putih dipimpin oleh Komandan Satuan Tugas adalah Komandan Resor Militer (Danrem) 064/Maulana Yusuf Banten, Brigjen Edy Saputra, S.I.P, M.Han dengan Wakil Komandan Satuan Tugas yaitu Komandan Pangkalan TNI Angkatan Laut (Danlanal) Banten Kol Laut (P) Catur Yogiantoro dan Kepala Balai TN Ujung Kulon. Sebelum Operasi Merah Putih dilakukan di lapangan, rangkaian persiapan dilakukan untuk memastikan seluruh tim berada pada kesiapan terbaik. Salah satu tahapan paling krusial adalah simulasi penggunaan kendaraan amfibi KAPA K-61 Marinir TNI Angkatan Laut, yang disusun untuk memetakan tantangan medan yang akan dihadapi saat membawa kandang angkut berisi badak jawa yang diestimasikan memiliki berat lebih dari satu ton. (lanjut di kolom komentar)"
 
Back
Top