Interesting . It’s been my view for a while and argued on this site. Outside of Island and isolated waters, I’m a let nature take its course kind of guy. Invasive Species orthodoxy is definitely a value judgement not always rooted in scientific analysis. A comment someone once made, in response to one my post arguing invasive species often lead to more complex ecosystems and greater species diversity, about how Nilgai were “devastating” south Texas comes to mind.
I think the work of researchers like this gentleman should be looked at critically rather than assumedly (or orthodoxly).
Anyway, I thought this was interesting.
I placed it in “rewilding” due to wild equids of this type being native to North America even if they didn’t survive the invasive arrival of Homo Sapiens 10,000-plus years ago. Or climate change and a comet impact if you prefer. I imagine it was likely an A+B+C event where factor A (arrival of Humans) was the key triggering event of the mass extinction of most large mammals from the Western Hemisphere. B+C just finished off the more vulnerable and less adaptive.