Wolves in Scotland Could Help Reduce Carbon in The Sky. Here's How.
It's been centuries since a wolf's howl was heard across the Scottish Highlands, but a team of researchers thinks it's time to bring back these much-maligned predators.
Doing so, their simulations have found, could return native woodlands to the country and pull carbon from the air.
Wolves (Canis lupus) were totally eradicated by human hunting in Scotland, with tradition claiming the last wolf was killed about 250 years ago (although it's difficult to be sure of the exact year, amid local myth and legend).
Around that time, the Jacobite rebellion of 1745 fundamentally changed much of the nation's land use. Woodland was cleared, and large shooting estates were established.
Eradicating this apex predator unraveled entire woodland ecosystems because the wolf's prey, red deer (Cervus elaphus), could multiply unabated.
Recent estimates suggest up to 400,000 red deer are out there right now, trampling and gnawing at the young saplings of trees that, in their absence, could grow into woodlands. Today, Scotland has native woods covering less than 4 percent of its surface, one of the lowest levels in Europe.
It's a textbook case of a predator as a 'keystone' species: a brick in the arch that holds its entire structure in place. In the US, reintroduction of wolves to a number of nationally managed ecosystems has been successful, most famously in Yellowstone National Park.
In theory, returning wolves to Scotland's wilds should help reduce the deer numbers, giving the woodland a chance to make a comeback.
"There is an increasing acknowledgment that the climate and biodiversity crises cannot be managed in isolation," says lead author and environmental scientist Dominick Spracklen from the University of Leeds.
"We need to look at the potential role of natural processes such as the reintroduction of species to recover our degraded ecosystems and these in turn can deliver co-benefits for climate and nature recovery."
The scientists' simulations suggest that a reintroduction in four key areas of Scotland could lead to a population of around 167 wolves, enough to reduce the density of deer populations in those areas to just four per square kilometer (0.4 square mile) in as little as two decades.
Each wolf, they estimate, has the potential to bring back enough woodland to absorb 6,080 metric tons (6,702 US tons) of CO2 each year. In today's carbon market, that's worth about US$195,000.
The resulting expansion of native woodlands would sequester 100 million metric tons of carbon dioxide over 100 years, their model suggests, "sufficient to make an important contribution to national climate targets".
"Large-scale expansion of woodlands, facilitated through the return of wolves, can contribute to national climate targets and could provide potential economic benefits to landowners and communities through carbon finance," the authors write.
But understandably, there are safety concerns that need to be considered – it's an intensely divisive topic, and for good reason.
"Human-wildlife conflicts involving carnivores are common and must be addressed through public policies that account for people's attitudes for a reintroduction to be successful," says ecologist and farmer Lee Schofield, who co-authored the paper.
The researchers believe lessons learned from the US and European wolf reintroductions will help here; and, while there's no denying the basis for wolves' fearful reputation, ecosystem collapse and extreme climate change are hardly toothless alternatives.
"This substantial carbon sequestration and the potential financial benefit related to wolf reintroduction may influence landowner and land manager perspectives around large carnivores," the team writes.
The research was published in Ecological Solutions and Evidence.
Places on Earth Too Hot For Humans Will Triple This Century, Scientists Warn
'Shocking': Global Glacier Ice Loss Accelerates by 36% in Last Decade
Extreme Drop in Oxygen Will Eventually Suffocate Most Life on Earth

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
23-05-2025
- Yahoo
Scientists grow concerned over devastating phenomenon impacting world's largest landlocked body of water: 'It is advisable to start action as soon as possible'
Coastal ports on the Caspian Sea could be left high and dry — and crucial habitats could be strongly affected — if the sea's level continues to drop with increasing global temperatures, a recent study reported. The research warned of risks to humans as well as protected species. Researchers led by University of Leeds faculty explored the possible impacts of projected declines in the sea's level by as much as 21 meters (about 70 feet) by the end of the century. They published their findings in April in the journal Communications Earth & Environment. The water level of the Caspian Sea — the world's largest landlocked water body — is declining as global temperatures increase, because more water is evaporating than flowing in, a university report about the study explained. The researchers concluded that, even if global temperature changes are limited to 2 degrees Celsius (3.6 Fahrenheit) above preindustrial levels, the Caspian Sea will likely drop 16 to 32 feet. This 2-degree mark is considered by many scientists to be a key threshold for efforts to limit the most severe effects on Earth's climate. Recent assessments consider it likely that the world will exceed this temperature increase. The new findings estimate that more than 27 million acres of the Caspian Sea — an area larger than Iceland — would dry up under even this more optimistic climate scenario. According to the new study, the sea level change under this scenario will "critically disrupt key ecosystems" as well as "reduce existing marine protected area coverage by up to 94%, and render billions of dollars of civil and industrial infrastructure obsolete." Per the report, the Caspian coast is home to more than 15 million people — in Azerbaijan, Iran, Kazakhstan, Russia, and Turkmenistan. They rely on it for fishing, shipping, and trade. The research indicated that, depending on the scenario, Northern Caspian communities and port equipment could end up anywhere from six to 60 miles from the shoreline of a dried-up sea. Dropping water levels will also reduce the breeding habitat of endangered Caspian seals and will limit access to rivers where several species of sturgeon spawn, per the research. A drying sea will also cause the loss of lagoons and other shallow-water habitats crucial to other fish and migratory birds. Do you think America has a plastic waste problem? Definitely Only in some areas Not really I'm not sure Click your choice to see results and speak your mind. The researchers noted that their findings come at a key juncture. "Some Caspian Sea level decline appears unavoidable," Simon Goodman, who supervised the research, said in the University of Leeds report. "It should be possible to find ways to protect biodiversity while safeguarding human interests and well-being ... [but] it is advisable to start action as soon as possible to give the best chance of success." Included on the researchers' list of recommendations are investments in biodiversity monitoring, conservation, and sustainable development. They advocated for helping coastal communities diversify their economies. They also argued for creating protected areas with flexible borders, to accommodate shifting habitats. The recommendations also included cuts to heat-trapping pollution on a global scale — to limit the warming that carries with it risks to the Caspian and the world. These cuts require work for companies and countries — and individuals can also contribute, through efforts ranging from reconsidering what we eat to limiting the carbon pollution of our homes. Join our free newsletter for good news and useful tips, and don't miss this cool list of easy ways to help yourself while helping the planet.
Yahoo
10-05-2025
- Yahoo
Antarctic Glacier Accused of "Ice Piracy"
When viewed from space, a very rude glacier in Antarctica was caught stealing ice from its neighbor as it melted. In a new study published in the journal The Cryosphere, researchers from England's University of Leeds found that one West Antarctic glacier has been engaging in "ice piracy," essentially bulking up while its neighbors thin due to melting. Using satellite imagery taken between 2005 and 2022, the environmental researchers were surprised to find that although three glaciers — Kohler East, Pope, and Smith — had begun to thin 51 percent faster per year, their neighbor, the Kohler West, actually slowed down by ten percent. According to Heather Selley, a Leeds PhD researcher who served as the paper's lead author, these disparate thinning speeds seemed to have strange consequences. "We think that the observed slowdown on Kohler West Glacier is due to the redirection of ice flow towards its neighbor — Kohler East," she explained in a press release. "This is due to the large change in Kohler West's surface slope, likely caused by the vastly different thinning rates on its neighboring glaciers. Because Kohler East's ice stream is flowing and thinning faster as it travels, it absorbs, or 'steals' ice from Kohler West." Like a child siphoning water from their friend's bucket into their own, this "ice piracy" involves ice being "redirected from one glacier to another, and the accelerating glacier is essentially 'thieving' ice from its slowing neighbor." While this phenomenon is not unknown to environmental scientists, it used to take hundreds or even thousands of years to occur. Observing it happen over a period of just 18 years was "fascinating," Selley said, but also troubling. The region of Antarctica where this ice piracy occurred is, as the European Space Agency noted, known for having "the highest recorded rates of thinning." The faster these glaciers melt, the higher sea levels rise, which can have severe consequences around the world. While scientists are well aware of the dangers of ever-increasing glacial retreat, this rapid ice piracy effect has seemingly thrown a curveball into their knowledge. "Our results show that there is substantial [melting] speed-up in this region of Antarctica, which has the highest recorded rates of thinning," Selley said. "Both of these are key indicators of the stability of an ice sheet and therefore have implications for predicting future sea level change." It's unlikely this ice theft will substantially alter the rate at which the world's glaciers are melting into the ocean and raising sea levels with it. But it's still an unexpected consequence of climate change that science had not, until now, witnessed occurring so quickly. More on glaciers: Glaciers Are Shrinking at an Incredible Rate
Yahoo
27-03-2025
- Yahoo
Scientists reveal cause of deadly storms which battered UK in space of a week
Three storms which battered the nation within the space of a week leaving 1.4 million households without electricity were caused by a 'swirling polar vortex' miles above the Earth, scientists have said. Four people lost their lives when storms Dudley, Eunice and Franklin hit the UK in February 2022, bringing 120mph winds and severe flooding. It marked the first time three named storms have been recorded within seven days since the storm-naming system began in 2015. According to new research, the cluster was connected to stronger winds in the Arctic stratosphere. Experts believe the finding could help forecasters identify any increased risk of storm clusters up to a month before they happen. Storm Eunice was described as a once-in-a-decade event and the most severe since 2014, with record wind gusts for England of 122mph recorded at the Needles on the Isle of Wight, the Met Office said. February 2022 was characterised by an extremely strong stratospheric polar vortex (SPV) – a large spinning mass of cold air in the stratosphere around 15 miles above the Arctic that is prominent during winter months, the findings published in the journal Communications Earth and Environment show. Researchers concluded that the strong SPV made it up to three times more likely that there would be intense storms affecting the UK and northern Europe during February 2022. Their results also reveal that the strong SPV at that time increased the likelihood of three or more storms reaching the UK in a single week by around 80% compared with when the SPV is normal. Crucially, the researchers say that the signal for a strong SPV was evident from forecasts carried out as early as November 2021 and that spotting these conditions could offer a window of opportunity for enhanced European predictability. Lead author Dr Ryan Williams, who carried out the research while at the University of Leeds, said: 'Our research demonstrates the need to better understand the different drivers of the North Atlantic storm track, such as the state of the stratospheric polar vortex that is potentially predictable several weeks in advance. 'Being able to provide early warnings of possible severe weather is all the more pertinent with climate change, as there is evidence that major winter storms will become more intense, exacerbating impacts such as flooding and wind damage.' Co-author Jeff Knight, the science lead in monthly to decadal prediction at the UK Met Office, said: 'It's been understood for a while that the Arctic stratosphere can affect the type of winter we get in the UK, but these results show that it can even affect the occurrence of stormy spells within the season. 'An intense stratospheric polar vortex can now be recognised as a warning to forecasters of increased risks of damaging storms. 'This was likely seen in the most recent winter, around the time of Storm Eowyn in late January.'