230 Global Mammals Relocated 36 Struggle at Home 22% Thrive

Govind Tekale

Worldwide mammal species introduced to new regions now face a startling twist - they're dying out in their original homes.

Photo Source: João Aguiar (Pexels)

Research reveals 230 non-native mammals spread globally, with 36 species now struggling to survive in their birthplaces.

Photo Source: Sergey Guk (Pexels)

Sulawesi's famous crested macaques dropped to critical numbers while their relocated cousins thrive on nearby Indonesian islands.

Photo Source: Quyet Le (CC BY-SA 2.0)

Europeans watch their native rabbits vanish while Australian populations of these same bunnies multiply rapidly.

Photo Source: Chris F (Pexels)

Massive rainforest destruction and hunting pushes tropical Asian mammals into this surprising survival pattern.

Photo Source: Михаил Фомин (Pexels)

Scientists found these relocated animal populations might accidentally save some species from complete extinction.

Photo Source: Enrico Blasutto (CC BY-SA 4.0)

Adding non-native populations to extinction risk calculations would boost survival chances for 22% of studied species.

Photo Source: Francesco Ungaro (Pexels)

Scientists from Vienna and Rome crack the code on how globalization reshapes wildlife survival strategies.

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Nature conservation faces tough choices between protecting native populations and accepting better survival rates in new territories.

Photo Source: Chris Clark (Pexels)