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Coordinates: 68°30′48″N 161°31′32″E / 68.51333°N 161.52556°E / 68.51333; 161.52556
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{{short description|Ecological experiment to make an Ice Age-Like Reserve}}
{{About|the existing Pleistocene Park in Siberia|information on proposed Pleistocene parks elsewhere|Pleistocene rewilding}}
{{About|the existing Pleistocene Park in Siberia|information on proposed Pleistocene parks elsewhere|Pleistocene rewilding}}
{{Multiple issues|
{{Primary sources|date=September 2023}}
{{Update|date=April 2020}}
}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=January 2020}}
{{Infobox Park
{{Infobox Park
| name =Pleistocene Park
| name =Pleistocene Park
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| nearest_city =[[Chersky (settlement)|Chersky]]
| nearest_city =[[Chersky (settlement)|Chersky]]
| coords ={{coord|68|30|48|N|161|31|32|E|dim:50000_region:RU-SA|display=inline,title|format=dms}}<!-- coordinates are those of marker on map on Pleistocene Park homepage (location of tower) -->
| coords ={{coord|68|30|48|N|161|31|32|E|dim:50000_region:RU-SA|display=inline,title|format=dms}}<!-- coordinates are those of marker on map on Pleistocene Park homepage (location of tower) -->
| area ={{convert|160|km2|sqmi|abbr=on|sigfig=1}}<!-- number is correct; the oft-cited 16 km2 (1600 ha) is just the fenced territory within the 160 km2 park area -->
| area ={{convert|20|km2|sqmi|abbr=on|sigfig=1}}
| established =1988 / {{start date|1996}}
| established =1988 / {{start date|df=yes|1996}}
| visitation_num =
| visitation_num =
| visitation_year =
| visitation_year =
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| website = {{Official URL}}
| website = {{Official URL}}
}}
}}
'''Pleistocene Park''' ({{lang-ru|Плейстоценовый парк}}) is a nature reserve on the [[Kolyma River]] south of [[Chersky (settlement)|Chersky]] in the [[Sakha Republic]], [[Russia]], in northeastern [[Siberia]], where an attempt is being made to recreate the [[Mammoth steppe|northern subarctic steppe grassland ecosystem]] that flourished in the area during the [[last glacial period]].<ref name="natgeo2005" /><ref name="Eli Kintisch: Born to Rewild. 2015" />
'''Pleistocene Park''' ({{langx|ru|Плейстоценовый парк|Pleystotsenovyy park}}) is a [[nature reserve]] on the [[Kolyma River]] south of [[Chersky (settlement)|Chersky]] in the [[Sakha Republic]], Russia, in northeastern [[Siberia]], where an attempt is being made to re-create the [[Mammoth steppe|northern subarctic steppe grassland ecosystem]] that flourished in the area during the [[last glacial period]].<ref name="Eli Kintisch: Born to Rewild. 2015"/>{{efn|During the last ice age northeastern Siberia remained a grassy refuge for scores of animals, including bison and woolly mammoths. Then, about 10,000&nbsp;years ago, this vast ecosystem disappeared as the Ice Age ended. Now, though, the Ice Age landscape is on its way back, with a little help from the Russian scientists who have established "Pleistocene Park".<ref name="natgeo2005">{{cite magazine |title=Pleistocene Park underway: Home for reborn mammoths? |magazine=National Geographic |date=17 May 2005 |access-date=20 April 2009 |url=http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2005/05/0517_050517_pleistocene.html|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20050521020536/http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2005/05/0517_050517_pleistocene.html|url-status=dead|archive-date=21 May 2005}}</ref>}}


The project is being led by [[Russia]]n scientist [[Sergey Zimov]],<ref name="meyer2005" /> with hopes to back the [[hypothesis]] that [[Quaternary extinction event#Hunting hypothesis|overhunting]], and not [[Quaternary extinction event#Climate change hypothesis|climate change]], was primarily responsible for the extinction of wildlife and the disappearance of the grasslands at the [[Quaternary extinction event|end of the Pleistocene epoch]].<ref name="Zimov 2005: Pleistocene Park: Return of the Mammoth's Ecosystem. Science Mag." /><ref name="Zimov 2007: Mammoth Steppes and Future Climate" />
The project is being led by [[Russia]]n scientists [[Sergey Zimov]] and Nikita Zimov,<ref name="meyer2005"/><ref name="Indiegogo 2018, update 30 May 2018"/><ref name="Anna Stroganova: Bison for Siberia. 2018"/><ref name="pp materials diary-nikita-wrangel-2010"/><ref name="zoologist 84"/> testing the [[hypothesis]] that repopulating with large herbivores (and predators) can restore rich grasslands ecosystems, as expected if [[Quaternary extinction event#Hunting hypothesis|overhunting]], and not [[Quaternary extinction event#Climate change hypothesis|climate change]], was primarily responsible for the extinction of wildlife and the disappearance of the grasslands at the [[Quaternary extinction event|end of the Pleistocene epoch]].<ref name="Zimov 2005: Pleistocene Park: Return of the Mammoth's Ecosystem. Science Mag."/><ref name="Zimov 2007: Mammoth Steppes and Future Climate"/>


A further aim is to research the climatic effects of the expected changes in the ecosystem. Here the hypothesis is that the change from [[tundra]] to grassland will result in a raised ratio of energy emission to energy absorption of the area, leading to less thawing of permafrost and thereby less emission of [[greenhouse gas]]es.<ref name="Zimov 2005: Pleistocene Park: Return of the Mammoth's Ecosystem. Science Mag." /><ref name="Zimov 2007: Mammoth Steppes and Future Climate" />
The aim of the project is to research the climatic effects of the expected changes in the ecosystem. Here the hypothesis is that the change from [[tundra]] to grassland will result in a raised ratio of energy emission to energy absorption of the area, leading to less thawing of [[permafrost]] and thereby less emission of [[greenhouse gas]]es.<ref name="Zimov 2005: Pleistocene Park: Return of the Mammoth's Ecosystem. Science Mag." /><ref name="Zimov 2007: Mammoth Steppes and Future Climate" /> It is also thought that removal of snow by large herbivores will further reduce the permafrost's insulation.


To study this, large [[herbivore]]s have been released, and their effect on the local fauna is being monitored. Preliminary results point at the ecologically low-grade tundra [[biome]] being converted into a productive grassland biome, and at the energy emission of the area being raised.<ref name="OttawaLife 2013: The Zimovs" />
To study this, large [[herbivore]]s have been released, and their effect on the local flora is being monitored. Preliminary results point at the ecologically low-grade tundra [[biome]] being converted into a productive grassland biome and at the energy emission of the area being raised.<ref name="OttawaLife 2013: The Zimovs" />


== Research goals ==
A documentary is being produced about the park by an American journalist and filmmaker.<ref name="Griswold-Tergis 2013: Pleistocene Park pt.1" /><ref name="Griswold-Tergis: Pleistocene Park Movie. fb" />
=== Effects of large herbivores on the arctic tundra/grasslands ecosystem ===
The primary aim of Pleistocene Park is to recreate the mammoth steppe (ancient [[taiga]]/[[tundra]] grasslands that were widespread in the region during the last ice age). The key concept is that animals, rather than climate, maintained that ecosystem. Reintroducing large herbivores to Siberia would then initiate a positive feedback loop promoting the reestablishment of grassland ecosystems. This argument is the basis for [[rewilding (conservation biology)|rewilding]] Pleistocene Park's landscape with [[megafauna]] that were previously abundant in the area, as evidenced by the fossil record.<ref name="Zimov 2005: Pleistocene Park: Return of the Mammoth's Ecosystem. Science Mag."/><ref name="Zimov 2007: Mammoth Steppes and Future Climate"/><ref name="Zimov et al 2012: Mammoth steppe: a high-productivity phenomenon. QSR"/>


The [[Mammoth steppe|grassland-steppe ecosystem]] that dominated Siberia during the [[Pleistocene]] disappeared 10,000 years ago and was replaced by a mossy and forested [[tundra]] and [[taiga]] ecosystem.<ref name="Zimov 2005: Pleistocene Park: Return of the Mammoth's Ecosystem. Science Mag."/> Concurrently, most of the large herbivores that roamed Siberia during the Pleistocene have vanished from the region.<ref name="Zimov 2007: Mammoth Steppes and Future Climate"/> The mainstream explanation for this used to be that at the beginning of the [[Holocene]] the arid steppe climate changed into a humid one, and when the steppe vanished so did the steppe's animals.<ref name="Zimov 2005: Pleistocene Park: Return of the Mammoth's Ecosystem. Science Mag." /> Sergei Zimov points out that in contradiction to this scenario:
== Goals ==
* Similar climatic shifts occurred in previous [[Interglacial|interglacial periods]] without causing such massive environmental changes.<ref name="Zimov 2005: Pleistocene Park: Return of the Mammoth's Ecosystem. Science Mag."/><ref name="Zimov 2007: Mammoth Steppes and Future Climate"/><ref name="Zimov et al 2012: Mammoth steppe: a high-productivity phenomenon. QSR"/>
* Those large herbivores of the former steppe that survived until today (e.g. [[Muskox|musk oxen]], [[bison]], [[Equus ferus|horses]]) thrive in humid environments just as well as in arid ones.<ref name="Zimov 2005: Pleistocene Park: Return of the Mammoth's Ecosystem. Science Mag."/><ref name="Zimov 2007: Mammoth Steppes and Future Climate"/><ref name="Zimov et al 2012: Mammoth steppe: a high-productivity phenomenon. QSR"/>
* The climate (both temperatures and humidity) in today's northern Siberia is in fact similar to that of the [[mammoth steppe]]. The radiation aridity index for northern Siberia on [[Mikhail Budyko]]'s scale is 2 (= steppe bordering on semi-desert).<ref name="Zimov 2005: Pleistocene Park: Return of the Mammoth's Ecosystem. Science Mag."/><ref name="Zimov 2007: Mammoth Steppes and Future Climate"/><ref name="Zimov et al 2012: Mammoth steppe: a high-productivity phenomenon. QSR"/> [[Aridity index#Budyko's index|Budyko's scale]] compares the ratio of the energy received by the earth's surface to the energy required for the evaporation of the total annual precipitation.


Zimov and colleagues argue for a reversed order of environmental change in the mammoth steppe. Humans, with their constantly improving technology, overhunted the large herbivores and led to their extinction and extirpation.<ref name="Zimov 2005: Pleistocene Park: Return of the Mammoth's Ecosystem. Science Mag."/><ref name="Zimov 2007: Mammoth Steppes and Future Climate"/><ref name="Zimov et al 2012: Mammoth steppe: a high-productivity phenomenon. QSR" /><ref name="Wolf 2008: Big Thaw"/> Without herbivores grazing and trampling over the land, mosses, shrubs and trees were able to take over and replace the grassland ecosystem.<ref name="Zimov 2005: Pleistocene Park: Return of the Mammoth's Ecosystem. Science Mag."/><ref name="Zimov 2007: Mammoth Steppes and Future Climate"/><ref name="Zimov et al 2012: Mammoth steppe: a high-productivity phenomenon. QSR"/><ref name="Wolf 2008: Big Thaw"/> If the grasslands were destroyed because herbivore populations were decimated by human hunting, then "it stands to reason that those landscapes can be reconstituted by the judicious return of appropriate herbivore communities."<ref name="Zimov 2005: Pleistocene Park: Return of the Mammoth's Ecosystem. Science Mag."/>
=== Researching the effects of large herbivores on the arctic tundra/grasslands ecosystem ===
The primary aim of Pleistocene Park is to recreate the ancient [[taiga]]/[[tundra]] grasslands that were widespread in the region during the last ice age. The key concept is that animals, rather than climate, maintained that ecosystem. Reintroducing large herbivores to Siberia would then initiate a positive feedback loop promoting the reestablishment of grassland ecosystems. This argument is the basis for [[rewilding (conservation biology)|rewilding]] Pleistocene Park's landscape with [[megafauna]] that was previously abundant in the area, as evidenced by the fossil record.<ref name="Zimov 2005: Pleistocene Park: Return of the Mammoth's Ecosystem. Science Mag." /><ref name="Zimov 2007: Mammoth Steppes and Future Climate" /><ref name="Zimov et al 2012: Mammoth steppe: a high-productivity phenomenon. QSR" />


=== Effects of large herbivores on permafrost and global warming ===
The [[Mammoth steppe|grassland-steppe ecosystem]] that dominated Siberia during the [[Pleistocene]] disappeared 10,000 years ago and was replaced by a mossy and forested [[tundra]] and [[taiga]] ecosystem.<ref name="Zimov 2005: Pleistocene Park: Return of the Mammoth's Ecosystem. Science Mag." /> Concurrently, most of the large herbivores that roamed Siberia during the Pleistocene vanished from the region.<ref name="Zimov 2007: Mammoth Steppes and Future Climate" /> The mainstream explanation for this used to be that at the beginning of the [[Holocene]] the arid steppe climate changed into a humid one, and when the steppe vanished so did the steppe's animals.<ref name="Zimov 2005: Pleistocene Park: Return of the Mammoth's Ecosystem. Science Mag." /> Sergei Zimov points out that in contradiction to this scenario
{{See also|Permafrost#Effects of climate change}}
* similar climatic shifts occurred in previous interglacial periods without causing such massive environmental changes,<ref name="Zimov 2005: Pleistocene Park: Return of the Mammoth's Ecosystem. Science Mag." /><ref name="Zimov 2007: Mammoth Steppes and Future Climate" /><ref name="Zimov et al 2012: Mammoth steppe: a high-productivity phenomenon. QSR" />
* those large herbivores of the former steppe that survived until today (e.g., [[Muskox|musk oxen]], [[bison]], [[Equus ferus|horses]]) thrive in humid environments just as well as in arid ones,<ref name="Zimov 2005: Pleistocene Park: Return of the Mammoth's Ecosystem. Science Mag." /><ref name="Zimov 2007: Mammoth Steppes and Future Climate" /><ref name="Zimov et al 2012: Mammoth steppe: a high-productivity phenomenon. QSR" />
A secondary aim is to research the climatic effects of the expected changes in the ecosystem. Here the key concept is that some of the effects of the large herbivores, such as eradicating trees and shrubs or trampling snow, will result in a stronger cooling of the ground in the winter, leading to less thawing of [[permafrost]] during summer and thereby less emission of [[greenhouse gas]]es.<ref name="Zimov 2005: Pleistocene Park: Return of the Mammoth's Ecosystem. Science Mag."/><ref name="Zimov 2007: Mammoth Steppes and Future Climate"/><ref name="Zimov et al 2012: Mammoth steppe: a high-productivity phenomenon. QSR"/>
* the climate (both temperatures and humidity) in today's northern Siberia is in fact similar to that of the [[mammoth steppe]]. The radiation aridity index for northern Siberia on [[Mikhail Budyko]]'s scale is 2 (= steppe bordering on semi-desert).<ref name="Zimov 2005: Pleistocene Park: Return of the Mammoth's Ecosystem. Science Mag." /><ref name="Zimov 2007: Mammoth Steppes and Future Climate" /><ref name="Zimov et al 2012: Mammoth steppe: a high-productivity phenomenon. QSR" /> [[Aridity index#Budyko's index|Budyko's scale]] compares the ratio of the energy received by the earth's surface to the energy required for the evaporation of the total annual precipitation. The 'humid climate' argument was based on [[Aridity index|other scales]], which compare precipitation to [[potential evapotranspiration]]. Moss has a very low transpiration rate and thus causes humidity without necessarily needing humidity for its establishment. Using these other scales as a proof for humidity being the cause of the disappearance of the grasslands therefore constitutes a scientifically not viable [[begging the question|circular argument]].
Zimov and colleagues argue for a reversed order of environmental change in the mammoth steppe. Humans, with their constantly improving technology, overhunted the large herbivores and led to their extinction and extirpation.<ref name="Zimov 2005: Pleistocene Park: Return of the Mammoth's Ecosystem. Science Mag." /><ref name="Zimov 2007: Mammoth Steppes and Future Climate" /><ref name="Zimov et al 2012: Mammoth steppe: a high-productivity phenomenon. QSR" /><ref name="Wolf 2008: Big Thaw" /> Without herbivores grazing and trampling over the land, mosses, shrubs and trees were able to take over and replace the grassland ecosystem.<ref name="Zimov 2005: Pleistocene Park: Return of the Mammoth's Ecosystem. Science Mag." /><ref name="Zimov 2007: Mammoth Steppes and Future Climate" /><ref name="Zimov et al 2012: Mammoth steppe: a high-productivity phenomenon. QSR" /><ref name="Wolf 2008: Big Thaw" /> If the grasslands were destroyed because herbivore populations were decimated by human hunting, then ″it stands to reason that those landscapes can be reconstituted by the judicious return of appropriate herbivore communities.″<ref name="Zimov 2005: Pleistocene Park: Return of the Mammoth's Ecosystem. Science Mag." />

=== Researching the effects of large herbivores on permafrost and global warming ===
{{See also|Permafrost#Climate change effects}}
A secondary aim is to research the climatic effects of the expected changes in the ecosystem. Here the key concept is that some of the effects of the large herbivores, such as eradicating trees and shrubs or trampling snow, will result in a stronger cooling of the ground in the winter, leading to less thawing of [[permafrost]] during summer and thereby less emission of [[greenhouse gas]]es.<ref name="Zimov 2005: Pleistocene Park: Return of the Mammoth's Ecosystem. Science Mag." /><ref name="Zimov 2007: Mammoth Steppes and Future Climate" /><ref name="Griswold-Tergis 2013: Pleistocene Park pt.1" /><ref name="Zimov et al 2012: Mammoth steppe: a high-productivity phenomenon. QSR" /><ref name="Griswold-Tergis 2013: Pleistocene Park pt.2" />


{{wikinews|Scientists warn thawing Siberia may trigger global meltdown}}
{{wikinews|Scientists warn thawing Siberia may trigger global meltdown}}
Permafrost is a large global carbon reservoir that has remained frozen throughout much of the Holocene.<ref name="Zimov, Schuur, Chapin 2006: Permafrost and Global" /> Due to recent [[global warming|climate change]], the permafrost is beginning to thaw, releasing stored carbon and forming [[Thermokarst|thermokarst lakes]].<ref name="Zimov, Schuur, Chapin 2006: Permafrost and Global" /><ref name="Grimes 2007: lakes a major source" /> When the thawed permafrost enters the thermokarst lakes, its carbon is converted into [[Greenhouse gas#Greenhouse gases|carbon dioxide and methane]] and released into the atmosphere.<ref name="Walter et al 2007: Thermokarst Lakes" /><ref name="Walter et al 2006: Methane bubbling" /><ref name="Zimov et al 1997: North Siberian Lakes" /> [[Atmospheric methane#Methane as a greenhouse gas|Methane is a potent greenhouse gas]] and the methane emissions from thermokarst lakes have the potential to initiate a [[positive feedback|positive feedback cycle]] in which increased atmospheric methane concentrations lead to amplified global climate change, which in turn leads to more permafrost thaw and more methane and carbon dioxide emissions.<ref name="Walter et al 2006: Methane bubbling" /><ref name="Zimov et al 1997: North Siberian Lakes" />
Permafrost is a large global carbon reservoir that has remained frozen throughout much of the Holocene.<ref name="Zimov, Schuur, Chapin 2006: Permafrost and Global"/> Due to recent [[global warming|climate change]], the permafrost is beginning to thaw, releasing stored carbon and forming [[Thermokarst|thermokarst lakes]].<ref name="Zimov, Schuur, Chapin 2006: Permafrost and Global"/><ref name="Grimes 2007: lakes a major source"/> When the thawed permafrost enters the thermokarst lakes, its carbon is converted into [[Greenhouse gas#Greenhouse gases|carbon dioxide and methane]] and released into the atmosphere.<ref name="Walter et al 2007: Thermokarst Lakes" /><ref name="Walter et al 2006: Methane bubbling"/><ref name="Zimov et al 1997: North Siberian Lakes"/> [[Atmospheric methane#Methane as a greenhouse gas|Methane is a potent greenhouse gas]] and the [[methane emissions]] from thermokarst lakes have the potential to initiate a [[positive feedback|positive feedback cycle]] in which increased atmospheric methane concentrations lead to amplified global climate change, which in turn leads to more permafrost thaw and more methane and carbon dioxide emissions.<ref name="Walter et al 2006: Methane bubbling"/><ref name="Zimov et al 1997: North Siberian Lakes"/>


As the combined carbon stored in the world's permafrost (1670 [[Gigatonne|Gt]])<ref name="Tarnocai et al (2009): Soil organic" /> equals about two times the amount of the carbon currently released in the atmosphere (720 Gt),<ref name="Falkowski et al 2000: Global Carbon Cycle" /> the setting in motion of such a positive feedback cycle could potentially lead to [[runaway climate change]] scenario. Even if the ecological situation of the arctic were as it was 400,000 years ago (i.e., grasslands instead of tundra), a global temperature rise of 1.5&nbsp;°C (2.7&nbsp;°F) relative to the pre-industrial level would be enough to start the thawing of permafrost in Siberia.<ref name="Fiona Harvey 2013 / Vaks et al 2013: Speleothems" /> An increased cooling of the ground during winter would raise the current [[Tipping point (climatology)|tipping point]], potentially delaying such a scenario.
As the combined carbon stored in the world's permafrost (1670 [[Gigatonne|Gt]])<ref name="Tarnocai et al (2009): Soil organic"/> equals about twice the amount of the carbon currently released in the atmosphere (720 Gt),<ref name="Falkowski et al 2000: Global Carbon Cycle"/> the setting in motion of such a positive feedback cycle could potentially lead to a runaway [[climate change scenario]]. Even if the ecological situation of the arctic were as it was 400,000&nbsp;years ago (i.e., grasslands instead of tundra), a global temperature rise of 1.5&nbsp;°C (2.7&nbsp;°F) relative to the [[Pre-industrial society|pre-industrial]] level would be enough to start the thawing of permafrost in Siberia.<ref name="Fiona Harvey 2013 / Vaks et al 2013: Speleothems"/> An increased cooling of the ground during winter would raise the current [[Tipping point (climatology)|tipping point]], potentially delaying such a scenario.


== Implementation ==
== Implementation ==

=== Background: regional Pleistocene ecoregions ===
=== Background: regional Pleistocene ecoregions ===
[[File:Saiga antelope at the Stepnoi Sanctuary.jpg|thumb|220px|right|[[Saiga antelope|Saigas]] are extinct in Europe and are a [[near threatened]] [[species]].]]
It has been proposed that the introduction of a variety of large herbivores will recreate their ancient [[ecological niche]]s in Siberia and regenerate the Pleistocene terrain with its different ecological habitats such as [[taiga]], [[tundra]], [[steppe]] and [[alpine-steppe|alpine terrain]].
It has been proposed that the introduction of a variety of large herbivores will recreate their ancient [[ecological niche]]s in Siberia and regenerate the Pleistocene terrain with its different ecological habitats such as [[taiga]], [[tundra]], [[steppe]] and [[alpine-steppe|alpine terrain]].


The main object, however, is to recreate the extensive grasslands that covered the [[Beringia|Beringia region]] in the late Pleistocene. This form of grassland (also known as [[mammoth steppe]]) was inhabited by a diverse set of large and medium herbivores. Back in the Pleistocene the area was populated by many species of [[grazers]] that assembled in large herds similar in size to those in Africa today. Species that roamed the great grasslands included the [[woolly mammoth]], [[woolly rhino]], [[steppe wisent]], [[Lena horse]], [[muskox]], and [[reindeer]].
The main objective, however, is to recreate the extensive grasslands that covered the [[Beringia|Beringia region]] in the late Pleistocene.


=== Proposed procedure ===
Another herbivore that was abundant in this region during the Pleistocene but now faces possible extinction in its remaining habitats is the [[saiga antelope]], which can form massive herds that keep the vegetation down.
In present-day Siberia only a few of the former species of megafauna are left; and their [[population density]] is extremely low, too low to affect the environment. To reach the desired effects, the density has to be raised artificially by fencing in and concentrating the existing large herbivores. A large variety of species is important as each species affects the environment differently and as the overall stability of the ecosystem increases with the variety of species<ref name="Zimov 2005: Pleistocene Park: Return of the Mammoth's Ecosystem. Science Mag."/> (compare ''[[Biodiversity#Biodiversity and ecological services | Biodiversity and ecological services]]''). Their numbers will be raised by reintroducing species that became locally extinct (e.g., [[muskox]]en). For species that became completely extinct, suitable replacements will be introduced if possible (e.g., [[wild Bactrian camel]]s for the extinct Pleistocene camels of the genus [[Paracamelus]]). As the number of herbivores increases, the enclosure will be expanded.<ref name="Zimov 2005: Pleistocene Park: Return of the Mammoth's Ecosystem. Science Mag."/><ref name="Zimov 2007: Mammoth Steppes and Future Climate"/><ref name="pp Scientific background"/><ref name="Good fence, Russian, 2006"/>


While this is taking place, the effects will be monitored. This concerns for example the effects on the flora (are the mosses being replaced by grasses, etc.), the effects on the atmosphere (changes in levels of methane, carbon dioxide, water vapor) and the effects on the [[permafrost]].<ref name="OttawaLife 2013: The Zimovs"/><ref name="HuffPost 2010: Russian Scientist Working To Recreate Ice Age Ecosystem"/><ref name="sakha news"/>
At the edges of these large stretches of grassland could be found more shrub-like terrain and dry conifer forests (similar to taiga). In this terrain the [[browsing (predation)|browsers]] of the Pleistocene were to be found. This group of megafauna included [[woolly rhinoceros]], [[moose]], [[wapiti]], [[Equus lambei|Yukon wild ass]], and [[camel]]s. The more mountainous terrain was occupied by several species of mountain-going animals like the [[snow sheep]].


Finally, once a high density of herbivores over a vast area has been reached, predators larger than the wolves will have to be introduced to keep the megafauna in check.<ref name="Zimov 2005: Pleistocene Park: Return of the Mammoth's Ecosystem. Science Mag."/><ref name="Zimov 2007: Mammoth Steppes and Future Climate"/>
Back in the Pleistocene there was also a great variety of carnivorous mammals as well. On the plains there were prides of [[Beringian cave lion]]. These large cats were the apex predators of the region, but also shared their habitat with other predators such as [[grey wolf]], [[cave hyena]], ''[[Homotherium]]'', [[brown bear]], [[wolverine]], and [[Arctic fox]], which all occupied a distinct ecological niche essential for the balance of their respective ecosystems.


=== Progress and plans ===
On the edges of the grasslands (in the shrubs and forests) there were also [[brown bear]]s, [[wolverine]]s, [[cave bear]]s, [[lynx]]es, [[tiger]]s, [[leopard]]s, and [[red fox]]es. The [[Siberian tiger]] and [[Amur leopard]] occupied the southern part of the steppe biome and surviving populations are still found along the present Russian-Sino border in the [[Amur region|Amur]] and [[Primorye|Primorye region]]s.
;1988–1996:
The first grazing experiments began in 1988 at the [[Northeast Science Station (Russia)|Northeast Science Station]] in Chersky with [[Yakutian horse]]s.<ref name="OttawaLife 2013: The Zimovs"/>


;1996–2004:
=== Proposed procedure ===
In 1996 a 50&nbsp;[[Hectare|ha]] (125&nbsp;[[acre]]) enclosure was built in Pleistocene Park.<ref name="Zimov 2007: Mammoth Steppes and Future Climate"/> As a first step in recreating the ancient landscape, the Yakutian horses were introduced, as horses had been the most abundant [[ungulate]]s on the northeastern Siberian mammoth steppe.<ref name="Gennady: The North of Eastern Siberia, 2004"/> Of the first 40&nbsp;horses, 15 were killed by predators and 12 died of eating poisonous plants. More horses were imported, and they learned to cope with the environment.<ref name="HuffPost 2010: Russian Scientist Working To Recreate Ice Age Ecosystem"/> In 2006 approximately 20&nbsp;horses lived in the park,<ref name="Radio Svoboda, Zimov interview, 2006"/> and by 2007 more horses were being born annually than died.<ref name="HuffPost 2010: Russian Scientist Working To Recreate Ice Age Ecosystem"/> By 2013, the number had risen to about 30.<ref name="zoologist 78"/> Moose, already present in the region, were also introduced.<ref name="pp Pleistocene Park"/> The effects of large animals (mammoths and [[wisent]]s) on nature were artificially created by using an [[Military engineering vehicle|engineering tank]] and an 8&nbsp;wheel drive [[ARGO (ATV manufacturer)|Argo]] [[all-terrain vehicle]] to crush pathways through the willow shrub.<ref name="Wolf 2008: Big Thaw"/><ref name="Mark Paricio: Polaris Project. 2013"/><ref name="pp machinery 62"/><ref name="Fanny Kittler: Summer Blog: Chersky 2013 - Pleistocene Park"/>
In present-day Siberia only a few of the former species of megafauna are left, and their population density is extremely low, too low to affect the environment. To reach the desired effects, the density has to be raised artificially by fencing in and concentrating the existing large herbivores. A large variety of species is important as each species affects the environment differently and as the overall stability of the ecosystem increases with the variety of species<ref name="Zimov 2005: Pleistocene Park: Return of the Mammoth's Ecosystem. Science Mag." /> (compare ''[[Biodiversity#Biodiversity and ecological services]]''). Their numbers will be raised by reintroducing species that went locally extinct (e.g., [[muskox]]en). For species that went completely extinct, suitable replacements will be introduced if possible (e.g., [[wild Bactrian camel]]s for the extinct Pleistocene camels). As the number of herbivores increases, the enclosure will be expanded.<ref name="Zimov 2005: Pleistocene Park: Return of the Mammoth's Ecosystem. Science Mag." /><ref name="Zimov 2007: Mammoth Steppes and Future Climate" /><ref name="pp Scientific background" /><ref name="Good fence, Russian, 2006" />


[[File:Pleistocene Park.jpg|thumb|Restored grasslands in Pleistocene Park]]The vegetation in the park started to change. In the areas where the horses grazed, the soil has been compacted<ref name="sakha news"/> and mosses, weeds and willow shrub were replaced by grasses.<ref name="meyer2005"/><ref name="OttawaLife 2013: The Zimovs"/><ref name="Good fence, Russian, 2006"/><ref name="Terry Chapin pp site: Pleistocene Park Concept"/> Flat grassland is now the dominating landscape inside the park.<ref name="Fanny Kittler: Summer Blog: Chersky 2013 - Pleistocene Park"/> The permafrost was also influenced by the grazers. When air temperature sank to −40&nbsp;[[Celsius|°C]] (−40&nbsp;[[Fahrenheit|°F]]) in winter, the temperature of the ground was found to be only –5&nbsp;°C (+23&nbsp;°F) under an intact cover of snow, but −30&nbsp;°C (−22&nbsp;°F) where the animals had trampled down the snow. The grazers thus help keep permafrost intact, thereby lessening the amount of methane released by the tundra.<ref name="OttawaLife 2013: The Zimovs"/><ref name="Zimov et al 2012: Mammoth steppe: a high-productivity phenomenon. QSR"/>
While this is taking place, the effects will be monitored. This concerns for example the effects on the flora (are the mosses being replaced by grasses, etc.), the effects on the atmosphere (changes in levels of methane, carbon dioxide, water vapor) and the effects on the [[permafrost]].<ref name="OttawaLife 2013: The Zimovs" /><ref name="HuffPost 2010: Russian Scientist Working To Recreate Ice Age Ecosystem" /><ref name="sakha news" />


;2004–2011:
Finally, once a high density of herbivores over a vast area has been reached, predators larger than the wolves will have to be introduced to keep the megafauna in check.<ref name="Zimov 2005: Pleistocene Park: Return of the Mammoth's Ecosystem. Science Mag." /><ref name="Zimov 2007: Mammoth Steppes and Future Climate" />
In the years 2004–2005 a new fence was erected, creating an enclosure of 16&nbsp;[[Square kilometre|km<sup>2</sup>]] (6&nbsp;[[Square mile|sq mi]]).<ref name="Good fence, Russian, 2006"/><ref name="pp Homepage"/>


The new enclosure finally allowed a more rapid development of the project.<ref name="Good fence, Russian, 2006"/> After the fence was completed, reindeer were brought into the park from herds in the region and are now the most numerous ungulates in the park.<ref name="pp Pleistocene Park"/><ref name="pp Reindeer"/> To increase moose density in the park, special constructions were added to the fence in several places that allow animals outside the fenced area to enter the park, while not allowing them to leave. Besides that, wild moose calves were caught in other regions and transported to the park.<ref name="pp Moose"/>
=== Progress and plans ===
'''1988–1996'''<br />
The first grazing experiments began in 1988 at the [[Northeast Science Station (Russia)|Northeast Science Station]] in Chersky with [[Yakutian horse]]s.<ref name="OttawaLife 2013: The Zimovs" />


In 2007 a 32&nbsp;meter (105&nbsp;foot) high tower was erected in the park that constantly monitors the levels of methane, carbon dioxide and water vapor in the park's atmosphere.<ref name="HuffPost 2010: Russian Scientist Working To Recreate Ice Age Ecosystem"/><ref name="pp pleistocene park 10"/>
;1996–2004
In 1996 a 50 [[Hectare|ha]] (125 [[acre]]) enclosure was built in Pleistocene Park.<ref name="Zimov 2007: Mammoth Steppes and Future Climate" /> As a first step in recreating the ancient landscape, the Yakutian horses were introduced, as horses had been the most abundant [[ungulate]]s on the northeastern Siberian mammoth steppe.<ref name="Gennady: The North of Eastern Siberia, 2004" /> Of the first 40 horses, 15 were killed by predators and 12 died of eating poisonous plants. More horses were imported, and they learned to cope with the environment.<ref name="HuffPost 2010: Russian Scientist Working To Recreate Ice Age Ecosystem" /> In 2006 approximately 20 horses lived in the park,<ref name="Radio Svoboda, Zimov interview, 2006" /> and by 2007 more horses were being born annually than died.<ref name="HuffPost 2010: Russian Scientist Working To Recreate Ice Age Ecosystem" /> By 2013, the number had risen to about 30.<ref name="zoologist 78" /> Moose, present in the area, were also introduced.<ref name="pp Pleistocene Park" /> The effects of large animals (mammoths and wisents) on nature were artificially created by using an [[Military engineering vehicle|engineering tank]] and an 8-wheel drive [[ARGO (ATV manufacturer)|Argo all-terrain vehicle]] to crush pathways through the willow shrub.<ref name="Wolf 2008: Big Thaw" /><ref name="Mark Paricio: Polaris Project. 2013" /><ref name="pp machinery 62" /><ref name="Fanny Kittler: Summer Blog: Chersky 2013 - Pleistocene Park" />


In September&nbsp;2010, 6&nbsp;male [[muskox]] from [[Wrangel Island]] were reintroduced,<ref name="pp materials diary-nikita-wrangel-2010"/> but 2&nbsp;[[muskox]]en died in the first months: one from unknown causes, and the other from infighting among the muskoxen.<ref name="auto">{{cite web |title=The Pleistocene Park Foundation is creating northern Serengeti and mitigating climate change |date=6 September 2020 |website=patreon.com |url=https://www.patreon.com/m/3777653/posts}}</ref><ref name="HuffPost 2010: Russian Scientist Working To Recreate Ice Age Ecosystem"/><ref name="pp news 13"/> Seven months later, in April&nbsp;2011, 6&nbsp;[[Altai wapiti]] and 5&nbsp;[[wisent]]s arrived at the park, the wapiti were from the [[Altai Mountains]] and the wisents from [[Prioksko-Terrasny Nature Reserve]], near Moscow.<ref name="pp news 6"/><ref name="БезФормата.Ru 2011"/> The enclosing fence proved too low for the wapiti, and by the end of 2012 all 6 had jumped the fence and run off.<ref name="Griswold-Tergis 2013: Pleistocene Park pt.2"/>
[[File:Pleistocene Park.jpg|thumb|Restored grasslands in Pleistocene Park]]The vegetation in the park started to change. In the areas where the horses grazed, the soil has been compacted<ref name="sakha news" /> and mosses, weeds and willow shrub were replaced by grasses.<ref name="meyer2005" /><ref name="OttawaLife 2013: The Zimovs" /><ref name="Good fence, Russian, 2006" /><ref name="Terry Chapin pp site: Pleistocene Park Concept" /> Flat grassland is now the dominating landscape inside the park.<ref name="Fanny Kittler: Summer Blog: Chersky 2013 - Pleistocene Park" /> The permafrost was also influenced by the grazers. When air temperature sank to –40&nbsp;[[Celsius|°C]] (–40&nbsp;[[Fahrenheit|°F]]) in winter, the temperature of the ground was found to be only –5&nbsp;°C (+23&nbsp;°F) under an intact cover of snow, but –30&nbsp;°C (–22&nbsp;°F) where the animals had trampled down the snow. The grazers thus help keep permafrost intact, thereby lessening the amount of methane released by the tundra.<ref name="OttawaLife 2013: The Zimovs" /><ref name="Zimov et al 2012: Mammoth steppe: a high-productivity phenomenon. QSR" />


;2011–2016:
;2004–2011
In the years 2011–2016 progress slowed down as most energy was put into the construction of a 150&nbsp;[[Hectare|ha]] (370&nbsp;[[Acre|ac]]) branch of Pleistocene Park near the city of [[Tula, Russia|Tula]] in [[Tula Oblast]] in Europe,<ref name="zoologist 78"/><ref name="pp news 22"/> see below ([[#Southern branch of Pleistocene Park: The Wild Field wilderness reserve|Wild Field]] section). A few more reindeer and moose were introduced into Pleistocene Park during this time,<ref name="pp news 22"/><ref name="pp news 10"/> and a monitoring system for measuring the [[energy balance (disambiguation)|energy balance]]<!--
In the years 2004–2005 a new fence was erected, creating an enclosure of 16 [[Square kilometre|km<sup>2</sup>]] (6 [[Square mile|sq mi]]).<ref name="Good fence, Russian, 2006" /><ref name="pp Homepage" />
for reason why link leads to disambiguation page see following note (ref group=lower-alpha name="energy balance")
--> (ratio of energy emission and energy absorption){{efn|name="energy balance"|Wikipedia has no good basic article, or at least article section on the energy balance (ratio of energy emission and energy absorption) of land surfaces: What it is, what affects it, etc. Some information may be gleaned from the articles
* [[Earth's energy budget]], though this article deals with the geological energy balance of the whole Earth and not of individual areas,
* [[Albedo]], which is the scientific term for the fraction of the Sun's radiation reflected from a surface, though this article deals with geological albedo only in passing and more from a physical than from a geological or ecological point of view, and it is one of those articles written in such a way that, if you do not already know the topic beforehand, the introductory paragraph may stymie you.}} of the pasture was installed.<ref name="pp news 11"/><ref name="pp musk ox 235"/>


;2017–2022:
The new enclosure finally allowed a more rapid development of the project.<ref name="Good fence, Russian, 2006" /> After the fence was completed, reindeer were brought into the park from herds in the region and are now the most numerous ungulates in the park.<ref name="pp Pleistocene Park" /><ref name="pp Reindeer" /> To increase moose density in the park, special constructions were added to the fence in several places that allow animals outside the fenced area to enter the park, while not allowing them to leave. Besides that, wild moose calves were caught in other regions and transported to the park.<ref name="pp Moose" />
Attention has now been shifted back to the further development of Pleistocene Park. A successful [[crowdfunding]] effort in early 2017 provided funding for further animal acquisitions.<ref name="Kickstarter"/><ref name="Adele Peters: … on the ферма. 2017"/><ref name="David Addison: A steppe towards a new age. 2017"/> Later that year 12&nbsp;[[domestic yak]]<ref name="Pl.Park fcbk: 13 June 2017"/><ref name="Pl.Park fcbk: 24 June 2017"/> and 30&nbsp;[[domestic sheep]]<ref name="Pl.Park fcbk: 8 September 2017"/><ref name="Pl.Park fcbk: 7 October 2017"/> were brought to the park.<ref name=":0">{{cite web |title=Pleistocene Park |website=facebook.com |lang=en |url=https://www.facebook.com/PleistocenePark/posts/440201056399594 |access-date=10 March 2018}}</ref><ref name=":2">{{cite AV media |title=Pleistocene Park |medium=video |website=facebook.com |lang=en |url=https://www.facebook.com/PleistocenePark/videos/vb.271986773221024/461247900961576/?type=3&theater |access-date=7 April 2018}}</ref> and the introduction of more muskoxen was planned for 2020.<ref name=":1">{{cite web |title=Pleistocene Park |website=facebook.com |url=https://www.facebook.com/PleistocenePark/posts/441396572946709 |lang=en |access-date=10 March 2018}}</ref>{{better source |date=January 2020}}


For the near future the focus in animal introductions will generally be placed on browsers, not grazers, i.e., [[bison]], [[muskox]]en, [[horse]]s, and [[domestic yak]]s. Their role in this phase will be to diminish the amount of shrubs and trees and enlarge the grassy areas. Only when these areas have sufficiently increased will grazers like [[saiga]] and [[wild Bactrian camel]]s be introduced.<ref name="RIA Novosti"/><ref name="zoologist 37"/>
In 2007 a 32-meter (105-foot) high tower was erected in the park that constantly monitors the levels of methane, carbon dioxide and water vapor in the park's atmosphere.<ref name="HuffPost 2010: Russian Scientist Working To Recreate Ice Age Ecosystem" /><ref name="pp pleistocene park 10" />


'''2023'''
In September 2010 the [[muskox]] was reintroduced. Six male animals were imported from [[Wrangel Island]],<ref name="pp materials diary-nikita-wrangel-2010" /> two of which died in the first months.<ref name="HuffPost 2010: Russian Scientist Working To Recreate Ice Age Ecosystem" /><ref name="pp news 13" /> Seven months later, in April 2011, six [[Altai wapiti]]s and five [[wisent]]s arrived at the park, the wapitis originating from the [[Altai mountains]] and the wisents from [[Prioksko-Terrasny Nature Reserve]] near Moscow.<ref name="pp news 6" /><ref name="БезФормата.Ru 2011" /> But the enclosing fence proved too low for the wapitis, and by the end of 2012 all six wapitis had jumped the fence and run off.<ref name="Griswold-Tergis 2013: Pleistocene Park pt.2" />


In 2023, 24 [[plains bison]] were brought to Pleistocene Park. The animals were sourced from Ditlevsdal Bison Farm, Denmark. Later that year, fourteen [[Muskox|musk oxen]] were brought to the park.{{citation needed|date=December 2023}}
;2011–2016
In the years 2011 to 2016 progress slowed down as most energy was put into the construction of a 150 [[Hectare|ha]] (370 [[Acre|ac]]) branch of Pleistocene Park near the city of [[Tula, Russia|Tula]] in [[Tula Oblast]] in Europe,<ref name="zoologist 78" /><ref name="pp news 22" /> see below (section “[[Pleistocene Park#Southern branch of Pleistocene Park: The Wild Field wilderness reserve|Wild Field]]”). A few more reindeer and moose were introduced into Pleistocene Park during this time,<ref name="pp news 22" /><ref name="pp news 10" /> and a monitoring system for measuring the [[energy balance]] (ratio of energy emission and energy absorption)<ref group=note name="energy balance">Wikipedia has no good basic article or at least article section on the energy balance (ratio of energy emission and energy absorption) of land surfaces – what it is, what affects it, etc. Some information may be gleaned from the articles
* [[Earth's energy budget]], though this article deals with the geological energy balance of the ''whole'' earth and not of individual areas,
* [[Albedo]], which is the scientific term for the fraction of the Sun's radiation reflected from a surface, though this article deals with geological albedo only in passing and more from a physical than from a geological or ecological point of view, and it is one of those articles written in such a way that, if you do not know the topic beforehand, already the introductory paragraph may stymie you.</ref> of the pasture was installed.<ref name="pp news 11" /><ref name="pp musk ox 235" />

;2017–
Attention has now been shifted back to the further development of Pleistocene Park. A successful [[crowdfunding]] effort in early 2017 provided funding for further animal acquisitions.<ref name="Kickstarter" /><ref name="Adele Peters: … on the ферма. 2017" /><ref name="David Addison: A steppe towards a new age. 2017" /> Later that year twelve domestic yak<ref name="Pl.Park fcbk: 13 June 2017" /><ref name="Pl.Park fcbk: 24 June 2017" /> and 30 domestic sheep<ref name="Pl.Park fcbk: 8 September 2017" /><ref name="Pl.Park fcbk: 7 October 2017" /> were brought to the park. The acquisition of a herd of [[bison]], also planned for 2017, has been shifted to 2018.<ref name="Pl.Park fcbk: 7 September 2017" />

For the near future the focus in animal introductions will generally be placed on browsers, not grazers, i.e., bison, muskoxen, moose and wapiti. Their role in this phase will be to diminish the amount of shrubs and trees and enlargen the grassy areas. Only when these areas have sufficiently increased will grazers like saiga and kiang be introduced.<ref name="RIA Novosti" /><ref name="zoologist 37" />


== Reception ==
== Reception ==

=== Controversial aspects ===
=== Controversial aspects ===
Critics admonish that introducing alien species could damage the fragile ecosystem of the existing tundra. To this criticism [[Sergey Zimov]] replied: ″Tundra – that is not an ecosystem. Such systems had not existed on the planet [before the disappearance of the megafauna], and there is nothing to cherish in the tundra. Of course, it would be silly to create a desert instead of the tundra, but if the same site would evolve into a steppe, then it certainly would improve the environment. If deer, foxes, bovines were more abundant, nature would only benefit from this. And people too. However, the danger still exists, of course, you have to be very careful. If it is a revival of the steppes, then, for example, small animals are really dangerous to release without control. As for large herbivores – no danger, as they are very easy to remove again.<ref name="Полiт.ру 2006: Siberian park ‘mammoth period'" />
Critics{{who|date=February 2020}} admonish that introducing alien species could damage the fragile ecosystem of the existing tundra. To this criticism [[Sergey Zimov]] replied: "The tundra is not an ecosystem. Such systems had not existed on the planet [before the disappearance of the megafauna], and there is nothing to cherish in the tundra. Of course, it would be silly to create a desert instead of the tundra, but if the same site would evolve into a steppe, then it certainly would improve the environment. If deer, foxes, bovines were more abundant, nature would only benefit from this. And people too. However, the danger still exists, of course, you have to be very careful. If it is a revival of the steppes, then, for example, small animals are really dangerous to release without control. As for large herbivores – no danger, as they are very easy to remove again."<ref name="Полiт.ру 2006: Siberian park 'mammoth period'" />


Another point of concern is doubt that the majority of species can be introduced in such harsh conditions. For example, according to some critics, the Yakutian horses, although they have been living in the park for several generations, would not have survived without human intervention. They normally tolerate –60&nbsp;°C, but are said to cope poorly with an abundance of snow and possibly would have died within the first snowy winter of starvation. However, horses of much less primitive stock abandoned by the Japanese Army have been living feral on some uninhabited Kuril Islands since 1945. Despite the deep snows (two to three times deeper than in Yakutia), they have successfully survived all the winters without feeding. And in Pleistocene Park, while some of the Yakutian horses accept supplementary feeding, others keep away and survive on their own.<ref name="HuffPost 2010: Russian Scientist Working To Recreate Ice Age Ecosystem" />
Another point of concern is doubt that the majority of species can be introduced in such harsh conditions. For example, according to some critics, the Yakutian horses, although they have been living in the park for several generations, would not have survived without human intervention. They normally tolerate –60&nbsp;°C, but are said to cope poorly with an abundance of snow and possibly would have died of starvation in the first snowy winter. However, horses of much less primitive stock abandoned by the [[Imperial Japanese Army|Japanese Army]] have been living feral on some uninhabited [[Kuril Islands]] since 1945. Despite the deep snows (two to three times deeper than in Yakutia), they have successfully survived all the winters without feeding. And in Pleistocene Park, while some of the Yakutian horses accept supplementary feeding, others keep away and survive on their own.<ref name="HuffPost 2010: Russian Scientist Working To Recreate Ice Age Ecosystem" />


=== Positive reception ===
=== Positive reception ===
The Zimov’s concept of Pleistocene Park and repopulating the mammoth steppe is listed as one of the “100 most substantive solutions to global warming” by [[Project Drawdown]].<ref name="Drawdown-mammoth steppe" /> The list, encompassing only technologically viable, existing solutions, was compiled by a team of over 200 scholars, scientists, policymakers, business leaders and activists;<ref name="Book Passage-drawdown" /><ref name="Drawdown" /> for each solution the carbon impact through the year 2050, the total and net cost to society, and the total lifetime savings were measured and modelled.<ref name="Drawdown-solutions" /><ref name="GreenBiz 2014" />
The Zimovs' concept of Pleistocene Park and repopulating the mammoth steppe is listed as one of the "100 most substantive solutions to global warming" by [[Project Drawdown]].<ref name="Drawdown-mammoth steppe" /> The list, encompassing only technologically viable, existing solutions, was compiled by a team of over 200 scholars, scientists, policymakers, business leaders and activists;<ref name="Book Passage-drawdown" /><ref name="Drawdown" /> for each solution the carbon impact through the year 2050, the total and net cost to society, and the total lifetime savings were measured and modeled.<ref name="Drawdown-solutions" /><ref name="GreenBiz 2014" />

In January 2020, a study co-authored by Nikita Zimov and three University of Oxford researchers assessed the viability of the park's goals when implemented on a larger scale. It was estimated that if three large-scale experimental areas were set up, each containing 1000 animals and costing 114 million US dollars over a ten year period, that 72,000 metric tons of carbon could be held and generate 360,000 US dollars in carbon revenues.<ref>{{Cite journal|last1=Macias-Fauria|first1=Marc|last2=Jepson|first2=Paul|last3=Zimov|first3=Nikita|last4=Malhi|first4=Yadvinder|date=2020-03-16|title=Pleistocene Arctic megafaunal ecological engineering as a natural climate solution?|journal=Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences|volume=375|issue=1794|page=20190122|doi=10.1098/rstb.2019.0122|pmc=7017769|pmid=31983339}}</ref>


== Visitors ==
== Visitors ==
The park is a hub for international scientists and students, who come from around the world to conduct their own ecological research and experiments.<ref name="OttawaLife 2013: The Zimovs" /> The Polaris Project was a yearly visitor from 2009 to 2015, sending US-American students on excursions to the park each summer.<ref name="Polaris Project: Blog" />
The park is a hub for international scientists and students, who come from around the world to conduct their own ecological research and experiments.<ref name="OttawaLife 2013: The Zimovs" /> The Polaris Project was a yearly visitor from 2009 to 2015, sending American students on excursions to the park each summer.<ref name="Polaris Project: Blog" />


Another group of visitors are journalists. The park is steadily gaining more media attention and while most journalists do not come to the park itself the number of visitors is increasing. In 2016 for example, the park was visited by a filmmaker, two print media (Swiss ''[[24 heures (Switzerland)|24 Heures]]'' and American ''[[The Atlantic]]''), and two TV broadcasting companies (German ''[[ARD (broadcaster)|ARD]]'' and American ''[[Vice on HBO|HBO]]'').<ref name="pp news 24" />
Another group of visitors are journalists. The park is steadily gaining more media attention and while most journalists do not come to the park itself the number of visitors is increasing. In 2016 for example, the park was visited by a filmmaker, two print media (Swiss ''[[24 heures (Switzerland)|24 Heures]]'' and American ''[[The Atlantic]]''), and two TV broadcasting companies (German ''[[ARD (broadcaster)|ARD]]'' and American ''[[Vice on HBO|HBO]]'').<ref name="pp news 24" />
Line 124: Line 127:


== Size and administration ==
== Size and administration ==
Pleistocene Park is a 160&nbsp;km<sup>2</sup> scientific [[nature reserve]] (''[[zakaznik]]'') consisting of [[Shrubland|willow brush]], [[Grassland#Tundra|grasslands]], [[Wetland|swamps]], [[forest]]s and a multitude of [[lake]]s.<ref name="Zimov 2005: Pleistocene Park: Return of the Mammoth's Ecosystem. Science Mag." /><ref name="Radio Svoboda, Zimov interview, 2006" /> The average temperature in January is about –33&nbsp;°C and in July +12&nbsp;°C; annual precipitation is 200–250&nbsp;mm.<ref name="Zimov 2007: Mammoth Steppes and Future Climate" />
Pleistocene Park is a 160&nbsp;km<sup>2</sup> scientific [[nature reserve]] (''[[zakaznik]]'') consisting of [[Shrubland|willow brush]], [[Grassland#Tundra grasslands|grasslands]], [[Wetland|swamps]], [[forest]]s and a multitude of [[lake]]s.<ref name="Zimov 2005: Pleistocene Park: Return of the Mammoth's Ecosystem. Science Mag."/><ref name="Re-Establishment FES"/>{{efn|name="160km2"|A newer source talks of "around 14&nbsp;thousand hectares" (140&nbsp;km<sup>2</sup>),<ref name="Anna Stroganova: Bison for Siberia. 2018"/> but as the two older references<ref name="Zimov 2005: Pleistocene Park: Return of the Mammoth's Ecosystem. Science Mag."/><ref name="Re-Establishment FES"/> were written by Sergey Zimov himself, while the newer source was written by a journalist, 160&nbsp;km<sup>2</sup> is more likely to be the correct number.}} The average temperature in January is about –33&nbsp;°C and in July +12&nbsp;°C; annual precipitation is 200–250&nbsp;mm.<ref name="Zimov 2007: Mammoth Steppes and Future Climate"/>


Pleistocene Park is owned and administered by a non-profit corporation, the Pleistocene Park Association, consisting of the [[ecologist]]s from the [[Northeast Science Station (Russia)|Northeast Science Station]] in Chersky and the [[Grassland Institute]] in [[Yakutsk]]. The reserve is surrounded by a 600&nbsp;km<sup>2</sup> buffer zone that will be added to the park by the regional government once the animals have successfully established themselves.<ref name="Re-Establishment FES" />
Pleistocene Park is owned and administered by a non-profit corporation, the Pleistocene Park Association, consisting of the [[ecologist]]s from the [[Northeast Science Station (Russia)|Northeast Science Station]] in Chersky and the [[Grassland Institute]] in [[Yakutsk]].<ref name="Re-Establishment FES"/> The present park area was signed over to the association by the state and is exempt from land tax.<ref name="Anna Stroganova: Bison for Siberia. 2018"/> The reserve is surrounded by a 600&nbsp;km<sup>2</sup> buffer zone that will be added to the park by the regional government once the animals have successfully established themselves.<ref name="Re-Establishment FES"/>


In July 2015 the [http://pleistocenepark.org/ Pleistocene Park Foundation] was founded, a non-profit organization (registered in Pennsylvania, USA, with [[501(c)(3)]] status pending) dedicated to acquiring private donations for funding Pleistocene Park.<ref name="pp news 20" /> Hitherto Pleistocene Park had been financed solely through the funds of the founders, a practice that grew increasingly insufficient.<ref name="pp news 20" />
In July&nbsp;2015 the {{cite web |title=Pleistocene Park Foundation |url=http://pleistocenepark.org/}} was founded, a non-profit organization (registered in [[Pennsylvania]], US, with [[501(c)(3)]] status)<ref name="PPF"/> dedicated to acquiring private donations for funding Pleistocene Park.<ref name="pp news 20"/> Hitherto Pleistocene Park had been financed solely through the funds of the founders, a practice that grew increasingly insufficient.<ref name="pp news 20"/>

In 2019 the {{cite web |title=Pleistocene & Permafrost Foundation |date=26 April 2023 |url=https://pleistocenepark.de/en/}} was founded in [[Germany]] by Michael Kurzeja and Bernd Zehentbauer and serves as a bridge between science, politics, companies, and society. It takes care of the project's financing, seeks donations in kind such as tractors, utility vehicles, and pick-ups to build the park, and funds further research projects with the [[Max Planck Institute]]. {{cite web |title=Dirk Steffens |url=https://pleistocenepark.de/en/about-us/}} and {{cite web |title=Anabel Ternès |url=https://pleistocenepark.de/en/about-us/}} are involved as ambassadors.


== Animals ==
== Animals ==
===Present in the park===

====Herbivores====
'''Animals already present in the park:'''

''Herbivores:''
[[File:Лошади темная 3 малень wiki.jpg|thumb|[[Yakutian horse]]s]]
[[File:Лошади темная 3 малень wiki.jpg|thumb|[[Yakutian horse]]s]]
* [[Reindeer]] (''[[Rangifer tarandus]]''):<ref name="pp Reindeer" /> Present before the project started (although more are being brought to help simulate Pleistocene conditions). They mainly graze in the southern highlands of the park. This territory is not affected by spring flooding and dominated by larch forests and shrubland. Reindeer rarely visit the flood plain. Besides actively grazing (especially in winter) they browse on willow shrubs, [[tree moss]], and [[lichen]]s. (Numbers in park in July 2017: approximately 20)<ref name="Anna-Lena Laurén: Sibirien sjunker sakta, DN 31 July 2017" />
* [[Reindeer]] (''Rangifer tarandus''):<ref name="pp Reindeer" /> Present before the project started (although more are being brought to help simulate Pleistocene conditions). They mainly graze in the southern highlands of the park. This territory is not affected by spring flooding and dominated by larch forests and shrubland. Reindeer rarely visit the flood plain. Besides actively grazing (especially in winter) they browse on willow shrubs, [[tree moss]], and [[lichen]]s. (Numbers in park in November 2021: 20–30)<ref>{{Cite web |title=Reindeer {{!}} Pleistocene Park |url=https://pleistocenepark.ru/animals/reindeer/ |access-date=2020-09-25 |website=pleistocenepark.ru}}</ref>
* [[Alces alces|Elk]]<sup><nowiki>[</nowiki>[[British English|BE]]<nowiki>]</nowiki></sup>/moose<sup><nowiki>[</nowiki>[[American English|AE]]<nowiki>]</nowiki></sup> (''[[Alces alces]]''):<ref name="pp Moose" /> Present before the project started, although in low numbers. Immigration from neighboring areas is stimulated. Due to poaching the density of moose in the region has substantially decreased in the last 20 years. To increase moose density in the park, special constructions were added to the fence in several places that allow animals outside the fenced area to enter the park, while not allowing them to leave. Besides that wild moose calves are being caught in other regions and transported to the park.<ref name="pp Moose" /> It is the largest extant species of the deer family and one of the largest herbivores in the park today. (Numbers in park in July 2017: approximately 15)<ref name="Anna-Lena Laurén: Sibirien sjunker sakta, DN 31 July 2017" />
* [[Moose|Elk]]<sup><nowiki>[</nowiki>[[British English|BE]]<nowiki>]</nowiki></sup>/[[moose]]<sup><nowiki>[</nowiki>[[American English|AE]]<nowiki>]</nowiki></sup> (''Alces alces''):<ref name="pp Moose"/> Present before the project started, although in low numbers. Immigration from neighboring areas is stimulated. Due to poaching the density of moose in the region has substantially decreased in the last 20&nbsp;years. To increase moose density in the park, special constructions were added to the fence in several places that allow animals outside the fenced area to enter the park, while not allowing them to leave. Besides that, wild moose calves are being caught in other regions and transported to the park.<ref name="pp Moose"/> It is the largest extant species of the deer family and one of the largest herbivores in the park today. (Numbers in park in November 2021: 5–15)<ref>{{Cite web|title=Moose {{!}} Pleistocene Park |url=https://pleistocenepark.ru/animals/moose/|access-date=2020-09-25 |website=pleistocenepark.ru}}</ref>
* [[Yakutian horse]] (a domestic breed of ''[[Equus ferus caballus]]''):<ref name="pp Horses" /> The first species to be introduced for the project, they were imported from the surrounding [[Srednekolymsk]] region beginning in 1988.<ref name="pp Horses" /> Yakutian horses have developed a [[Yakutian horse#Adaption to the Siberian environment|range of remarkable morphologic, metabolic and physiologic adaptions]] to the harsh environment of Siberia, including an extremely dense and long winter coat, a compact build, a metabolism adjusted to seasonal needs, and an increased production of antifreezing compounds.<ref name="Pablo Librado et al., Tracking the origins of Yakutian horses, 2017" /><ref name="Uffe Wilken, A tale of Yakutian horses, 2017" /> In summer they grow very large hooves, which they wear down in winter scraping away snow to get at food. Despite their size, they proved to be dominant over the wisents, who often fled from them. Yakutian horses are purely grazing animals – they eat only [[Graminoid|grass species]], and visit the park's forests only during the spring flood. In the spring of 2015, ten more Yakutian horses were acquired to increase genetic diversity.<ref name="Jake Kong 11 April 2015" /> (Numbers in park in July 2017: approximately 25)<ref name="Anna-Lena Laurén: Sibirien sjunker sakta, DN 31 July 2017" />
* [[Yakutian horse]] (a domestic breed of [[horse]]):<ref name="pp Horses"/> The first species to be introduced for the project, they were imported from the surrounding [[Srednekolymsk]] region beginning in 1988.<ref name="pp Horses"/> Yakutian horses have developed a [[Yakutian horse#Adaption to the Siberian environment|range of remarkable morphologic, metabolic and physiologic adaptions]] to the harsh environment of Siberia, including an extremely dense and long winter coat, a compact build, a metabolism adjusted to seasonal needs, and an increased production of antifreezing compounds.<ref name="Pablo Librado et al., Tracking the origins of Yakutian horses, 2017"/><ref name="Uffe Wilken, A tale of Yakutian horses, 2017"/> In summer they grow very large hooves, which they wear down in winter scraping away snow to get at food. Despite their size, they proved to be dominant over the wisents, who often fled from them. Yakutian horses are purely grazing animals – they eat only [[Graminoid|grass species]] and visit the park's forests only during the spring flood. In the spring of 2015, ten more Yakutian horses were acquired to increase genetic diversity.<ref name="Jake Kong 11 April 2015"/> (Numbers in park in November 2021: approximately 40)<ref>{{Cite web|title=Yakutian Horse {{!}} Pleistocene Park|url=https://pleistocenepark.ru/animals/horses/|access-date=2020-09-25|website=pleistocenepark.ru}}</ref>
[[File:Greenland-musk-ox hg.jpg|thumb|[[Muskox]]en family]]
[[File:Greenland-musk-ox hg.jpg|thumb|[[Muskox]]en family]]
* [[Muskox]] (''[[Ovibos moschatus]]''):<ref name="pp Musk ox" /> Muskoxen arrived at the park in September 2010. They were brought from [[Wrangel Island]]<ref name="pp Musk ox" /> (itself repopulated with animals from [[North America]]). They are doing well and are now fully grown. Unfortunately only males could be acquired, and the Zimovs are now urgently looking for females.<ref name="pp news 13" /> (Numbers in park in July 2017: 3 males)<ref name="Anna-Lena Laurén: Sibirien sjunker sakta, DN 31 July 2017" />
* [[Muskox]] (''Ovibos moschatus''):<ref name="pp Musk ox"/> Muskoxen arrived at the park in September&nbsp;2010. They were brought from [[Wrangel Island]]<ref name="pp Musk ox"/> (itself repopulated with animals from [[Canada]]). They are doing well and are now fully grown. Unfortunately only males could be acquired, after an attempt to get both males and females was thwarted during the expedition when a [[polar bear]] broke the fence to eat one of them,<ref name="auto"/> and the Zimovs are now urgently looking for females.<ref name="pp news 13"/> The introduction of more muskoxen was planned for 2019.<ref name=":1"/><ref name="Anna-Lena Laurén: Sibirien sjunker sakta, DN 31 July 2017"/> A new expedition to go to Wrangel Island was planned to take place in late 2020, but ultimately cancelled due to various delays by the time they had the boats ready, including by the [[COVID-19 pandemic]].<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.facebook.com/PleistocenePark/videos/1057921194627574 |title=Facebook |date=17 October 2020| website=facebook.com}}</ref> The original muskoxen managed to escape the park several times, eventually escaping it for good, but in July 2023, they would retrieve 14 young muskoxen from the [[Yamal Peninsula]] in exchange for several plains bison. (Numbers in park in September 2023: approximately 14)<ref>{{Cite web|title=Musk Ox {{!}} Pleistocene Park|url=https://pleistocenepark.ru/animals/musk-ox/|access-date=2023-10-07|website=pleistocenepark.ru}}</ref>
[[File:Sarlyk_Yak2.jpg|thumb|[[Domestic yak]] in Russia]]
* [[Wisent]] (European bison, ''[[Bison bonasus]]''):<ref name="pp Bison" /> During the [[Last glacial period|last ice age]], wisents were the most cold-adapted of the ''Bison'' species and thrived in the glacial grassland-steppe biome.<ref name="Soubrier et al. 2016: Early cave art and ancient DNA" />{{refn|group=note|Two bison species are known to have co-existed during that period in Eurasia, the [[steppe bison]] (''Bison priscus'', the ancestor of today’s American bison) and the ancestral form of today’s wisent. A study on the distribution of these two species in the Urals, the Caucasus and Western Europe found that population replacements between steppe bison and wisent occurred regularly in correlation “with major palaeoenvironmental shifts”, with the wisent being “associated with colder, more tundra-like landscapes and absence of a warm summer” while the steppe bison dominated during the warmer [[interstadial]]s. During the [[Last Glacial Maximum]] the steppe bison disappeared from all of the area covered by the study, leaving only the wisent.<ref name="Soubrier et al. 2016: Early cave art and ancient DNA" />}} Their dietary needs are very different from the American bison. Year-round 10% of their intake necessarily consists of trees and shrubs, and they will ignore their main forage ([[Poaceae|grasses]], [[sedge]]s and [[forb]]s) in favour of woody forage to reach this quota.<ref name="ADW: wisent" /> Five wisents, one adult male and four juvenile females, were introduced in the park in April 2011. The wisents were brought to the park from the [[Prioksko-Terrasny Nature Reserve]] near Moscow.<ref name="БезФормата.Ru 2011" /><ref name="pp Bison" /> The transportation was more complicated and took a longer time than originally thought, but all the animals recovered rapidly after the trip. Unfortunately, the wisents did not sufficiently acclimatize in the first months. They started to [[moult]] in November, when temperatures already were down to –30 [[Celsius|°C]] (–35 [[Fahrenheit|°F]]) in Cherskii. The four juveniles died; only the adult bull survived. He is now fully acclimatized.<ref name="zoologist 78" /><ref name="pp bison 241" /> For the future, the plans focus on introducing [[wood bison]] (see below).<ref name="pp bison 241" /> (Numbers in park in July 2017: 1 male)<ref name="Anna-Lena Laurén: Sibirien sjunker sakta, DN 31 July 2017" />
* [[Domestic yak]] (''Bos mutus grunniens''): Ten domestic yaks acquired in [[Irkutsk Oblast]] were introduced in Pleistocene Park in June 2017; two calves were born a few days after the arrival.<ref name="Pl.Park fcbk: 13 June 2017"/> Another calf was born after that.<ref name=":3">{{cite web |url=https://www.facebook.com/PleistocenePark/photos/a.277325669353801.1073741828.271986773221024/525070987912600/?type=3&theater |title=Pleistocene Park |website=www.facebook.com |language=en |access-date=3 August 2018}}</ref> Yaks are adapted to extreme cold, short growing seasons for grazing herbage, and rough grazing conditions with [[sedge]]s and shrubby plants. [[Wild yak]]s lived in Beringia until the early Holocene.<ref>Fox-Dobbs, K., Leonard, J. A., & Koch, P. L. (2008). "Pleistocene megafauna from eastern Beringia: Paleoecological and paleoenvironmental interpretations of stable carbon and nitrogen isotope and radiocarbon records". ''Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology'', 261 (1-2), 30-46.</ref><ref>Murchie, T.J., et al. (2021) "Collapse of the mammoth-steppe in central Yukon as revealed by ancient environmental DNA". ''Nature Communications'', 12 (1): 1-18.</ref> (Numbers in park in November 2021: approximately 8)<ref name="Pl.Park fcbk: 13 June 2017"/><ref name="Pl.Park fcbk: 24 June 2017"/><ref name=":3"/>
[[File:Alltaj2 018.jpg|thumb|[[Domestic yak]] in the [[Altai Mountains]]]]
* [[Domestic yak]] (''[[Bos mutus grunniens]]''): Ten domestic yaks acquired in [[Irkutsk Oblast]] were introduced in Pleistocene Park in June 2017; two calves were born a few days after the arrival.<ref name="Pl.Park fcbk: 13 June 2017" /> Yaks are adapted to extreme cold, short growing seasons for grazing herbage, and rough grazing conditions with [[sedge]]s and shrubby plants. (Numbers in park in June 2017: 10 adults, 2 calves)<ref name="Pl.Park fcbk: 13 June 2017" /><ref name="Pl.Park fcbk: 24 June 2017" />
* [[Edilbay sheep|Edilbaevskaya sheep]] (a domestic breed of sheep):<ref name="Pl.Park fcbk: 12 October 2017"/> 30&nbsp;domestic sheep acquired in [[Irkutsk Oblast]] were introduced in Pleistocene Park in October&nbsp;2017.<ref name="Pl.Park fcbk: 8 September 2017"/><ref name="Pl.Park fcbk: 7 October 2017"/> The sheep are from a breed that is adapted to the Siberian cold.<ref name="Pl.Park fcbk: 8 September 2017"/> They belong to the breed group of [[fat-tailed sheep]]; their fatty rump evolved to store fat as a reserve for lean seasons,<ref name="OxSympFoodCook 1986"/> analogous to a camel's humps.<ref name="Kate Allen: Camel Fossils 2013"/> (Numbers in park in November 2021: 18)<ref>{{cite web |url=https://pleistocenepark.ru/animals/sheep/ |title = Sheep &#124; Pleistocene Park}}</ref>
* [[Kalmyk cattle|Kalmykian cattle]] (a domestic breed of [[cattle]] adapted for the Mongolian steppe):<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.facebook.com/PleistocenePark/photos/a.277325669353801.1073741828.271986773221024/543675239385508/?type=3&theater |title=Pleistocene Park |website=www.facebook.com |language=en |access-date=11 August 2018}}</ref> A population was introduced to the park in October&nbsp;2018.<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.facebook.com/PleistocenePark/photos/a.277325669353801/580063495746682/?type=3&theater |title=Pleistocene Park |website=www.facebook.com |language=en |access-date=7 October 2018}}</ref> (Numbers in park in November 2021: 15)<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://pleistocenepark.ru/animals/cows/|title = Kalmykian Cows &#124; Pleistocene Park}}</ref>
* [[Edilbay sheep|Edilbaevskaya sheep]] (a domestic breed of ''[[Ovis orientalis aries]]''):<ref name="Pl.Park fcbk: 12 October 2017" /> 30 domestic sheep acquired in [[Irkutsk Oblast]] were introduced in Pleistocene Park in October 2017.<ref name="Pl.Park fcbk: 8 September 2017" /><ref name="Pl.Park fcbk: 7 October 2017" /> The sheep are from a breed that is adapted to the Siberian cold.<ref name="Pl.Park fcbk: 8 September 2017" /> They belong to the breed group of [[fat-tailed sheep]]; their fatty rump evolved to store fat as a reserve for lean seasons,<ref name="OxSympFoodCook 1986" /> similar to a camel’s humps.<ref name="Kate Allen: Camel Fossils 2013" /> (Numbers in park in October 2017: 30)<ref name="Pl.Park fcbk: 7 October 2017" />
* [[Plains bison]] (''Bison bison bison''): Twelve [[Yearling (horse)|yearling]] plains bison, nine males and three females,<ref name="Alex DeMarban: Alaska bison await shipment to Siberia. 2018"/> were acquired and would have been introduced in the park once the United States' [[FAA]] gave clearance for the flight.<ref name="Indiegogo 2018, update 30 May 2018"/><ref name="Pl.Park fcbk: 08 June 2018"/> The plains bison were bought from the [[Stevens Village]] Bison Reserve{{efn|For information on the Stevens Village Bison Reserve see for example the website of the Stevens Village Community Improvement Corporation, subpage "Stevens Village Bison Reserve";<ref name="SVCIC"/> the 2006 article "Stevens Village council launches bison project" in the Juneau Empire;<ref name="Juneau Empire 2006"/> and the 2010 article "Other tribes restore buffalo ties" in the Casper Star-Tribune.<ref name="Tom Mast-Star.Trib.-2010"/>}} near [[Delta Junction, Alaska|Delta Junction]] in Alaska; as the climate there is comparable to that of Siberia, the young bison were expected to thrive.<ref name="Adele Peters: Baby Bison. 2018"/> Plains bison are grazers of [[Poaceae|grasses]] and [[sedge]]s. Unlike wisents, plains bison are almost pure grazers, which will consume other plant material mainly in time of need.<ref name="ADF&G: FAQ wood bison"/><ref name="ADW: American bison"/><ref name="ISM, Ice Age Midwest: Bison"/> While wood bison were the preferred choice of subspecies, they are not easy to acquire;<ref name="pp bison 241"/><ref name="Pl.Park fcbk: 01 November 2017"/> plains bison simply are the subspecies that could be brought to the Park most easily.<ref name="Adele Peters: … on the ферма. 2017"/><ref name="Kickstarter comment 28 March 2017"/> They got bison from Denmark, from the Ditlevsdal bison farm. The bison began traveling on 7&nbsp;May, and officially arrived safely in the park on 9&nbsp;June. A second expedition to the Ditlevsdal bison farm allowed for another herd to be brought to the park. (Numbers in park in September 2023: 35)<ref name="Alex DeMarban: Alaska bison await shipment to Siberia. 2018"/>
* Non-[[ungulate]] herbivores to be found in the park are the [[snow hare]] (''[[Lepus timidus]]''), the [[black-capped marmot]] (''[[Marmota camtschatica]]''), and the [[Arctic ground squirrel]] (''[[Spermophilus parryii]]''),<ref name="Zimov 2005: Pleistocene Park: Return of the Mammoth's Ecosystem. Science Mag." /><ref name="Zimov 2007: Mammoth Steppes and Future Climate" /> as also the [[muskrat]] (''[[Ondatra zibethicus]]'') and diverse species of [[vole]]s.<ref name="Pl.Park fcbk: 10 May 2017" />
* [[Uzbek Black goat|Orenburg fur goat]] (''Capra aegagrus hircus''): Its presence is necessary due to their ability to eat anything, including plant poisonous to other herbivores.<ref name="auto"/> Only difficulty with acquiring them is due to them being only found in [[Orenburg]], due to veterinary services not allowing shipping out of that region. Current plans involve bringing the goats from a farm belonging to a park ranger that formerly worked for Pleistocene Park into the park around May&nbsp;2021.<ref name="auto1">{{cite web |url=https://www.patreon.com/m/3777653/posts |title=The Pleistocene Park Foundation Inc. is creating Northern Serengeti and Mitigating Climate Change |date=2 April 2021 |website=patreon.com}}</ref> The trip to acquire them began on May&nbsp;5, with the goats being loaded on May&nbsp;8, then the long trek to bring them to Pleistocene Park finished with their arrival at the park on June&nbsp;18. (Numbers in park in November 2021: 35)<ref name="auto2">{{cite web |url=https://www.facebook.com/PleistocenePark/|title=Pleistocene Park|website=www.facebook.com|language=en|access-date=20 June 2021}}</ref>
[[File:Camel seitlich trabend.jpg|thumb|Bactrian camel in winter.]]
* [[Bactrian camel]] (''Camelus bactrianus''): Either of the [[Two-humped camel|two-humped camel species]] could act as a proxy for extinct [[Camel#Evolution|Pleistocene camel species]], whose fossils have been found in areas that once formed part of [[Beringia]].<ref>{{Cite web |title=Yukon's Camels {{!}} Yukon Beringia Interpretive Centre |url=https://www.beringia.com/exhibit/ice-age-animals/yukons-camels |access-date=2023-12-13 |website=www.beringia.com}}</ref> <ref>{{Cite web |title=Bactrian Camels {{!}} Pleistocene Park |url=https://pleistocenepark.ru/animals/camels/ |access-date=2023-12-13 |website=pleistocenepark.ru}}</ref> The camel evolved in the high arctic as a large boreal browser; its hump presumably evolved to store fat as a resource for the long winter.<ref name="Kate Allen: Camel Fossils 2013"/> Bactrian camels will [[Bactrian camel#Diet|eat almost anything]], preferably any plant material such as grass, shrubs, bark, etc., but in times of need also [[carrion]].<ref name="ADW: Bactrian camel"/><ref name="DesertUSA: The Wild Bactrian camel"/> In the winter they will dig under snow to get at forage.<ref name="ADW: Bactrian camel"/> Camels are not suitable for wet environments, preferring uplands, and are mainly sought out in order to browse away at plants like [[willow]] shrubs, though they do sometimes eat the wet grasses.<ref name="auto1"/> The trip to acquire them began on May&nbsp;5, 2021 with the camels being loaded on May&nbsp;8, and then the expedition would wrap up with the transport truck carrying the camels arriving at Pleistocene Park on June&nbsp;18. (Numbers in park in November 2021: 10)<ref name="auto2"/>
* Several non-[[ungulate]] herbivores were already present before establishment of the park and remain resident; these include the [[mountain hare]] (''Lepus timidus''), the [[black-capped marmot]] (''Marmota camtschatica''), the [[Arctic ground squirrel]] (''Spermophilus parryii''),<ref name="Zimov 2005: Pleistocene Park: Return of the Mammoth's Ecosystem. Science Mag."/><ref name="Zimov 2007: Mammoth Steppes and Future Climate"/> the [[muskrat]] (''Ondatra zibethicus''), and diverse species of [[vole]]s.<ref name="Pl.Park fcbk: 10 May 2017"/>


''Carnivores:''
====Carnivores====
[[File:Хозяин_морей.jpg|thumb|[[East Siberian brown bear]]]]
* [[Eurasian lynx]] (''[[Lynx lynx]]''): Present before the project started.<ref name="Zimov 2005: Pleistocene Park: Return of the Mammoth's Ecosystem. Science Mag." /> It is an important predator of medium-sized herbivores like [[hare]]s and [[Siberian roe deer|roe deer]].
* [[Tundra wolf]] (''[[Canis lupus albus]]''): Despite the original low concentration of ungulates, the area was home to a wolf family already<ref name="moscow times 7 Nov 1998" /> before the project started.<ref name="Zimov 2005: Pleistocene Park: Return of the Mammoth's Ecosystem. Science Mag." /> This [[arctic]] [[subspecies]] of the [[grey wolf]] is widespread from northern [[Scandinavia]] to the [[Kamchatka Peninsula]].
* [[Eurasian lynx]] (''Lynx lynx''): Resident before the project started.<ref name="Zimov 2005: Pleistocene Park: Return of the Mammoth's Ecosystem. Science Mag."/> It is an important predator of medium-sized herbivores like [[hare]]s and [[Siberian roe deer|roe deer]].
* [[Arctic fox]] (''[[Vulpes lagopus]]''): Present before the project started.<ref name="Zimov 2005: Pleistocene Park: Return of the Mammoth's Ecosystem. Science Mag." /> Well adapted to living in the arctic environment, its fur changes color with the season: white in winter, brown in summer.
* [[Tundra wolf]] (''Canis lupus albus''): Before the project started the area was already home to a family of wolves,<ref name="moscow times 7 Nov 1998"/> despite the originally low concentration of prey ungulates.<ref name="Zimov 2005: Pleistocene Park: Return of the Mammoth's Ecosystem. Science Mag."/>
* [[Arctic fox]] (''Vulpes lagopus''): Resident before the project started.<ref name="Zimov 2005: Pleistocene Park: Return of the Mammoth's Ecosystem. Science Mag."/>
[[File:Brown bear (Ursus arctos arctos) running.jpg|thumb|[[Eurasian brown bear]]]]
* [[Eurasian brown bear]] (''[[Ursus arctos arctos]]''): Present before the project started.<ref name="Zimov 2005: Pleistocene Park: Return of the Mammoth's Ecosystem. Science Mag." /><ref name="Zimov 2007: Mammoth Steppes and Future Climate" /> Currently the largest predator in the region.
* [[East Siberian brown bear]] (''Ursus arctos collaris''): Resident before the project started.<ref name="Zimov 2005: Pleistocene Park: Return of the Mammoth's Ecosystem. Science Mag."/><ref name="Zimov 2007: Mammoth Steppes and Future Climate"/>
* [[Wolverine]] (''[[Gulo gulo]]''): Present before the project started.<ref name="Zimov 2005: Pleistocene Park: Return of the Mammoth's Ecosystem. Science Mag." /><ref name="Zimov 2007: Mammoth Steppes and Future Climate" /> A stocky and muscular carnivore, the wolverine is a powerful and versatile predator and scavenger.
* [[Wolverine]] (''Gulo gulo''): Present before the project started.<ref name="Zimov 2005: Pleistocene Park: Return of the Mammoth's Ecosystem. Science Mag."/><ref name="Zimov 2007: Mammoth Steppes and Future Climate"/>
* [[Red fox]] (''[[Vulpes vulpes]]''): Present before the project started.<ref name="Zimov 2005: Pleistocene Park: Return of the Mammoth's Ecosystem. Science Mag." /> Red foxes are omnivores with a highly varied diet. In the former Soviet Union, up to 300 animals and a few dozen plant species are known to be consumed by them.
* [[Red fox#Subspecies|Yakutsk red fox]] (''Vulpes vulpes jakutensis''): Resident before the project started.<ref name="Zimov 2005: Pleistocene Park: Return of the Mammoth's Ecosystem. Science Mag."/>
* [[Sable]] (''[[Martes zibellina]]''): Present before the project started.<ref name="Pl.Park fcbk: 10 May 2017" />
* [[Sable]] (''Martes zibellina''): Resident before the project started.<ref name="Pl.Park fcbk: 10 May 2017"/>{{better source|date=January 2020}}
* [[Stoat]] (''[[Mustela erminea]]''): Present before the project started.<ref name="Pl.Park fcbk: 10 May 2017" />
* [[Stoat]] (''Mustela erminea''): Resident before the project started.<ref name="Pl.Park fcbk: 10 May 2017"/>{{better source|date=January 2020}}


'''Animals considered for reintroduction:'''
===Formerly present and considered for introduction===
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This is a list only of animals whose introduction is planned or considered by the park management.
This is a list only of animals whose introduction is planned or considered by the park management.
Only add animals together with a reliable source showing that the species in question is being considered for reintroduction by the Zimovs (the directors of Pleistocene Park and Northeast Science Station).
Only add animals together with a reliable source showing that the species in question is being considered for reintroduction by the Zimovs (the directors of Pleistocene Park and Northeast Science Station).
See also the Talk Page, section ‘Animals without references'.
See also the Talk Page, section 'Animals without references'.
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====Herbivores====
[[File:Turnir.jpg|thumb|European bisons in the Altai]]
* [[European bison|Wisent]] (AKA European bison, ''Bison bonasus''):<ref name="pp Bison"/> During the [[Last glacial period|last ice age]], wisents were the most cold-adapted of the ''Bison'' species and thrived in the glacial grassland-steppe biome.<ref name="Soubrier et al. 2016: Early cave art and ancient DNA"/>{{efn|Two bison species are known to have co-existed during that period in Eurasia, the [[steppe bison]] (''Bison priscus'', the ancestor of today's American bison) and the ancestral form of today's wisent. A study on the distribution of these two species in the Urals, the Caucasus and Western Europe found that population replacements between steppe bison and wisent occurred regularly in correlation "with major palaeoenvironmental shifts", with the wisent being "associated with colder, more tundra-like landscapes and absence of a warm summer" while the steppe bison dominated during the warmer [[interstadial]]s. During the [[Last Glacial Maximum]] the steppe bison disappeared from all of the area covered by the study, leaving only the wisent.<ref name="Soubrier et al. 2016: Early cave art and ancient DNA"/>}} Their dietary needs are very different from the American bison. Year-round 10% of their diet necessarily consists of trees and shrubs, and they will ignore their main forage ([[Poaceae|grasses]], [[sedge]]s and [[forb]]s) in favour of woody forage to reach this quota.<ref name="ADW: wisent"/> Without supplementary feeding in winter, the yearly average may rise to 20% even in countries with mild winters.<ref name="Joris Cromsigt et al., 17 December 2017"/> Five wisents, one adult male and four juvenile females, were introduced in the park in April&nbsp;2011. The wisents were brought to the park from the [[Prioksko-Terrasny Nature Reserve]] near Moscow.<ref name="БезФормата.Ru 2011"/><ref name="pp Bison"/> The transportation was more complicated and took a longer time than originally thought, but all the animals recovered rapidly after the trip. Unfortunately, the wisents did not sufficiently acclimatize in the first months. They started to [[moult]] in November, when temperatures already were down to –30 [[Celsius|°C]] (–35 [[Fahrenheit|°F]]) in Cherskii. The four juveniles died; only the adult bull survived. He is now fully acclimatized.<ref name="zoologist 78"/><ref name="pp bison 241"/> (Numbers in park in November 2021: 1&nbsp;male)<ref name="Anna-Lena Laurén: Sibirien sjunker sakta, DN 31 July 2017"/> The park announced via an Instagram comment that after 12 years of residence, the remaining wisent died sometime during the winter of 2022.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Pleistocene Park |url=https://www.instagram.com/accounts/login/?next=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.instagram.com%2Fp%2FCvuWD4it6Mm%2F%3Figshid%3DMzRlODBiNWFlZA%253D%253D |access-date=2023-08-10 |website=www.instagram.com}}</ref>
* [[Wood bison]] (''Bison bison athabascae''): Better adapted to life in the [[Far North (disambiguation)|Far North]]<!-- America AND Siberia; no common lemma for both, therefore link to disambig page --> than the plains bison.<ref name="Adele Peters: … on the ферма. 2017"/> Mainly a grazer of grasses and sedges,<ref name="ADF&G: FAQ wood bison"/><ref name="Mitchell/Gates: Wood bison in Alberta, 2002"/> seasonally supplements this diet with other plant material like [[forb]]s, [[lichen]], and [[silverberry]] and [[willow]] leaves.<ref name="Mitchell/Gates: Wood bison in Alberta, 2002"/><ref name="ADF&G: Species profile wood bison"/> [[Wet meadow]]s in [[Floodplain|bottomlands]] (like the [[Kolyma (river)|Kolyma river]] plain) are an important habitat for wood bison.<ref name="Mitchell/Gates: Wood bison in Alberta, 2002"/> The original plans for the [[Rewilding (conservation biology)|rewilding]] of ''[[Bison]]'' had called for the introduction of wood bison as an ecological proxy for the extinct [[steppe wisent]], ''[[Bison priscus]]''.<ref name="moscow times 7 Nov 1998"/><ref name="Terry Chapin pp site: PP + Bison and PP"/> These plans did not work out<ref name="Pl.Park fcbk: 01 February 2017"/> and [[wisent]]s were acquired instead.
[[File:Внешний вид марала во время гона.JPG|thumb|[[Altai maral]]]]
* [[Altai wapiti]] or Altai maral (''Cervus canadensis sibiricus''): Had been introduced in April 2011.<ref name="pp Wapiti"/> The wapiti made their way to the park all the way from the mountainous regions of [[Altai Mountains|Altai]] in central southern Siberia.<ref name="pp Wapiti"/> Wapiti are very good jumpers and all six escaped within the first two years. The fence has been strengthened to cope with future introductions.<ref name="pp news 10"/>


====Carnivores====
''Herbivores:''
* [[American bison]] (''[[Bison bison]]''): Was to be introduced in 2017, but this did not work out for technical reasons.<ref name="Kickstarter 16 May 2017" /> Introduction now planned for 2018.<ref name="Pl.Park fcbk: 7 September 2017" /> Unlike wisents, American bison are almost pure grazers, which will consume other plant material mainly in time of need.<ref name="ADF&G: FAQ wood bison" /><ref name="ADW: American bison" />
** [[Plains bison]] (''[[Bison bison bison]]''): A grazer of [[Poaceae|grasses]] and [[sedge]]s which in time of need will also eat other plant material like [[sagebrush]].<ref name="ADW: American bison" /><ref name="ISM, Ice Age Midwest: Bison" /> This bison subspecies simply is the one that can most easily be brought to the Park.<ref name="Adele Peters: … on the ферма. 2017" /><ref name="Kickstarter comment 28 March 2017" />
** [[Wood bison]] (''[[Bison bison athabascae]]''): Better adapted to life in the [[Far North]]<!-- America and Siberia --> than the plains bison.<ref name="Adele Peters: … on the ферма. 2017" /> Mainly a grazer of grasses and sedges,<ref name="ADF&G: FAQ wood bison" /><ref name="Mitchell/Gates: Wood bison in Alberta, 2002" /> seasonally supplements this diet with other plant material like [[forb]]s, [[lichen]], and [[silverberry]] and [[willow]] leaves.<ref name="Mitchell/Gates: Wood bison in Alberta, 2002" /><ref name="ADF&G: Species profile wood bison" /> [[Wet meadow]]s in [[Floodplain|bottomlands]] (like the Kolyma river plain) are an important habitat for wood bison.<ref name="Mitchell/Gates: Wood bison in Alberta, 2002" /> The original plans for the [[Rewilding (conservation biology)|rewilding]] of ''[[Bison]]'' had called for the introduction of wood bison as an ecological proxy for the extinct [[steppe wisent]], ''[[Bison priscus]]''.<ref name="moscow times 7 Nov 1998" /><ref name="Terry Chapin pp site: PP + Bison and PP" /> These plans did not work out<ref name="Griswold-Tergis: Pleistocene Park Movie. Post 23 July 2014" /><ref name="Pl.Park fcbk: 01 February 2017" /> and [[wisent]]s were acquired instead. Current introduction plans focus on wood bison again.<ref name="Anna-Lena Laurén: Sibirien sjunker sakta, DN 31 July 2017" /><ref name="pp bison 241" /><ref name="Pl.Park fcbk: 01 November 2017" />
* [[Altai wapiti]] or Altai maral (''Cervus canadensis sibiricus''): Had been introduced in April 2011.<ref name="pp Wapiti" /> The wapiti made their way to the park all the way from the mountainous regions of [[Altai Mountains|Altai]] in central southern Siberia.<ref name="pp Wapiti" /> Wapiti are very good jumpers and all six escaped within the first two years. The fence has been strengthened to cope with future introductions.<ref name="Griswold-Tergis 2013: Pleistocene Park pt.2" /><ref name="pp news 10" />
[[File:Altai maral 2.jpg|thumb|[[Altai maral]]]]
* [[Wild yak]] (''Bos mutus''): Could be brought from the [[Tibetan Plateau]]. Along with the domestic yak, wisent, and the reindeer, the species could contribute to the further proliferation of grasses in the region.<ref name="Griswold-Tergis 2013: Pleistocene Park pt.2" /><ref name="VoR 2011: Pleistocene Park: so far without mammoths." />
* [[Snow sheep]] (''Ovis nivicola''): Immigration from neighboring areas is encouraged. Especially rams may be lured to the park by domestic ewes in rut.{{citation needed|date=February 2014}}
* [[Saiga antelope]] (''Saiga tatarica''): Introduction is in the planning stage.{{citation needed|date=February 2014}} Its presence would be critical for the regulation of poisonous plants in the region that can be digested by the saiga but are harmful to other herbivores. Currently, free saigas can only be found in Russia in the [[Chyornye Zemli Nature Reserve]].
* [[Wild Bactrian camel]] (''Camelus ferus'') or [[Bactrian camel]] (''Camelus bactrianus''): Either of the [[Two-humped camel|two-humped camel species]] could act as a proxy for extinct [[Camel#Evolution|Pleistocene camel species]], whose fossils have been found in areas that once formed part of [[Beringia]].<ref name="VoR 2011: Pleistocene Park: so far without mammoths." /> The camel evolved in the high arctic as a large boreal browser; its hump presumably evolved to store fat as a resource for the long winter.<ref name="Kate Allen: Camel Fossils 2013" /> Bactrian camels will [[Bactrian camel#Diet|eat almost anything]], preferably any plant material such as grass, shrubs, bark, etc., but in times of need also carrion.<ref name="ADW: Bactrian camel" /><ref name="DesertUSA: The Wild Bactrian camel" /> In the winter they will dig under snow to get at forage.<ref name="ADW: Bactrian camel" /> The wild Bactrian camel is critically endangered and is only found in some few areas of [[China]] and [[Mongolia]].
* [[Siberian roe deer]] (''Capreolus pygargus''): Immigration from neighboring areas is encouraged.{{citation needed|date=February 2014}}

''Carnivores:''
[[File:P.t.altaica Tomak Male.jpg|thumb|[[Siberian tiger]]]]
<!--
<!--
This is a list only of animals whose introduction is planned or considered by the park management.
This is a list only of animals whose introduction is planned or considered by the park management.
Only add animals together with a reliable source showing that the species in question is being considered for reintroduction by the Zimovs (the directors of Pleistocene Park and Northeast Science Station).
Only add animals together with a reliable source showing that the species in question is being considered for reintroduction by the Zimovs (the directors of Pleistocene Park and Northeast Science Station).
See also the Talk Page, section ‘Animals without references'.
See also the Talk Page, section 'Animals without references'.
-->
-->
* [[Siberian tiger]] (''Panthera tigris altaica''): Introduction planned for a later stage, when herbivores have multiplied.<ref name="Zimov 2005: Pleistocene Park: Return of the Mammoth's Ecosystem. Science Mag." /><ref name="Zimov 2007: Mammoth Steppes and Future Climate" /><ref name="HuffPost 2010: Russian Scientist Working To Recreate Ice Age Ecosystem" /> Endangered and reduced to the [[Primorye|Primorye region]]. As the largest feline alive, the Siberian tiger could play a key role in regulating the numbers of the largest herbivores.
* [[Siberian tiger]] (''Panthera tigris tigris''): Introduction planned for a later stage, when herbivores have multiplied.<ref name="Zimov 2005: Pleistocene Park: Return of the Mammoth's Ecosystem. Science Mag."/><ref name="Zimov 2007: Mammoth Steppes and Future Climate"/><ref name="HuffPost 2010: Russian Scientist Working To Recreate Ice Age Ecosystem"/>


'''Animals that could be placed in the park in the event of being 'resurrected' from extinction:'''
===Introductions in the event of de-extinction===
Despite referencing the ''[[Jurassic Park]]'' franchise in its name, the park's staff is not involved in species [[de-extinction]] research, be it through [[cloning]], [[genome editing]], or other methods<ref>[https://pleistocenepark.org/faq/ Pleistocene Park FAQ]</ref> (such as [[breeding back]]). Nonetheless, Zimov has manifested his willingness to volunteer the park as a location for reintroduction in the event of such animals ever being produced, particularly in regard to the [[woolly mammoth]] (''Mammuthus primigenius''), an extinct [[ecosystem engineer]] with no living proxies. Currently the staff uses a vehicle to bulldoze trees too large to be broken by the park's residents but that would be vulnerable to mammoths, opening forest terrain that the animals can turn into grassland through grazing. This vehicle is nicknamed the "baby mammoth".<ref>[https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2017/04/pleistocene-park/517779/ ''Pleistocene Park''] by ''[[The Atlantic]]''.</ref>
[[File:Wooly Mammoth-RBC.jpg|thumb|[[Woolly mammoth]] model at the [[Royal BC Museum]], Victoria, [[British Columbia]]]]

* [[Woolly mammoth]] (''Mammuthus primigenius''): In January 2011, the ''[[Yomiuri Shimbun]]'' reported that a team of scientists from [[Kyoto University]] were planning to extract DNA from a mammoth carcass preserved in a Russian laboratory and insert it into egg cells of [[elephant]]s in hope of creating a mammoth embryo. If the experiment succeeded, the calf would be taken to the park along with others to form a wild population. The researchers claimed that their aim was to produce the first mammoth within six years.<ref name="VoR 2011: Pleistocene Park: so far without mammoths." /><ref name="Lewis: Regeneration of the Mammoth Steppe?" /><ref name="Brad Lendon: Mammoth. CNN2011" /><ref name="Fowler 2007: Siberian Window" /><ref name="Zimmer 2013: NatGeo" />
{{clear}}


== Southern branch of Pleistocene Park: The Wild Field wilderness reserve ==
== Southern branch of Pleistocene Park: The Wild Field wilderness reserve ==
{{Main|Wild Field (wilderness reserve)}}
{{Main|Wild Field (wilderness reserve)}}
In 2012 to 2014 a branch of Pleistocene Park named ″Wild Field″ ({{lang-ru|Дикое поле}} ''Dikoe pole'') was constructed near the city of [[Tula, Russia|Tula]] in [[Tula Oblast]] in the European part of Russia, approximately 250&nbsp;km (150&nbsp;mi) south of Moscow.<ref name="zoologist 78" /><ref name="pp news 14" />
In 2012 to 2014 a branch of Pleistocene Park named "Wild Field" ({{langx|ru|Дикое поле}}, {{transl|ru|Dikoe pole}}) was constructed near the city of [[Tula, Russia|Tula]] in [[Tula Oblast]] in the European part of Russia, approximately 250&nbsp;km (150&nbsp;mi) south of [[Moscow]].<ref name="zoologist 78" /><ref name="pp news 14" />


Unlike Pleistocene Park, Wild Field's primary purpose is not scientific research but public outreach, i.e., it will provide a model of what an unregulated [[Eurasian Steppe|steppe ecosystem]] looked like before the advent of humans. It is situated near a federal road and a railway station and will be accessible to the general public.<ref name="pp news 14" />
Unlike Pleistocene Park, Wild Field's primary purpose is not scientific research but public outreach, i.e., it will provide a model of what an unregulated [[Eurasian Steppe|steppe ecosystem]] looked like before the advent of humans. It is situated near a federal road and a railway station and will be accessible to the general public.<ref name="pp news 14" />


Wild Field comprises 300 [[Hectare|ha]] (740 [[Acre|ac]])<ref name="pp news 14" /> of which 280 ha have been fenced off and stocked with animals.<ref name="Pl.Park fcbk: 04 June 2017" /> Already present in the park are nine species of [[Megaherbivore|large herbivores]] and one [[omnivore]] species: [[Bashkir Pony|Bashkir horse]]s (a strain of ''[[Equus ferus caballus]]'') from the southern part of the Ural Mountains,<ref name="TNF 4 March 14" /><ref name="pp Wild Field" /> [[Altai maral]]/[[Altai wapiti]] (''[[Cervus canadensis sibiricus]]''),<ref name="pp Wild Field" /> [[domestic sheep]] (''[[Ovis orientalis aries]]''),<ref name="pp Wild Field" /> [[roe deer]] (''[[Capreolus|Capreolus spec.]]''),{{refn|group=note|These are the roe deer of the Tula region, which were already present on the site of Wild Field reserve. The species is not certain, as roe deer were absent in much of European Russia throughout the 20th century and only reoccupied the area in the last decades. Judging by the [[IUCN]] distribution maps,<ref name="IUCN maps roe deer" /> the roe deer of the Tula region should be [[European roe deer]] (''[[Capreolus capreolus]]''), with the westernmost extension of the range of the [[Siberian roe deer]] (''[[Capreolus pygargus]]'') ending approximately 500 km (300 mi) to the east.}}<ref name="pp news 14" /><ref name="pp wild field 245" /> [[Kalmyk cattle|Kalmykian cattle]] (a strain of ''[[Bos primigenius taurus]]''),<ref name="zoologist 84" /><ref name="First Tula Telechannel 3-2015" /> [[Yak#Domesticated yaks|domestic yaks]] (''[[Bos mutus grunniens]]''),<ref name="zoologist 84" /><ref name="First Tula Telechannel 3-2015" /><ref name="pp news 21" /> [[wild boar]] (''[[Sus scrofa]]''),<ref name="pp news 21" /> one female [[Alces|elk]]<sup><nowiki>[</nowiki>[[British English|BE]]<nowiki>]</nowiki></sup>/[[Alces|moose]]<sup><nowiki>[</nowiki>[[American English|AE]]<nowiki>]</nowiki></sup> (''[[Alces alces]]''),<ref name="pp news 21" /> four [[reindeer]] (''[[Rangifer tarandus]]'')<ref name="Pl.Park fcbk: 24 May 2017" /> and 73 domestic [[Pridonskaya goat]]s (''[[Capra aegagrus hircus]]'').<ref name="Pl.Park fcbk: 04 June 2017" />
Wild Field comprises 300&nbsp;[[Hectare|ha]] (740&nbsp;[[Acre|ac]])<ref name="pp news 14"/> of which 280 ha have been fenced off and stocked with animals.<ref name="Pl.Park fcbk: 04 June 2017"/> Already present in the park are nine species of [[Megaherbivore|large herbivores]] and one [[omnivore]] species: [[Bashkir Pony|Bashkir horse]]s (a strain of ''Equus ferus caballus'') from the southern part of the Ural Mountains,<ref name="TNF 4 March 14"/><ref name="pp Wild Field"/> [[Altai maral]]/[[Altai wapiti]] (''Cervus canadensis sibiricus''),<ref name="pp Wild Field"/> [[Edilbaevskaya sheep]] (a strain of ''Ovis orientalis aries''),{{citation needed|date=January 2020}} [[roe deer]] (''Capreolus spec.''),{{efn|These are the roe deer of the Tula region, which were already present on the site of Wild Field reserve. The species is not certain, as roe deer were absent in much of European Russia throughout the 20th century and only reoccupied the area in the last decades. Judging by the [[IUCN]] distribution maps,<ref name="IUCN maps roe deer"/> the roe deer of the Tula region should be [[European roe deer]] (''Capreolus capreolus''), with the westernmost extension of the range of the [[Siberian roe deer]] (''Capreolus pygargus'') ending approximately 500 km (300 mi) to the east.}}<ref name="pp news 14"/><ref name="pp wild field 245"/> [[Kalmyk cattle|Kalmykian cattle]] (a strain of ''Bos primigenius taurus''),<ref name="zoologist 84"/><ref name="First Tula Telechannel 3-2015"/> [[Yak#Domesticated yaks|domestic yaks]] (''Bos mutus grunniens''),<ref name="zoologist 84"/><ref name="First Tula Telechannel 3-2015"/><ref name="pp news 21"/> [[wild boar]] (''Sus scrofa''),<ref name="pp news 21"/> one female [[Moose|elk]]<sup>&#91;[[British English|BE]]&#93;</sup>/[[Alces|moose]]<sup>&#91;[[American English|AE]]&#93;</sup> (''Alces alces''),<ref name="pp news 21"/> four [[reindeer]] (''Rangifer tarandus'')<ref name="Pl.Park fcbk: 24 May 2017"/> and 73 domestic [[Pridonskaya goat]]s (a strain of ''[[Goat|Capra aegagrus hircus]]'').<ref name="Pl.Park fcbk: 04 June 2017"/>


== See also ==
== See also ==
{{portal|Ecology|Environment|Siberia}}
* [[Wild Field (wilderness reserve)]]
* [[Permafrost carbon cycle]]
* [[Permafrost carbon cycle]]
* [[Quaternary extinction event]]
* [[Quaternary extinction event]]
* [[Rewilding (conservation biology)]]
* [[Rewilding (conservation biology)]]


== External links ==
==Notes==
*[https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/907484977/pleistocene-park-an-ice-age-ecosystem-to-save-the?ref=creator_nav Successful Kickstarter campaign]
{{reflist|group=note}}
*[https://www.indiegogo.com/projects/bison-to-save-the-world--2/x/15910674#/ Fundraiser at Indiegogo]
*[https://www.my5.tv/ben-fogle-new-lives-in-the-wild/season-11/ben-fogle-new-lives-in-the-wild-9fa94ce3-7b5b-41d8-8ac5-3029a7be00c6 Ben Fogle: New Lives In The Wild, S11 E2: Siberia] available online until 20 October 2022


== Media ==
==Footnotes==
{{Cc}}
{{notelist|1}}
* [http://www.pleistocenepark.ru/en/ Official park website]
* [https://www.facebook.com/PleistocenePark/ Official facebook site]
* [http://www.pleistocenepark.ru/files/WILD_FIELD_MANIFESTO_ENGLISH_VERSION.pdf ″Wild Field″ Manifesto]. Sergey A. Zimov, 2014.

=== Literature ===
* Sergey A. Zimov (2005): [http://www.sciencemag.org/content/308/5723/796.1.full ″Pleistocene Park: Return of the Mammoth's Ecosystem.″] In: ''[[Science (journal)|Science]]'', 6 May 2005, vol. 308, no. 5723, pp.&nbsp;796–798. <small>Accessed 5 May 2013.</small>.
* [[Alexander V. Markov|Aleksandr Markov]] (2006): [http://www.russia-ic.com/travel/ideas/357/#.UY5SkoIw9NQ ″Good Fence for Future Mammoth Steppes.″] Translated by Anna Kizilova. Russia-InfoCentre website, 21 January 2007. <small>Accessed 5 May 2013.</small>.
* Sergei Zimov (2007): [http://www.pleistocenepark.ru/files/Science_in_Russia_en.pdf ″Mammoth Steppes and Future Climate.″] In: ''Science in Russia'', 2007, pp.&nbsp;105–112. Article found in: [http://www.pleistocenepark.ru/en/materials/ www.pleistocenepark.ru/en/ – Materials.] <small>Accessed 5 May 2013.</small>.
* Adam Wolf (2008): [http://alumni.stanford.edu/get/page/magazine/article/?article_id=31018 ″The Big Thaw.″] In: ''Stanford Magazine'', Sept.–Oct. 2008, pp.&nbsp;63–69. <small>Accessed 7 May 2013.</small>. – [http://www.pleistocenepark.ru/files/Wolf_PleistocenePark_StanMag.pdf PDF of print version], found in: [http://www.pleistocenepark.ru/en/materials/ www.pleistocenepark.ru/en/ – Materials.] <small>Accessed 7 May 2013.</small>.
* Arthur Max (2010): [http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2010/11/27/sergey-zimov-ice-age-ecosystem-siberia_n_788806.html ″Russian Scientist Working To Recreate Ice Age Ecosystem.″] In: ''[[The Huffington Post]]'', 27 November 2010. <small>Accessed 7 May 2013.</small>.
* Martin W. Lewis (2012): [http://geocurrents.info/place/russia-ukraine-and-caucasus/siberia/pleistocene-park-the-regeneration-of-the-mammoth-steppe ″Pleistocene Park: The Regeneration of the Mammoth Steppe?″] and [http://geocurrents.info/place/russia-ukraine-and-caucasus/siberia/pleistocene-re-wilding-environmental-restoration-or-ecological-heresy ″Pleistocene Re-Wilding: Environmental Restoration or Ecological Heresy?″] In: ''GeoCurrents'', 12 respectively 14 April 2012. <small>Accessed 2 May 2013.</small>.
* Sergey A. Zimov, Nikita S. Zimov, [[F. Stuart Chapin III]] (2012): [http://media.longnow.org/files/2/REVIVE/The%20Past%20and%20Future%20of%20the%20Mammoth%20Steppe%20Ecosystem.pdf “The Past and Future of the Mammoth Steppe Ecosystem.”] ([https://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-25038-5_10 doi]). In: Julien Louys (ed.), ''Paleontology in Ecology and Conservation'', Berlin Heidelberg, Springer-Verlag 2012. <small>Accessed 4 November 2017.</small>.
* S.A. Zimov, N.S. Zimov, A.N. Tikhonov, [[F. Stuart Chapin III|F.S. Chapin III]] (2012): [https://www.researchgate.net/profile/F_Stuart_Chapin_Iii/publication/257110614_Mammoth_steppe_A_high-productivity_phenomenon/links/0deec53405eb847714000000/Mammoth-steppe-A-high-productivity-phenomenon.pdf ″Mammoth steppe: a high-productivity phenomenon.″] In: ''[[Quaternary Science Reviews]]'', vol.&nbsp;57, 4 December 2012, pp.&nbsp;26–45. <small>Accessed 10 February 2014.</small>.
* Damira Davletyarova (2013): [http://www.ottawalife.com/2013/02/the-zimovs-restoration-of-the-mammoth-era-ecosystem-and-reversing-global-warming/ ″The Zimovs: Restoration of the Mammoth-Era Ecosystem, and Reversing Global Warming.″] In: ''[[Ottawa Life Magazine]]'', 11 February 2013. <small>Accessed 6 June 2013.</small>.
* [[Eli Kintisch]] (2015): [http://www.sciencemagazinedigital.org/sciencemagazine/4_december_2015?pg=24#pg24 “Born to rewild. A father and son’s quixotic quest to bring back a lost ecosystem – and save the world.”] In: ''[[Science (journal)|Science]]'', 4 December 2015, vol. 350, no. 6265, pp.&nbsp;1148–1151. ([http://pulitzercenter.org/reporting/born-rewild-father-and-son-seek-transform-arctic-and-save-world Alternative version] on the [[Pulitzer Center on Crisis Reporting]] website.) <small>Accessed 26 September 2016.</small>.
* Ross Andersen (2017): [https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2017/04/pleistocene-park/517779/ “Welcome to Pleistocene Park. In Arctic Siberia, Russian scientists are trying to stave off catastrophic climate change—by resurrecting an Ice Age biome complete with lab-grown woolly mammoths.”] In: ''[[The Atlantic]]'', April 2017. <small>Accessed 10 March 2017.</small>.
* Adele Peters (2017): [https://www.fastcompany.com/3068929/meet-the-father-son-duo-importing-american-buffalo-to-siberia-to-save-the-planet “Home, home on the ферма. Meet The Father-Son Duo Importing American Bison To Siberia To Save The Planet.”] In: ''[[Fast Company (magazine)|Fast Company]]'', 21 March 2017. <small>Accessed 29 March 2017.</small>.
* [[Animal People|Animal People, Inc.]] (2017): [http://animalpeopleforum.org/2017/04/02/an-interview-with-nikita-zimov-director-of-pleistocene-park/ “An Interview with Nikita Zimov, Director of Pleistocene Park.”] In: ''Animal People Forum'', 2 April 2017.
* Noah Deich (2017): [http://www.centerforcarbonremoval.org/blog-posts/2017/4/3/mammoths-permafrost-soil-carbon-storagea-qa-about-pleistocene-park “Mammoths, Permafrost & Soil Carbon Storage: A Q&A about Pleistocene Park.”] Interview with Dr. Guy Lomax of the Natural Climate Initiative at [[The Nature Conservancy]]. ''Center for Carbon Removal'', 3 April 2017.

=== Video ===
* Pleistocene Park (w/o date): [http://www.pleistocenepark.ru/photos/original/13.jpg 360° panorama view from top of the monitoring tower.] Photo in Pleistocene Park [http://www.pleistocenepark.ru/en/photo/13/ Picture Gallery.] <small>Accessed 20 October 2014.</small>.
* R. Max Holmes (2011): [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vBrFudwiVp0 ''An Arctic Solution to Climate Warming.''] Talk at the [http://www.ted.com/tedx/events/2011 TEDxWoodsHole], 2 March 2011, in [[Woods Hole, Massachusetts|Woods Hole, Mass]]. Video, 9:17&nbsp;min., uploaded 18 November 2011. <small>Accessed 10 March 2017.</small>.
* Eugene Potapov (2012): [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pxsv3DLJ6KA ''Pleistocene Park.''] Video, 7:11&nbsp;min., uploaded 21 October 2012. <small>Accessed 23 April 2013.</small>.
* Panoramio (2012): [https://www.panoramio.com/photo/81042324 A view of the Kolyma River floodplains taken from the surrounding hills above Pleistocene Park.] Photo, uploaded 23 October 2012. <small>Accessed 27 June 2013.</small>.
* Luke Griswold-Tergis (2014): [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wO0wyICAAqg ''Can Woolly Mammoths Save the World?''] Talk at the [http://www.ted.com/tedx/events/12063 TEDxConstitutionDrive 2014] (Menlo Park, CA).] Video, 15:25&nbsp;min., uploaded 29 May 2014. <small>Accessed 20 October 2014.</small>.
* Grant Slater, Ross Andersen (2016): [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=c71Qm5ljmG8 ''Creating Pleistocene Park.''] Video, 26:01&nbsp;min., uploaded 13 March 2017. <small>Accessed 6 April 2017.</small>.
* The Pleistocene Park Foundation, Inc. (2017): [https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/907484977/2038454729?token=1af7c89f ''Pleistocene Park: an ice-age ecosystem to save the world.''] Video, 3:09&nbsp;min. [[Kickstarter]] crowdfunding campaign. <small>Accessed 4 March 2017.</small>.
* ZoominTV (2017) [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=V9bt_NzwpxU ''Jurassic Park IRL: How the mammoth can help our future.''] Video, 3:25&nbsp;min., uploaded 10 July 2017. Note: This video shows [[Wild Field (wilderness reserve)|Wild Field]] footage cut against an interview about Pleistocene Park.<small>Accessed 6 April 2017.</small>.


== References ==
== References ==
{{reflist|24em|refs=
{{reflist|25em|refs=


If this is too much for you, don't panic:
If this is too much for you, don't panic:
References placed in the text according to the normal method ❬ref❭...❬/ref❭ will be automatically integrated into the 'References' section.
References placed in the text according to the normal method ❬ref❭...❬/ref❭ will be automatically integrated into this 'References' section.


The following list is ordered in alphabetical order according to ref name.
The following list is ordered in alphabetical order according to ref name.
Official park website: ref names start with ‘pp'; subpages are capitalized; slides, sections, etc. in minuscles.
Official park website: ref names start with 'pp'; subpages are capitalized; slides, sections, etc. in minuscles.


A
A
<ref name="Adele Peters: … on the ферма. 2017">Adele Peters (2017): [https://www.fastcompany.com/3068929/meet-the-father-son-duo-importing-american-buffalo-to-siberia-to-save-the-planet “Home, home on the ферма. Meet The Father-Son Duo Importing American Bison To Siberia To Save The Planet.”] In: ''[[Fast Company (magazine)|Fast Company]]'', 21 March 2017. Retrieved 29 March 2017.</ref>
<ref name="Adele Peters: … on the ферма. 2017">{{cite magazine |first=Adele |last=Peters |url=https://www.fastcompany.com/3068929/meet-the-father-son-duo-importing-american-buffalo-to-siberia-to-save-the-planet |title=Home, home on the ферма. Meet the father-son duo importing American bison to Siberia to save the planet |magazine=[[Fast Company (magazine)|Fast Company]] |date=21 March 2017 |access-date=29 March 2017}}</ref>


<ref name="Adele Peters: Baby Bison. 2018">{{cite magazine |first=Adele |last=Peters |url=https://www.fastcompany.com/40561843/baby-bison-are-being-flow-to-siberia-to-try-to-save-the-permafrost |title=Baby bison are being flown to Siberia to try to save the permafrost |magazine=[[Fast Company (magazine)|Fast Company]] |date=23 April 2018 |access-date=29 May 2018}}</ref>
<ref name="ADF&G: FAQ wood bison">ADF&G (w/o date): [http://www.adfg.alaska.gov/index.cfm?adfg=woodbisonrestoration.faqs “Frequently Asked Questions – What do bison eat? How often do they eat?”] In: ''Wood Bison Restoration in Alaska'', web resource of the Alaska Department of Fish and Game. Retrieved 14 November 2017.</ref>


<ref name="ADF&G: FAQ wood bison">{{cite web |department=Alaska Department of Fish and Game |publisher=State of Alaska |title=Frequently Asked Questions – What do bison eat? How often do they eat? |series=Wood Bison Restoration in Alaska |url=http://www.adfg.alaska.gov/index.cfm?adfg=woodbisonrestoration.faqs |access-date=14 November 2017}}</ref>
<ref name="ADF&G: Species profile wood bison">ADF&G (w/o date): [http://www.adfg.alaska.gov/index.cfm?adfg=woodbison.main “Wood Bison (''Bison bison athabascae''). Species Profile.”] In: ''Species'', web resource of the Alaska Department of Fish and Game. Retrieved 14 November 2017.</ref>


<ref name="ADF&G: Species profile wood bison">{{cite web |department=Alaska Department of Fish and Game |publisher=State of Alaska |url=http://www.adfg.alaska.gov/index.cfm?adfg=woodbison.main |title=Wood Bison (''Bison bison athabascae'') |series=Species Profile |access-date=14 November 2017}}</ref>
<ref name="ADW: American bison">Toni Lynn Newell, Anna Bess Sorin: “[http://animaldiversity.org/accounts/Bison_bison/ ''Bison bison.'' American bison.]” University of Michigan: ''[[Animal Diversity Web]]'', 2003. Retrieved 14 November 2017.</ref>


<ref name="ADW: Bactrian camel">Emily Cutshall (author); Karen Powers, Tanya Dewey (eds.): [http://animaldiversity.org/accounts/Camelus_bactrianus/ ''Camelus bactrianus.'' Bactrian camel.”] University of Michigan: ''[[Animal Diversity Web]]'', 2017. Retrieved 11 November 2017.</ref>
<ref name="ADW: American bison">{{cite web |first1=Toni Lynn |last1=Newell |first2=Anna Bess |last2=Sorin |url=http://animaldiversity.org/accounts/Bison_bison/ |title=''Bison bison.'' American bison |publisher=University of Michigan |website=[[Animal Diversity Web]] |year=2003 |access-date=14 November 2017}}</ref>


<ref name="ADW: wisent">Kassondra Hendricks (author); John Bruggink, Tanya Dewey (eds.): “[http://animaldiversity.org/accounts/Bison_bonasus/ ''Bison bonasus.'' European bison. (Also: wisent.)]” University of Michigan: ''[[Animal Diversity Web]]'', 2013. Retrieved 14 November 2017.</ref>
<ref name="ADW: Bactrian camel">{{cite web |first=Emily |last=Cutshall |editor1-first=Karen |editor1-last=Powers |editor2-first=Tanya |editor2-last=Dewey |url=http://animaldiversity.org/accounts/Camelus_bactrianus/ |title=''Camelus bactrianus.'' Bactrian camel |publisher=University of Michigan |website=[[Animal Diversity Web]] |year=2017 |access-date=11 November 2017}}</ref>


<ref name="ADW: wisent">{{cite web |first=Kassondra |last=Hendricks |editor1-first=John |editor1-last=Bruggink |editor2-first=Tanya |editor2-last=Dewey |url=http://animaldiversity.org/accounts/Bison_bonasus/ |title=''Bison bonasus.'' European bison (also: wisent) |publisher=University of Michigan |website=[[Animal Diversity Web]] |year=2013 |access-date=14 November 2017}}</ref>
<ref name="Anna-Lena Laurén: Sibirien sjunker sakta, DN 31 July 2017">Anna-Lena Laurén: [https://www.dn.se/nyheter/varlden/sibirien-sjunker-sakta-ned-i-dyn-nar-permafrosten-tinar/ “Sibirien sjunker sakta ned i dyn när permafrosten tinar.”] ''[[Dagens Nyheter]]'', 31 July 2017. ([http://inosmi.ru/social/20170924/240356603.html Russian version], 24 September 2017.) Retrieved 18 October 2017.</ref>

<ref name="Alex DeMarban: Alaska bison await shipment to Siberia. 2018">{{cite news |first=Alex |last=de Marban |date=24 May 2018 |url=https://www.adn.com/alaska-news/environment/2018/05/22/alaska-bison-await-shipment-to-siberia-in-project-to-fight-climate-change/ |title=Alaska bison await shipment to Siberia in project to fight climate change |newspaper=[[Anchorage Daily News]] |access-date=30 May 2018}}</ref>

<ref name="Anna-Lena Laurén: Sibirien sjunker sakta, DN 31 July 2017">{{cite news |first=Anna-Lena |last=Laurén |url=https://www.dn.se/nyheter/varlden/sibirien-sjunker-sakta-ned-i-dyn-nar-permafrosten-tinar/ |title=Sibirien sjunker sakta ned i dyn när permafrosten tinar |newspaper=[[Dagens Nyheter]] |date=31 July 2017 |access-date=18 October 2017 |language=sv}} {{cite web |url=http://inosmi.ru/social/20170924/240356603.html |title=Russian version |date=24 September 2017 |access-date=18 October 2017 |language=ru}}</ref>

<ref name="Anna Stroganova: Bison for Siberia. 2018">{{cite web |title=Бизоны для Сибири: как двое ученых борются с глобальным потеплением |first=Анна (Anna) |last=Строганова (Stroganova) |url=http://m.ru.rfi.fr/rossiya/20180508-bizony-dlya-sibiri-kak-dvoe-uchenykh-boryutsya-s-globalnym-potepleniem |date=8 May 2018 |publisher=[[Radio France Internationale|Radio France Internationale russe]] |series=Interview with Nikita Zimov |language=fr |access-date=2 June 2018}}</ref>


B
B
<ref name="Book Passage-drawdown">Book Passage (w/o date): [http://www.bookpassage.com/event/paul-hawken-drawdown-san-rafael “Paul Hawken - Drawdown (San Rafael).”] Retrieved 16 March 2017.</ref>
<ref name="Book Passage-drawdown">{{cite web |website=Book Passage |date= 3 January 2017|url=http://www.bookpassage.com/event/paul-hawken-drawdown-san-rafael |title=Paul Hawken - Drawdown (San Rafael) |access-date=16 March 2017}}</ref>


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<ref name="Brad Lendon: Mammoth. CNN2011">{{cite news|title=Scientists trying to clone, resurrect extinct mammoth|author=Brad Lendon|url=http://news.blogs.cnn.com/2011/01/17/scientists-trying-to-clone-resurrect-extinct-mammoth/comment-page-25/|newspaper=[[CNN]] news blog|date=17 January 2011|accessdate=3 May 2013}}</ref>
<ref name="Brad Lendon: Mammoth. CNN2011">{{cite news |title=Scientists trying to clone, resurrect extinct mammoth |author=Lendon, Brad |url=http://news.blogs.cnn.com/2011/01/17/scientists-trying-to-clone-resurrect-extinct-mammoth/comment-page-25/ |archive-url=https://archive.today/20130616020113/http://news.blogs.cnn.com/2011/01/17/scientists-trying-to-clone-resurrect-extinct-mammoth/comment-page-25/ |url-status=dead |archive-date=16 June 2013 |publisher=[[CNN]] |type=news blog |date=17 January 2011 |access-date=3 May 2013}}</ref>
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<ref name="БезФормата.Ru 2011">[http://serpuhov.bezformata.ru/listnews/pyatero-smelih-zubrov/671304/ “Пятеро смелых...зубров.”] (“Five Bold ... Wisents.”) ''БезФормата.Ru'', 12 April 2011. Retrieved 11 October 2017.</ref>
<ref name="БезФормата.Ru 2011">{{cite web |url=http://serpuhov.bezformata.ru/listnews/pyatero-smelih-zubrov/671304/ |title=Пятеро смелых ... зубров |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131202221750/http://serpuhov.bezformata.ru/listnews/pyatero-smelih-zubrov/671304/ |archive-date=2 December 2013 |trans-title=Five Bold ... Wisents |website=БезФормата.Ru |date=12 April 2011 |access-date=11 October 2017 |language=ru}}</ref>


C
C


D
D
<ref name="David Addison: A steppe towards a new age. 2017">David Addison (2017): [https://www.virgin.com/virgin-unite/steppe-towards-new-age-restoration “A steppe towards a new age of restoration. If you learned that, today, you had the opportunity to back a mammoth effort to restore one of the world’s biggest ecosystems, would you take it?] ''[[Virgin Group|Virgin]]'', 15 March 2017. Retrieved 17 March 2017.</ref>
<ref name="David Addison: A steppe towards a new age. 2017">David Addison (2017): [https://www.virgin.com/virgin-unite/steppe-towards-new-age-restoration "A steppe towards a new age of restoration. If you learned that, today, you had the opportunity to back a mammoth effort to restore one of the world's biggest ecosystems, would you take it?"] ''[[Virgin Group|Virgin]]'', 15 March 2017. Retrieved 17 March 2017.</ref>


<ref name="DesertUSA: The Wild Bactrian camel">Jay Sharp: [https://www.desertusa.com/animals/bactrian-camel.html “The Wild Bactrian Camel. (''Camelus ferus.'')] ''DesertUSA'', w/o date. Retrieved 11 November 2017.</ref>
<ref name="DesertUSA: The Wild Bactrian camel">Jay Sharp: [https://www.desertusa.com/animals/bactrian-camel.html "The Wild Bactrian Camel. (''Camelus ferus.'')"] ''DesertUSA'', w/o date. Retrieved 11 November 2017.</ref>


<ref name="Drawdown">[http://www.drawdown.org/ Project Drawdown homepage.] Retrieved 16 March 2017.</ref>
<ref name="Drawdown">[http://www.drawdown.org/ Project Drawdown homepage.] Retrieved 16 March 2017.</ref>


<ref name="Drawdown-mammoth steppe">Project Drawdown (w/o date): [http://www.drawdown.org/solutions/coming-attractions/repopulating-mammoth-steppe “Repopulating the Mammoth Steppe.] Retrieved 16 March 2017.</ref>
<ref name="Drawdown-mammoth steppe">Project Drawdown (w/o date): [http://www.drawdown.org/solutions/coming-attractions/repopulating-mammoth-steppe "Repopulating the Mammoth Steppe."] Retrieved 16 March 2017.</ref>


<ref name="Drawdown-solutions">Project Drawdown (w/o date): [http://www.drawdown.org/solutions “Solutions.] Retrieved 16 March 2017.</ref>
<ref name="Drawdown-solutions">Project Drawdown (w/o date): [http://www.drawdown.org/solutions "Solutions."] Retrieved 16 March 2017.</ref>


E
E
<ref name="Eli Kintisch: Born to Rewild. 2015">Eli Kintisch (2015): [http://www.sciencemagazinedigital.org/sciencemagazine/4_december_2015?pg=24#pg24 “Born to rewild. A father and son’s quixotic quest to bring back a lost ecosystem – and save the world.”] ''[[Science (journal)|Science]]'', 4 December 2015, vol. 350, no. 6265, pp. 1148–1151.</ref><!-- alternative url (identical text, w/o the pictures, different title, different magazine):
<ref name="Eli Kintisch: Born to Rewild. 2015">{{cite magazine |first=Eli |last=Kintisch |url=http://www.sciencemagazinedigital.org/sciencemagazine/4_december_2015?pg=24#pg24 |title=Born to rewild. A father and son's quixotic quest to bring back a lost ecosystem – and save the world |magazine=[[Science (journal)|Science]] |date=4 December 2015 |volume=350 |issue=6265 |pages=1148–1151}}</ref><!-- alternative url (identical text, w/o the pictures, different title, different magazine):
http://pulitzercenter.org/reporting/born-rewild-father-and-son-seek-transform-arctic-and-save-world
http://pulitzercenter.org/reporting/born-rewild-father-and-son-seek-transform-arctic-and-save-world
-->
-->


F
F
<ref name="Falkowski et al 2000: Global Carbon Cycle">{{cite web|title=The Global Carbon Cycle: A Test of Our Knowledge of Earth as a System|author=P. Falkowski|url=http://www.sciencemag.org/content/290/5490/291|date=13 October 2000|publisher=''[[Science (journal)|Science]]'', vol.&nbsp;290 no.&nbsp;5490, pp.&nbsp;291–296|pmid=11030643|accessdate=4 February 2015|display-authors=etal}}</ref>
<ref name="Falkowski et al 2000: Global Carbon Cycle">{{cite journal |title=The global carbon cycle: A test of our knowledge of Earth as a system |journal=Science |volume=290 |issue=5490 |pages=291–6 |author=Falkowski, P. |date=13 October 2000 |pmid=11030643 |display-authors=etal |doi=10.1126/science.290.5490.291 |bibcode=2000Sci...290..291F}}</ref>


<ref name="Fanny Kittler: Summer Blog: Chersky 2013 - Pleistocene Park">Fanny Kittler (17 July 2013): [http://page21.org/field-sites/82-blogs/summer-blog-chersky-2013/279-chersky-2013-6-pleistocene-park “Summer Blog: Chersky 2013 – Pleistocene Park.] In: [http://page21.org/blogs/92-summer-blog-chersky-2013 PAGE21: ''Summer Blog: Chersky 2013.''] Retrieved 10 February 2014.</ref>
<ref name="Fanny Kittler: Summer Blog: Chersky 2013 - Pleistocene Park">Fanny Kittler (17 July 2013): [http://page21.org/field-sites/82-blogs/summer-blog-chersky-2013/279-chersky-2013-6-pleistocene-park "Summer Blog: Chersky 2013 – Pleistocene Park."] In: [http://page21.org/blogs/92-summer-blog-chersky-2013 PAGE21: ''Summer Blog: Chersky 2013.''] Retrieved 10 February 2014.</ref>


<ref name="Fiona Harvey 2013 / Vaks et al 2013: Speleothems">{{cite web|title=Speleothems Reveal 500,000-Year History of Siberian Permafrost|author=A. Vaks|url=http://www.sciencemag.org/content/340/6129/183.abstract?sid=0f256622-5c43-441d-8706-496bd2ef5ce1|date=12 April 2013|orig-year=published online 21 February 2013|publisher=''[[Science (journal)|Science]]'', vol.&nbsp;340, no.&nbsp;6129, pp.&nbsp;183–186|accessdate=4 February 2015|display-authors=etal}} Quoted after: {{cite web|title=1.5C rise in temperature enough to start permafrost melt, scientists warn|author=Fiona Harvey|url=https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2013/feb/21/temperature-rise-permafrost-melt|date=21 February 2013|publisher=''[[The Guardian]]''|accessdate=4 February 2015}}</ref>
<ref name="Fiona Harvey 2013 / Vaks et al 2013: Speleothems">{{cite journal |title=Speleothems Reveal 500,000-Year History of Siberian Permafrost |journal=Science |volume=340 |issue=6129 |pages=183–186 |author=A. Vaks |date=12 April 2013 |orig-date=21 February 2013 |display-authors=etal |doi=10.1126/science.1228729 |pmid=23429705 |url=http://www.gt-crust.ru/jour/article/view/86 |bibcode=2013Sci...340..183V|hdl=20.500.11820/ad9e4b95-dd79-44b4-be37-bf04e0958094 |s2cid=206544502 |hdl-access=free }} Quoted after: {{cite news |title=1.5C rise in temperature enough to start permafrost melt, scientists warn |author=Fiona Harvey |author-link=Fiona Harvey |url=https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2013/feb/21/temperature-rise-permafrost-melt|date=21 February 2013 |newspaper=[[The Guardian]] |access-date=4 February 2015}}</ref>


<ref name="First Tula Telechannel 3-2015">{{cite web|title=На территории Воловского района создаётся экспериментальный заповедник|author=First Tula Telechannel|url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=65DOVsDEoI0|date=31 March 2015|publisher=(''On the territory of Volovsky district an experimental reserve is created.'') TV feature on the Wild Field reserve|accessdate=2 April 2015}}</ref>
<ref name="First Tula Telechannel 3-2015">{{cite AV media |title=На территории Воловского района создаётся экспериментальный заповедник |publisher=First Tula Telechannel |url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=65DOVsDEoI0 |archive-url=https://ghostarchive.org/varchive/youtube/20211215/65DOVsDEoI0 |archive-date=2021-12-15 |url-status=live|date=31 March 2015 |trans-title=On the territory of Volovsky district an experimental reserve is created |medium=TV feature |series=Wild Field reserve |access-date=2 April 2015 |via=YouTube}}{{cbignore}}</ref>


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<ref name="Fowler 2007: Siberian Window">{{cite web|title=Siberian Window on the Ice Age|author=Adam Fowler|url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/6246926.stm|date=2 July 2007|publisher=''[[BBC News]]''|accessdate=4 February 2015}}</ref>
<ref name="Fowler 2007: Siberian Window">{{cite news |title=Siberian window on the Ice Age |author=Fowler, Adam |url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/6246926.stm |date=2 July 2007 |website=[[BBC News]] |access-date=4 February 2015}}</ref>
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<ref name="Gennady: The North of Eastern Siberia, 2004">{{cite web|title=The North of Eastern Siberia; Refuge of Mammoth Fauna in the Holocene|author=Gennady G. Boeskorov|url=http://www.rhinoresourcecenter.com/pdf_files/131/1312936307.pdf|year=2004|publisher=''[[Gondwana Research]]'', vol. 7, no. 2, pp. 451–455|accessdate=14 June 2013}}
<ref name="Gennady: The North of Eastern Siberia, 2004">{{cite journal |title=The north of eastern Siberia: Refuge of mammoth fauna in the Holocene |author=Boeskorov, Gennady G. |url=http://www.rhinoresourcecenter.com/pdf_files/131/1312936307.pdf |year=2004 |journal=[[Gondwana Research]] |volume=7 |issue=2 |pages=451–455 |doi=10.1016/S1342-937X(05)70796-6 |bibcode=2004GondR...7..451B |access-date=14 June 2013}}
</ref>
</ref>


<ref name="Good fence, Russian, 2006">Александр Марков (Aleksandr Markov) (6 December 2006): [http://elementy.ru/news/430403?page_design=print “Хороший забор — главное условие восстановления мамонтовых степей.] In: ''Элементы.'' Article found in: [http://www.pleistocenepark.ru/en/press/ www.pleistocenepark.ru/en/ – Media about us.] Retrieved 7 May 2013.</ref>
<ref name="Good fence, Russian, 2006">Александр Марков (Aleksandr Markov) (6 December 2006): [http://elementy.ru/news/430403?page_design=print "Хороший забор — главное условие восстановления мамонтовых степей."] In: ''Элементы.'' Article found in: [http://www.pleistocenepark.ru/en/press/ www.pleistocenepark.ru/en/ – Media about us.] Retrieved 7 May 2013.</ref>


<ref name="GreenBiz 2014">Joel Makower (2014): [https://www.greenbiz.com/blog/2014/10/22/inside-paul-hawkens-audacious-plan-drawdown-climate-change “Inside Paul Hawken’s audacious plan to ‘drawdown’ climate change.] GreenBiz, 22 October 2014. Retrieved 16 March 2017.</ref>
<ref name="GreenBiz 2014">Joel Makower (2014): [https://www.greenbiz.com/blog/2014/10/22/inside-paul-hawkens-audacious-plan-drawdown-climate-change "Inside Paul Hawken's audacious plan to 'drawdown' climate change."] GreenBiz, 22 October 2014. Retrieved 16 March 2017.</ref>


<ref name="Grimes 2007: lakes a major source">{{cite web|title=Study reveals lakes a major source of prehistoric methane|author=Marmian Grimes|url=http://uafcornerstone.net/news/a_news/20071024130833.html|date=24 October 2007|publisher=[[University of Alaska Fairbanks]]|accessdate=4 February 2015}}<!--alternative url= http://www.sitnews.us/1107news/110207/110207_methane.html --> Broken picture links: [http://www.sitnews.us/1107news/110207/110207_aerial_lakes.jpg An aerial photo ...], [http://www.sitnews.us/1107news/110207/110207_flame.jpg UAF researcher Katey Walter lights a pocket of methane ...] [http://www.californiagreensolutions.com/images/al-bubbles.jpg Methane bubbles ...], [http://www.californiagreensolutions.com/images/al_methane.jpg Graduate students ... pose near a large pocket of methane ...]</ref>
<ref name="Grimes 2007: lakes a major source">{{cite web |title=Study reveals lakes a major source of prehistoric methane |author=Grimes, Marmian |url=http://uafcornerstone.net/news/a_news/20071024130833.html |date=24 October 2007 |publisher=[[University of Alaska Fairbanks]] |access-date=4 February 2015 |archive-date=4 March 2016 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160304061652/http://uafcornerstone.net/news/a_news/20071024130833.html |url-status=dead }}<!--alternative url=http://www.sitnews.us/1107news/110207/110207_methane.html --> Broken picture links: [http://www.sitnews.us/1107news/110207/110207_aerial_lakes.jpg An aerial photo ...], [http://www.sitnews.us/1107news/110207/110207_flame.jpg UAF researcher Katey Walter lights a pocket of methane ...] [http://www.californiagreensolutions.com/images/al-bubbles.jpg Methane bubbles ...] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210204233255/http://www.californiagreensolutions.com/images/al-bubbles.jpg |date=4 February 2021 }}, [http://www.californiagreensolutions.com/images/al_methane.jpg Graduate students ... pose near a large pocket of methane ...] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160305001803/http://www.californiagreensolutions.com/images/al_methane.jpg |date=5 March 2016 }}</ref>


<ref name="Griswold-Tergis 2013: Pleistocene Park pt.1">{{cite web|title=A Pleistocene Park – pt.1|author=Luke Griswold-Tergis|url=http://www.virginearth.com/2013/11/a-pleistocene-park-pt-1/|date=8 November 2013|publisher=[[Virgin Earth Challenge#Earth Challenge Blog|Earth Challenge Blog]]|accessdate=10 February 2014}}</ref>
<ref name="Griswold-Tergis 2013: Pleistocene Park pt.2">{{cite web |title=A Pleistocene Park – pt.2 |author=Griswold-Tergis, Luke |url=http://www.virginearth.com/2013/11/a-pleistocene-park-pt-2/ |date=11 November 2013 |publisher=[[Virgin Earth Challenge#Earth Challenge Blog|Earth Challenge Blog]] |access-date=10 February 2014}}</ref>


<ref name="HuffPost 2010: Russian Scientist Working To Recreate Ice Age Ecosystem">Arthur Max (27 November 2010): [https://web.archive.org/web/20101130081708/http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2010/11/27/sergey-zimov-ice-age-ecosystem-siberia_n_788806.html "Russian Scientist Working To Recreate Ice Age Ecosystem."]<!-- Original url: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2010/11/27/sergey-zimov-ice-age-ecosystem-siberia_n_788806.html --> In: ''[[The Huffington Post]].'' Article found in: [http://www.pleistocenepark.ru/en/press/ www.pleistocenepark.ru/en/ – Media about us.] Retrieved 7 May 2013.</ref>
<ref name="Griswold-Tergis 2013: Pleistocene Park pt.2">{{cite web|title=A Pleistocene Park – pt.2|author=Luke Griswold-Tergis|url=http://www.virginearth.com/2013/11/a-pleistocene-park-pt-2/|date=11 November 2013|publisher=[[Virgin Earth Challenge#Earth Challenge Blog|Earth Challenge Blog]]|accessdate=10 February 2014}}</ref>

<ref name="Griswold-Tergis: Pleistocene Park Movie. fb">[https://www.facebook.com/PleistoceneParkMovie Facebook: Pleistocene Park Movie.] Retrieved 18 January 2014.</ref>

<ref name="Griswold-Tergis: Pleistocene Park Movie. Post 23 July 2014">[https://www.facebook.com/PleistoceneParkMovie/posts/316122978553693 Facebook: Pleistocene Park Movie] (23 July 2014): ″Sergey Zimov and [[F. Stuart Chapin III|Terry Chapin]] arranged for Wood Bison to be shipped to Yakutia in 2006. Unfortunately the Yakutian government did not allow any bison to be released Pleistocene Park.″ Retrieved 29 August 2014.</ref>

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<ref name="HuffPost 2010: Russian Scientist Working To Recreate Ice Age Ecosystem">Arthur Max (27 November 2010): [https://web.archive.org/web/20101130081708/http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2010/11/27/sergey-zimov-ice-age-ecosystem-siberia_n_788806.html “Russian Scientist Working To Recreate Ice Age Ecosystem.”]<!-- Original url: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2010/11/27/sergey-zimov-ice-age-ecosystem-siberia_n_788806.html --> In: ''[[The Huffington Post]].'' Article found in: [http://www.pleistocenepark.ru/en/press/ www.pleistocenepark.ru/en/ – Media about us.] Retrieved 7 May 2013.</ref>


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<ref name="ISM, Ice Age Midwest: Bison">Illinois State Museum (w/o date): [http://iceage.museum.state.il.us/mammals/bison-0 “Bison, ''Bison bison''.”] In: ''Explore the Ice Age Midwest .....plants and animals of the Pleistocene'', web resource of the Illinois State Museum. Retrieved 14 November 2017.</ref>
<ref name="Indiegogo 2018, update 30 May 2018">Nikita Zimov: [https://www.indiegogo.com/projects/bison-to-save-the-world--2#/updates/all "Bison to save the world."] Indiegogo crowdfunding campaign, update #7 of 30 May 2018. Retrieved 2 June 2018.</ref>


<ref name="ISM, Ice Age Midwest: Bison">Illinois State Museum (w/o date): [http://iceage.museum.state.il.us/mammals/bison-0 "Bison, ''Bison bison''."] In: ''Explore the Ice Age Midwest ... plants and animals of the Pleistocene'', web resource of the Illinois State Museum. Retrieved 14 November 2017.</ref>
<ref name="IUCN maps roe deer">The IUCN Red List of Threatened Species: [http://maps.iucnredlist.org/map.html?id=42395 Distribution map of ''Capreolus capreolus'',] [http://maps.iucnredlist.org/map.html?id=42396 Distribution map of ''Capreolus pygargus''.] Retrieved 24 October 2014.</ref>

<ref name="IUCN maps roe deer">The IUCN Red List of Threatened Species: [http://maps.iucnredlist.org/map.html?id=42395 Distribution map of ''Capreolus capreolus''], [http://maps.iucnredlist.org/map.html?id=42396 Distribution map of ''Capreolus pygargus''.] Retrieved 24 October 2014.</ref>


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<ref name="Jake Kong 11 April 2015">[https://www.facebook.com/truenaturefoundation/posts/1608324886046867 Jake Kong: Private communication from Zimov.] Published on the True Nature Foundation Facebook site, 11 April 2015.</ref>
<ref name="Jake Kong 11 April 2015">[https://www.facebook.com/truenaturefoundation/posts/1608324886046867 Jake Kong: Private communication from Zimov.] Published on the True Nature Foundation Facebook site, 11 April 2015.</ref>

<ref name="Joris Cromsigt et al., 17 December 2017">Joris P. G. M. Cromsigt, Yvonne J. M. Kemp, Esther Rodriguez, Hubert Kivit: [https://www.rewildingeurope.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/01/Cromsigt_et_al-2017-Restoration_Ecology9297.pdf "Rewilding Europe's large grazer community: how functionally diverse are the diets of European bison, cattle, and horses?"] ''[[Restoration Ecology (journal)|Restoration Ecology]]'', 17 December 2017. [https://doi.org/10.1111/rec.12661 https://doi.org/10.1111/rec.12661]. Retrieved 30 January 2018.</ref>

<ref name="Juneau Empire 2006">Associated Press (2006): [http://juneauempire.com/stories/090406/sta_20060904009.shtml "Stevens Village council launches bison project."] ''[[Juneau Empire]]'', 4 September 2006. Retrieved 23 January 2018.</ref>


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<ref name="Kate Allen: Camel Fossils 2013">Kate Allen (2013): [https://www.thestar.com/news/world/2013/03/05/camel_fossils_discovered_in_canadas_arctic_shed_light_on_animals_evolution.html “Camel fossils discovered in Canada’s Arctic shed light on animal’s evolution.] The Toronto Star: thestar.com, 5 March 2013. Retrieved 13 October 2017.</ref>
<ref name="Kate Allen: Camel Fossils 2013">Kate Allen (2013): [https://www.thestar.com/news/world/2013/03/05/camel_fossils_discovered_in_canadas_arctic_shed_light_on_animals_evolution.html "Camel fossils discovered in Canada's Arctic shed light on animal's evolution."] The Toronto Star: thestar.com, 5 March 2013. Retrieved 13 October 2017.</ref>


<ref name="Kickstarter">The Pleistocene Park Foundation, Inc. (2017): [https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/907484977/2038454729?token=1af7c89f “Pleistocene Park: an ice-age ecosystem to save the world.] [[Kickstarter]] crowdfunding campaign. Retrieved 4 March 2017.</ref>
<ref name="Kickstarter">The Pleistocene Park Foundation, Inc. (2017): [https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/907484977/2038454729?token=1af7c89f "Pleistocene Park: an ice-age ecosystem to save the world."] [[Kickstarter]] crowdfunding campaign. Retrieved 4 March 2017.</ref>


<ref name="Kickstarter 16 May 2017">The Pleistocene Park Foundation, Inc. (2017): [https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/907484977/pleistocene-park-an-ice-age-ecosystem-to-save-the/posts/1886504 “Expedition to bring animals to the Pleistocene Park is about to start.] [[Kickstarter]] crowdfunding page, update #10, 16 May 2017. Retrieved 17 May 2017.</ref>
<!--<ref name="Kickstarter 16 May 2017">The Pleistocene Park Foundation, Inc. (2017): [https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/907484977/pleistocene-park-an-ice-age-ecosystem-to-save-the/posts/1886504 "Expedition to bring animals to the Pleistocene Park is about to start."] [[Kickstarter]] crowdfunding page, update #10, 16 May 2017. Retrieved 17 May 2017.</ref>-->


<ref name="Kickstarter comment 28 March 2017">Nikita Zimov (2017): [https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/907484977/pleistocene-park-an-ice-age-ecosystem-to-save-the/comments?cursor=16314794#comment-16314793 “Dear Brian.] Reply to comment in Comments section of [[Kickstarter]] crowdfunding page, 28 March 2017. Retrieved 5 November 2017.</ref>
<ref name="Kickstarter comment 28 March 2017">Nikita Zimov (2017): [https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/907484977/pleistocene-park-an-ice-age-ecosystem-to-save-the/comments?cursor=16314794#comment-16314793 "Dear Brian."] Reply to comment in Comments section of [[Kickstarter]] crowdfunding page, 28 March 2017. Retrieved 5 November 2017.</ref>


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<ref name="Lewis: Regeneration of the Mammoth Steppe?">{{cite web|title=Pleistocene Park: The Regeneration of the Mammoth Steppe?|author=Martin W. Lewis|url=http://geocurrents.info/place/russia-ukraine-and-caucasus/siberia/pleistocene-park-the-regeneration-of-the-mammoth-steppe|publisher=GeoCurrents|date=12 April 2012|accessdate=2 May 2013}}</ref>
<ref name="Lewis: Regeneration of the Mammoth Steppe?">{{cite web |title=Pleistocene Park: The regeneration of the mammoth steppe? |author=Lewis, Martin W. |url=http://geocurrents.info/place/russia-ukraine-and-caucasus/siberia/pleistocene-park-the-regeneration-of-the-mammoth-steppe |publisher=GeoCurrents |date=12 April 2012 |access-date=2 May 2013}}</ref>
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<ref name="Mark Paricio: Polaris Project. 2013">{{cite web|title=Pleistocene Park|author=Mark Paricio|url=http://www.thepolarisproject.org/pleistocene-park|date=20 July 2012|publisher=The Polaris Project|accessdate=7 May 2013}}</ref>
<ref name="Mark Paricio: Polaris Project. 2013">{{cite web |title=Pleistocene Park |author=Paricio, Mark |url=http://www.thepolarisproject.org/pleistocene-park|date=20 July 2012 |publisher=The Polaris Project |access-date=7 May 2013}}</ref>


<!-- <ref name="Menażeria2017">{{cite web |title=O suhaku, który z suchych stepów przybył |url=https://etymologicznamenazeria.wordpress.com/2017/10/06/o-suhaku-ktory-z-suchych-stepow-przybyl/ |website=Menażeria Etymologiczna |date=6 October 2017 |access-date=7 May 2020}}</ref> -->
<ref name="meyer2005">{{Citation | title=Hunting the double helix: how DNA is solving puzzles of the past | author=Anna Meyer | year=2005 | accessdate=20 April 2009 | publisher=Allen & Unwin | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=CBxhrHjECoUC | isbn=1-74114-107-9 | quote=''... lies in the work of a Russian ecologist, Sergei Zimov, who hopes to recreate a 'mammoth steppe' in north-east Siberia, part of a 'Pleistocene Park'. Work on the project has begun, and so far there are horses, moose, reindeer and bison in the park. These animals are removing mosses and shrubs, ...''}}</ref>


<ref name="meyer2005">{{cite book |title=Hunting the double helix: How DNA is solving puzzles of the past |author=Meyer, Anna |year=2005 |access-date=20 April 2009 |publisher=Allen & Unwin |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=CBxhrHjECoUC |isbn=978-1-74114-107-8 |quote=... lies in the work of a Russian ecologist, Sergei Zimov, who hopes to recreate a 'mammoth steppe' in north-east Siberia, part of a 'Pleistocene Park'. Work on the project has begun, and so far there are horses, moose, reindeer and bison in the park. These animals are removing mosses and shrubs, ...}}</ref>
<ref name="Mitchell/Gates: Wood bison in Alberta, 2002">Jonathan A. Mitchell, C. Cormack Gates (2002): [http://aep.alberta.ca/fish-wildlife/species-at-risk/species-at-risk-publications-web-resources/mammals/documents/SAR-StatusWoodBisonAlberta-Jan2002.pdf “Status of the Wood Bison (''Bison bison athabascae'') in Alberta.”] [http://aep.alberta.ca/fish-wildlife/species-at-risk/species-at-risk-publications-web-resources/default.aspx Wildlife Status Report] No. 38. Edmonton, AB: Alberta Sustainable Resource Development, Fish and Wildlife Division, and Alberta Conservation Association, January 2002. Retrieved 14 November 2017.</ref>


<ref name="Mitchell/Gates: Wood bison in Alberta, 2002">Jonathan A. Mitchell, C. Cormack Gates (2002): [http://aep.alberta.ca/fish-wildlife/species-at-risk/species-at-risk-publications-web-resources/mammals/documents/SAR-StatusWoodBisonAlberta-Jan2002.pdf "Status of the Wood Bison (''Bison bison athabascae'') in Alberta."] [http://aep.alberta.ca/fish-wildlife/species-at-risk/species-at-risk-publications-web-resources/default.aspx Wildlife Status Report] No. 38. Edmonton, AB: Alberta Sustainable Resource Development, Fish and Wildlife Division, and Alberta Conservation Association, January 2002. Retrieved 14 November 2017.</ref>
<ref name="moscow times 7 Nov 1998">{{cite web|title= Pleistocene Park|author=Richard Stone|url=http://www.themoscowtimes.com/news/article/pleistocene-park/283403.html|date=7 November 1998|publisher=''[[The Moscow Times]]'', issue 1578|accessdate=22 January 2014|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140202101140/http://www.themoscowtimes.com/news/article/pleistocene-park/283403.html|archive-date=2 February 2014}}</ref>

<ref name="moscow times 7 Nov 1998">{{cite web |title=Pleistocene Park |author=Richard Stone |url=http://www.themoscowtimes.com/news/article/pleistocene-park/283403.html |date=7 November 1998 |publisher=[[The Moscow Times]] |issue=1578 |access-date=22 January 2014 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140202101140/http://www.themoscowtimes.com/news/article/pleistocene-park/283403.html |archive-date=2 February 2014}}</ref>


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<ref name="natgeo2005">{{Citation | title= Pleistocene Park Underway: Home for Reborn Mammoths? | newspaper=National Geographic | date=May 17, 2005 | accessdate = 20 April 2009 | url=http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2005/05/0517_050517_pleistocene.html | quote=During the last ice age northeastern Siberia remained a grassy refuge for scores of animals, including bison and woolly mammoths. Then, about 10,000 years ago, this vast ecosystem disappeared as the Ice Age ended. Now, though, the Ice Age landscape is on its way back, with a little help from the Russian scientists who have established "Pleistocene Park.}}</ref>


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<ref name="OttawaLife 2013: The Zimovs">{{cite web|title=The Zimovs: Restoration of the Mammoth-Era Ecosystem, and Reversing Global Warming|author=Damira Davletyarova|url=http://www.ottawalife.com/2013/02/the-zimovs-restoration-of-the-mammoth-era-ecosystem-and-reversing-global-warming/|date=11 February 2013|publisher=''[[Ottawa life Magazine]]''|accessdate=6 June 2013}}</ref>
<ref name="OttawaLife 2013: The Zimovs">{{cite web |title=The Zimovs: Restoration of the mammoth-era ecosystem, and reversing global warming |author=Damira Davletyarova |url=http://www.ottawalife.com/2013/02/the-zimovs-restoration-of-the-mammoth-era-ecosystem-and-reversing-global-warming/ |date=11 February 2013 |publisher=[[Ottawa life Magazine]] |access-date=6 June 2013}}</ref>


<ref name="OxSympFoodCook 1986">Jill Tilsley-Benham (1987): “Sheep with Two Tails: Sheep's Tail-Fat as Cooking Medium in the Middle East. In: Tom Jaine (ed.), ''The Cooking Medium,'' proceedings of the [[Oxford Symposium on Food and Cookery#Annual symposia of the 1980s|Oxford Symposium on Food and Cookery 1986]], London, Prospect Books 1987. {{ISBN|090732536X}} ([https://books.google.com/books?id=Ohdhy5fiYbwC&pg0p47 google books]). Retrieved 13 October 2017.</ref>
<ref name="OxSympFoodCook 1986">Jill Tilsley-Benham (1987): "Sheep with Two Tails: Sheep's Tail-Fat as Cooking Medium in the Middle East." In: Tom Jaine (ed.), ''The Cooking Medium,'' proceedings of the [[Oxford Symposium on Food and Cookery#Annual symposia of the 1980s|Oxford Symposium on Food and Cookery 1986]], London, Prospect Books 1987. {{ISBN|0-907325-36-X}} ([https://books.google.com/books?id=Ohdhy5fiYbwC&pg0p47 google books]). Retrieved 13 October 2017.</ref>


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<ref name="Pablo Librado et al., Tracking the origins of Yakutian horses, 2017">Pablo Librado et al. (23 November 2015): “Tracking the origins of Yakutian horses and the genetic basis for their fast adaptation to subarctic environments. ''[[Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America]]'', vol. 112 no. 50, E6889–E6897, 23 November 2015. [https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1513696112 https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1513696112]. Retrieved 11 November 2017.</ref>
<ref name="Pablo Librado et al., Tracking the origins of Yakutian horses, 2017">Pablo Librado ''et al''. (23 November 2015): "Tracking the origins of Yakutian horses and the genetic basis for their fast adaptation to subarctic environments." ''[[Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America]]'', vol. 112 no. 50, E6889–E6897, 23 November 2015. [https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1513696112 https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1513696112]. Retrieved 11 November 2017.</ref>

<ref name="Pl.Park fcbk: 01 February 2017">Pleistocene Park: [https://www.facebook.com/PleistocenePark/photos/a.277325669353801.1073741828.271986773221024/280025185750516/ "This picture was taken in the Wild Field in the first year animals were introduced."] Facebook post of 1 February 2017. Retrieved 5 November 2017.</ref>

<ref name="Pl.Park fcbk: 10 May 2017">Pleistocene Park: [https://www.facebook.com/PleistocenePark/photos/a.277325669353801.1073741828.271986773221024/326901321062902/ "Photo of the Arctic ground squirrel, made somewhere in the neighborhood of Pleistocene Park."] Facebook post of 10 May 2017. Retrieved 11 May 2017.</ref>

<ref name="Pl.Park fcbk: 24 May 2017">Pleistocene Park: [https://www.facebook.com/PleistocenePark/photos/a.277325669353801.1073741828.271986773221024/332697913816576/ "To the wild field were introduced 75 goats and 4 reindeers."] Facebook post of 24 May 2017. Retrieved 2 July 2017.</ref>


<ref name="Pl.Park fcbk: 01 February 2017">Pleistocene Park: [https://www.facebook.com/PleistocenePark/photos/a.277325669353801.1073741828.271986773221024/280025185750516/ “This picture was taken in the Wild Field in the first year animals were introduced.] Facebook post of 1 February 2017. Retrieved 5 November 2017.</ref>
<ref name="Pl.Park fcbk: 04 June 2017">Pleistocene Park: [https://www.facebook.com/PleistocenePark/photos/a.277325669353801.1073741828.271986773221024/337864983299869/ "Wild Field 31.05.2017."] Facebook post of 4 June 2017. Retrieved 2 July 2017.</ref>


<ref name="Pl.Park fcbk: 10 May 2017">Pleistocene Park: [https://www.facebook.com/PleistocenePark/photos/a.277325669353801.1073741828.271986773221024/326901321062902/ “Photo of the Arctic ground squirrel, made somewhere in the neighborhood of Pleistocene Park.] Facebook post of 10 May 2017. Retrieved 11 May 2017.</ref>
<ref name="Pl.Park fcbk: 13 June 2017">Pleistocene Park: [https://www.facebook.com/PleistocenePark/photos/a.277325669353801.1073741828.271986773221024/341878092898558/ "On June 9th, we have finally arrived to the Pleistocene Park, with all yaks on board."] Facebook post of 13 June 2017. Retrieved 13 June 2017.</ref>


<ref name="Pl.Park fcbk: 24 May 2017">Pleistocene Park: [https://www.facebook.com/PleistocenePark/photos/a.277325669353801.1073741828.271986773221024/332697913816576/ “To the wild field were introduced 75 goats and 4 reindeers.] Facebook post of 24 May 2017. Retrieved 2 July 2017.</ref>
<ref name="Pl.Park fcbk: 24 June 2017">Pleistocene Park: [https://www.facebook.com/PleistocenePark/photos/a.277325669353801.1073741828.271986773221024/347196175700083/ "Apparently we had more than one pregnant yak during the trip."] Facebook post of 24 June 2017. Retrieved 2 July 2017.</ref>


<ref name="Pl.Park fcbk: 04 June 2017">Pleistocene Park: [https://www.facebook.com/PleistocenePark/photos/a.277325669353801.1073741828.271986773221024/337864983299869/ “Wild Field 31.05.2017.”] Facebook post of 4 June 2017. Retrieved 2 July 2017.</ref>
<!--<ref name="Pl.Park fcbk: 7 September 2017">Pleistocene Park: [https://www.facebook.com/PleistocenePark/photos/a.277325669353801.1073741828.271986773221024/377038982715802/ "So we do not stop the experiments on bringing new animals."] Facebook post of 7 September 2017. Retrieved 11 October 2017.</ref>-->


<ref name="Pl.Park fcbk: 13 June 2017">Pleistocene Park: [https://www.facebook.com/PleistocenePark/photos/a.277325669353801.1073741828.271986773221024/341878092898558/ “On June 9th, we have finally arrived to the Pleistocene Park, with all yaks on board.] Facebook post of 13 June 2017. Retrieved 13 June 2017.</ref>
<ref name="Pl.Park fcbk: 8 September 2017">Pleistocene Park: [https://www.facebook.com/PleistocenePark/videos/377616842658016/ "As I mentioned yesterday, we are making another expedition to bring animals."] Facebook post of 8 September 2017. Retrieved 11 October 2017.</ref>


<ref name="Pl.Park fcbk: 24 June 2017">Pleistocene Park: [https://www.facebook.com/PleistocenePark/photos/a.277325669353801.1073741828.271986773221024/347196175700083/ “Apparently we had more than one pregnant yak during the trip.] Facebook post of 24 June 2017. Retrieved 2 July 2017.</ref>
<ref name="Pl.Park fcbk: 7 October 2017">Pleistocene Park: [https://www.facebook.com/PleistocenePark/videos/387661818320185/ "Road to the Park earlier today."] Facebook post of 7 October 2017. Retrieved 11 October 2017.</ref>


<ref name="Pl.Park fcbk: 7 September 2017">Pleistocene Park: [https://www.facebook.com/PleistocenePark/photos/a.277325669353801.1073741828.271986773221024/377038982715802/ “So we do not stop the experiments on bringing new animals.] Facebook post of 7 September 2017. Retrieved 11 October 2017.</ref>
<ref name="Pl.Park fcbk: 12 October 2017">Pleistocene Park: [https://www.facebook.com/PleistocenePark/photos/a.277325669353801.1073741828.271986773221024/389585531461147/ "Unfortunately we did not get to the park with ships."] Facebook post of 12 October 2017. Retrieved 13 October 2017.</ref>


<ref name="Pl.Park fcbk: 8 September 2017">Pleistocene Park: [https://www.facebook.com/PleistocenePark/videos/377616842658016/ “As I mentioned yesterday, we are making another expedition to bring animals.] Facebook post of 8 September 2017. Retrieved 11 October 2017.</ref>
<ref name="Pl.Park fcbk: 01 November 2017">Pleistocene Park: [https://www.facebook.com/PleistocenePark/posts/397276974025336 "Very exciting project. Wild bison once again roam Alaska. Siberia is next. Making plans for spring."] Facebook post of 1 November 2017. Retrieved 5 November 2017.</ref>


<ref name="Pl.Park fcbk: 7 October 2017">Pleistocene Park: [https://www.facebook.com/PleistocenePark/videos/387661818320185/ “Road to the Park earlier today.] Facebook post of 7 October 2017. Retrieved 11 October 2017.</ref>
<!--<ref name="Pl.Park fcbk: 14 December 2017">Pleistocene Park: [https://www.facebook.com/PleistocenePark/photos/a.277325669353801.1073741828.271986773221024/413751229044577/ "Wild Field, December 2017."] Facebook post of 14 December 2017. Retrieved 17 December 2017.</ref>-->


<ref name="Pl.Park fcbk: 12 October 2017">Pleistocene Park: [https://www.facebook.com/PleistocenePark/photos/a.277325669353801.1073741828.271986773221024/389585531461147/ “Unfortunately we did not get to the park with ships.] Facebook post of 12 October 2017. Retrieved 13 October 2017.</ref>
<!--<ref name="Pl.Park fcbk: 18 January 2018">Pleistocene Park: [https://www.facebook.com/PleistocenePark/posts/427975124288854 "Pleistocene Park shared a Page. https://www.facebook.com/Stevens-Village-TribeBuffalo-far…/…"] Facebook post of 18 January 2018. Retrieved 23 January 2018.</ref>-->


<ref name="Pl.Park fcbk: 01 November 2017">Pleistocene Park: [https://www.facebook.com/PleistocenePark/posts/397276974025336 “Very exciting project. Wild bison once again roam Alaska. Siberia is next. Making plans for spring.] Facebook post of 1 November 2017. Retrieved 5 November 2017.</ref>
<ref name="Pl.Park fcbk: 08 June 2018">Pleistocene Park: [https://www.facebook.com/PleistocenePark/videos/488180158268350/ "At the end of May 2018 ..."] Facebook post of 8 June 2018, comments section. Retrieved 19 June 2018.</ref>


<ref name="Polaris Project: Blog">Polaris Project: [http://www.thepolarisproject.org/blog/ “Blog.] Retrieved 26 September 2016.</ref>
<ref name="Polaris Project: Blog">Polaris Project: [http://www.thepolarisproject.org/blog/ "Blog."] Retrieved 26 September 2016.</ref>


<ref name="Полiт.ру 2006: Siberian park ‘mammoth period'">{{cite web|title=Сибирский парк "мамонтового периода"|author=Александр Марков (Aleksandr Markov), Ольга Орлова (Olga Orlova)|url=http://polit.ru/article/2006/12/26/mamont/|date=26 December 2006|publisher=''Полiт.ру''. Interview with Sergey Zimov|accessdate=10 February 2014}}</ref>
<ref name="Полiт.ру 2006: Siberian park 'mammoth period'">{{cite web|title=Сибирский парк "мамонтового периода"|author=Александр Марков (Aleksandr Markov), Ольга Орлова (Olga Orlova)|url=http://polit.ru/article/2006/12/26/mamont/|date=26 December 2006|publisher=Полiт.ру. Interview with Sergey Zimov|access-date=10 February 2014}}</ref>


<ref name="pp Bison">[http://www.pleistocenepark.ru/en/photo/145/ www.pleistocenepark.ru/en/ – Bison.] Retrieved 19 September 2012.</ref>
<ref name="pp Bison">[http://www.pleistocenepark.ru/en/photo/145/ www.pleistocenepark.ru/en/ – Bison.] Retrieved 19 September 2012.</ref>
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<ref name="pp Homepage">[http://www.pleistocenepark.ru/en/ www.pleistocenepark.ru/en/ – Homepage.] Retrieved 2 May 2013.</ref>
<ref name="pp Homepage">[http://www.pleistocenepark.ru/en/ www.pleistocenepark.ru/en/ – Homepage.] Retrieved 2 May 2013.</ref>


<ref name="pp Horses">[http://www.pleistocenepark.ru/en/photo/68/ www.pleistocenepark.ru/en/ – Horses.] Retrieved 19 September 2012.</ref>
<ref name="pp Horses">[http://www.pleistocenepark.ru/en/photo/68/ www.pleistocenepark.ru/en/ – Horses.] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131102021555/http://www.pleistocenepark.ru/en/photo/68/ |date=2 November 2013 }} Retrieved 19 September 2012.</ref>


<ref name="pp machinery 62">[http://www.pleistocenepark.ru/en/photo/62/ www.pleistocenepark.ru/en/photo/62/ www.pleistocenepark.ru/en/ – Machinery; slide 62.] Retrieved 2 May 2013.</ref>
<ref name="pp machinery 62">[http://www.pleistocenepark.ru/en/photo/62/ www.pleistocenepark.ru/en/photo/62/ www.pleistocenepark.ru/en/ – Machinery; slide 62.] Retrieved 2 May 2013.</ref>


<ref name="pp materials diary-nikita-wrangel-2010">[http://www.pleistocenepark.ru/en/materials/ www.pleistocenepark.ru/en/ – Diary of Nikita Zimov during the trip to Wrangel Island in August-September 2010. (In Russian.)] Retrieved 2 May 2013.</ref>
<ref name="pp materials diary-nikita-wrangel-2010">[http://www.pleistocenepark.ru/en/materials/ www.pleistocenepark.ru/en/ – Diary of Nikita Zimov during the trip to Wrangel Island in August-September 2010. (In Russian.)] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20161103172534/http://www.pleistocenepark.ru/en/materials/ |date=3 November 2016 }} Retrieved 2 May 2013.</ref>


<ref name="pp Moose">[http://www.pleistocenepark.ru/en/photo/87/ www.pleistocenepark.ru/en/ – Moose.] Retrieved 19 September 2012.</ref>
<ref name="pp Moose">[http://www.pleistocenepark.ru/en/photo/87/ www.pleistocenepark.ru/en/ – Moose.] Retrieved 19 September 2012.</ref>
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<ref name="pp news 20">[http://www.pleistocenepark.ru/en/news/20/ www.pleistocenepark.ru/en/ – News July 9, 2015: Opening of The Pleistocene Park Foundation.] Retrieved 24 September 2015.</ref>
<ref name="pp news 20">[http://www.pleistocenepark.ru/en/news/20/ www.pleistocenepark.ru/en/ – News July 9, 2015: Opening of The Pleistocene Park Foundation.] Retrieved 24 September 2015.</ref>


<ref name="pp news 21">[http://www.pleistocenepark.ru/en/news/21/ www.pleistocenepark.ru/en/ News June 19, 2016: Reports from Wild Field.] Retrieved 29 October 2016.</ref>
<ref name="pp news 21">{{cite web|url=http://www.pleistocenepark.ru/en/news/21/|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160820004708/https://pleistocenepark.ru/en/news/21/|archive-date=20 August 2016|date=19 June 2016|title=Reports from Wild Field|website=Pleistocene Park}}</ref>


<ref name="pp news 22">[http://www.pleistocenepark.ru/en/news/22/ www.pleistocenepark.ru/en/ – News September 17, 2016: Updates from the Pleistocene Park.] Retrieved 26 September 2016.</ref>
<ref name="pp news 22">[http://www.pleistocenepark.ru/en/news/22/ www.pleistocenepark.ru/en/ – News September 17, 2016: Updates from the Pleistocene Park.] Retrieved 26 September 2016.</ref>
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<ref name="pp Wapiti">[http://www.pleistocenepark.ru/en/photo/138/ www.pleistocenepark.ru/en/ – Wapiti.] Retrieved 19 September 2012.</ref>
<ref name="pp Wapiti">[http://www.pleistocenepark.ru/en/photo/138/ www.pleistocenepark.ru/en/ – Wapiti.] Retrieved 19 September 2012.</ref>


<ref name="pp Wild Field">[http://www.pleistocenepark.ru/en/photo/182/ www.pleistocenepark.ru/en/ – Wild Field.] Retrieved 15 October 2014.</ref>
<ref name="pp Wild Field">[http://www.pleistocenepark.ru/en/photo/182/ www.pleistocenepark.ru/en/ – Wild Field.] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20141019183236/http://www.pleistocenepark.ru/en/photo/182/ |date=19 October 2014 }} Retrieved 15 October 2014.</ref>


<ref name="pp wild field 245">[http://www.pleistocenepark.ru/en/photo/245/ www.pleistocenepark.ru/en/ Wild Field; slide 245.] Retrieved 24 October 2014.</ref>
<ref name="pp wild field 245">{{cite web|url=http://www.pleistocenepark.ru/en/photo/245/|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150913072119/http://www.pleistocenepark.ru/en/photo/245/|archive-date=13 September 2015|title=Wild Field; slide 245|website=Pleistocene Park|access-date=24 October 2014}}</ref>

<ref name="PPF">The Pleistocene Park Foundation: [http://pleistocenepark.org/ Official Website of the Pleistocene Park Foundation], continuously updated. Retrieved 2 June 2018.</ref>


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<ref name="Radio Svoboda, Zimov interview, 2006">{{cite web|title=В Сибирской тундре воссоздается экосистема, погибшая 12 тысяч лет назад|author=Александр Костинский, Александр Марков (Aleksandr Kostinskiy, Aleksandr Markov)|url=http://www.svoboda.org/content/article/368409.html|year=2006|publisher=''[[Radio Svoboda|Радио Свобода]]'', 21 December 2006.Printversion of an interview with Sergey Zimov aired by Radio Svoboda on 15 December 2006 –|accessdate=14 June 2013}}</ref>
<ref name="Radio Svoboda, Zimov interview, 2006">{{cite news |script-title=ru:В Сибирской тундре воссоздается экосистема, погибшая 12 тысяч лет назад |author=Александр Костинский (Aleksandr Kostinskiy) |author2=Александр Марков (Aleksandr Markov) |url=http://www.svoboda.org/content/article/368409.html |orig-date=15 December 2006 |newspaper=[[Radio Svoboda|Радио Свобода]] |date=21 December 2006 |access-date=14 June 2013}}transcript of an interview with Sergey Zimov aired by Radio Svoboda on 15 December 2006 –</ref>


<ref name="Re-Establishment FES">[[Sergey Zimov|Sergei A. Zimov]], [[F. Stuart Chapin III|F. Stuart Chapin, III]], Melissa Chapin (w/o date): [https://web.archive.org/web/20100620045317/http://www.faculty.uaf.edu/fffsc/Pleistocene%20Park%20Cana%20-%20Eco.pdf “Pleistocene Park: Re-Establishment of a Functional Steppe Ecosystem in Northeast Siberia.] Retrieved 4 March 2017.</ref>
<ref name="Re-Establishment FES">[[Sergey Zimov|Sergei A. Zimov]], [[F. Stuart Chapin III|F. Stuart Chapin, III]], Melissa Chapin (w/o date): [https://web.archive.org/web/20100620045317/http://www.faculty.uaf.edu/fffsc/Pleistocene%20Park%20Cana%20-%20Eco.pdf "Pleistocene Park: Re-Establishment of a Functional Steppe Ecosystem in Northeast Siberia."] Retrieved 4 March 2017.</ref>


<ref name="RIA Novosti">{{cite web|title=Через сто лет в Якутии может сформироваться популяция зубров|author=Наталья Парамонова (Natalia Paramonov)|publisher=RIA Novosti|date=27 June 2011|url=http://ria.ru/nature/20110627/394077441.html|accessdate=27 June 2013}}</ref>
<ref name="RIA Novosti">{{cite web |title=Через сто лет в Якутии может сформироваться популяция зубров |author=Наталья Парамонова (Natalia Paramonov) |publisher=RIA Novosti |date=27 June 2011 |url=http://ria.ru/nature/20110627/394077441.html |access-date=27 June 2013}}</ref>


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<ref name="sakha news">{{cite web|title="Плейстоценовый парк" Якутии открывает тайны прошлого|author=Алексей Курило (Aleksey Kurilo)|url=http://www.1sn.ru/show.php?id=25217|date=2 August 2008|publisher=''Sakha News''|accessdate=27 June 2013}}</ref>
<ref name="sakha news">{{cite web |title="Плейстоценовый парк" Якутии открывает тайны прошлого |author=Алексей Курило (Aleksey Kurilo) |url=http://www.1sn.ru/show.php?id=25217 |date=2 August 2008 |publisher=Sakha News |access-date=27 June 2013}}</ref>


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<ref name="Soubrier et al. 2016: Early cave art and ancient DNA">Julien Soubrier, Alan Cooper et al. (2016): [http://www.nature.com/articles/ncomms13158 “Early cave art and ancient DNA record the origin of European bison.”] ''Nature Communications'' 7, Article number: 13158, 2016. Retrieved 28 October 2016.</ref>

<ref name="Soubrier et al. 2016: Early cave art and ancient DNA">Julien Soubrier, Alan Cooper, ''et al''. (2016): [http://www.nature.com/articles/ncomms13158 "Early cave art and ancient DNA record the origin of European bison."] ''Nature Communications'' 7, Article 13158. Retrieved 28 October 2016.</ref>

<ref name="SVCIC">Stevens Village Community Improvement Corporation: [http://khevron.tripod.com/svcic/bison.html "Stevens Village Bison Reserve."] Without date. Retrieved 23 January 2018.</ref>


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<ref name="Tarnocai et al (2009): Soil organic">{{cite web|title=Soil organic carbon pools in the northern circumpolar permafrost region|author1=C. Tarnocai |author2=J. G. Canadell |author3=E. A. G. Schuur |author4=P. Kuhry |author5=G. Mazhitova |author6=S. Zimov |url=http://www.lter.uaf.edu/dev2009/pdf/1350_Tarnocai_Canadell_2009.pdf|date=June 2009|publisher=''Global Biogeochemical Cycles,'' vol. 23, GB 2023|accessdate=4 February 2015}}</ref>
<ref name="Tarnocai et al (2009): Soil organic">{{cite journal |author1=Tarnocai, C. |author2=Canadell, J.G. |author3=Schuur, E.A.G. |author4=Kuhry, P. |author5=Mazhitova, G. |author6=Zimov, S. |date=27 June 2009 |title=Soil organic carbon pools in the northern circumpolar permafrost region |journal=Global Biogeochemical Cycles |volume=23 |issue=2 |pages=n/a |id=GB2023 |doi=10.1029/2008GB003327 |bibcode=2009GBioC..23.2023T |doi-access=free }}</ref>


<ref name="Terry Chapin pp site: Pleistocene Park Concept">[http://terrychapin.org/ Terry Chapin]: [http://terrychapin.org/concept.html The Pleistocene Park Concept. An Illustration.] Retrieved 29 August 2014.</ref>
<ref name="Terry Chapin pp site: Pleistocene Park Concept">[http://terrychapin.org/ Terry Chapin]: [http://terrychapin.org/concept.html The Pleistocene Park Concept. An Illustration.] Retrieved 29 August 2014.</ref>
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<ref name="TNF 4 March 14">True Nature Foundation (4 March 2014): [https://www.facebook.com/truenaturefoundation/posts/1476387932573897 ″Professor Zimov and his team, known from Pleistocene Park, ...″] [https://www.facebook.com/truenaturefoundation TNF Facebook site.] Retrieved 5 March 2014.</ref>
<ref name="TNF 4 March 14">True Nature Foundation (4 March 2014): [https://www.facebook.com/truenaturefoundation/posts/1476387932573897 ″Professor Zimov and his team, known from Pleistocene Park, ...″] [https://www.facebook.com/truenaturefoundation TNF Facebook site.] Retrieved 5 March 2014.</ref>

<ref name="Tom Mast-Star.Trib.-2010">Tom Mast (2010): [http://trib.com/news/state-and-regional/other-tribes-restore-buffalo-ties/article_a1b9290a-f73e-11df-8ad7-001cc4c002e0.html "Other tribes restore buffalo ties."] ''[[Casper Star-Tribune]]'', 28 November 2010. Retrieved 23 January 2018.</ref>


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<ref name="Uffe Wilken, A tale of Yakutian horses, 2017">Uffe Wilken (23 November 2015): [http://www.science.ku.dk/english/press/news/2015/adapting-to--70-degrees-in-siberia-a-tale-of-yakutian-horses/ “Adapting to –70 degrees in Siberia: a tale of Yakutian horses.] University of Copenhagen, Faculty of Science, 23 November 2015. Retrieved 11 November 2017.</ref>
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<ref name="VoR 2011: Pleistocene Park: so far without mammoths.">Lidia Kruglova (2 May 2011): [https://sputniknews.com/voiceofrussia/2011/05/02/49734637/ “Pleistocene Park: so far without mammoths.”] In: ''[[Voice of Russia]].'' Article found in: [http://www.pleistocenepark.ru/en/press/ www.pleistocenepark.ru/en/ – Media about us.] Retrieved 5 May 2013.</ref>


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<ref name="Walter et al 2006: Methane bubbling">{{cite web|title=Methane bubbling from Siberian thaw lakes as a positive feedback to climate warming|author=K. M. Walter, S. A. Zimov, J. P. Chanton, D. Verbyla, [[F. Stuart Chapin III|F.S. Chapin III]]|url=http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v443/n7107/abs/nature05040.html|date=7 September 2006|publisher=''[[Nature (journal)|Nature]] 443, 71-75|accessdate=4 February 2015}}</ref>
<ref name="Walter et al 2006: Methane bubbling">{{cite journal |title=Methane bubbling from Siberian thaw lakes as a positive feedback to climate warming |journal=Nature |volume=443 |issue=7107 |pages=71–75 |author=K. M. Walter |author2=S. A. Zimov |author3=J. P. Chanton |author4=D. Verbyla |author5=[[F. Stuart Chapin III|F.S. Chapin III]] |date=7 September 2006 |doi=10.1038/nature05040 |bibcode=2006Natur.443...71W |pmid=16957728|s2cid=4415304 }}</ref>


<ref name="Walter et al 2007: Thermokarst Lakes">{{cite web|title=Thermokarst Lakes as a Source of Atmospheric CH<sub>4</sub> During the Last Deglaciation|author=K. M. Walter, M. E. Edwards, G. Grosse, S. A. Zimov, [[F. Stuart Chapin III|F.S. Chapin III]]|url=http://www.sciencemag.org/content/318/5850/633.short|date=26 October 2007|publisher=''[[Science (journal)|Science]]'', vol.&nbsp;318, no.&nbsp;5850, pp.&nbsp;633–636|accessdate=4 February 2015}}</ref>
<ref name="Walter et al 2007: Thermokarst Lakes">{{cite journal |title=Thermokarst lakes as a source of atmospheric CH<sub>4</sub> during the last deglaciation |journal=Science |volume=318 |issue=5850 |pages=633–636 |author=K. M. Walter |author2=M. E. Edwards |author3=G. Grosse |author4=S. A. Zimov |author5=[[F. Stuart Chapin III|F.S. Chapin III]] |date=26 October 2007 |doi=10.1126/science.1142924 |bibcode=2007Sci...318..633W |pmid=17962561|s2cid=31630756 }}</ref>


<ref name="Wolf 2008: Big Thaw">Adam Wolf (Sep–Oct 2008): [http://alumni.stanford.edu/get/page/magazine/article/?article_id=31018 “The Big Thaw.] In: ''Stanford Magazine'', pages 63–69. Article found in: [http://www.pleistocenepark.ru/en/materials/ www.pleistocenepark.ru/en/ – Materials.] Retrieved 7 May 2013.</ref>
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<ref name="Zimmer 2013: NatGeo">{{cite journal |last=Zimmer |first=Carl |year=2013 |title=Bringing extinct species back to life |journal=National Geographic |volume=233 |pages=33–36 |url=http://ngm.nationalgeographic.com/2013/04/125-species-revival/zimmer-text |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130501033944/http://ngm.nationalgeographic.com/2013/04/125-species-revival/zimmer-text |url-status=dead |archive-date=1 May 2013 |access-date=15 June 2013}}</ref>
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<ref name="Zimov 2005: Pleistocene Park: Return of the Mammoth's Ecosystem. Science Mag.">Sergey A. Zimov (6 May 2005): [http://science.sciencemag.org/content/308/5723/796.1.full “Pleistocene Park: Return of the Mammoth's Ecosystem.”] In: ''[[Science (journal)|Science]]'', pages 796–798. Article also to be found in [http://www.pleistocenepark.ru/en/materials/ www.pleistocenepark.ru/en/ – Materials.] Retrieved 5 May 2013.</ref>
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<ref name="Zimov 2007: Mammoth Steppes and Future Climate">Sergei Zimov (2007): [http://www.pleistocenepark.ru/files/Science_in_Russia_en.pdf “Mammoth Steppes and Future Climate.] In: ''Science in Russia'', pages 105–112. Article found in: [http://www.pleistocenepark.ru/en/materials/ www.pleistocenepark.ru/en/ – Materials.] Retrieved 5 May 2013.</ref>
<ref name="Zimov 2007: Mammoth Steppes and Future Climate">Sergei Zimov (2007): [http://www.pleistocenepark.ru/files/Science_in_Russia_en.pdf "Mammoth Steppes and Future Climate."] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131029211418/http://www.pleistocenepark.ru/files/Science_in_Russia_en.pdf |date=29 October 2013 }} In: ''Science in Russia'', pages 105–112. Article found in: [http://www.pleistocenepark.ru/en/materials/ www.pleistocenepark.ru/en/ – Materials.] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20161103172534/http://www.pleistocenepark.ru/en/materials/ |date=3 November 2016 }} Retrieved 5 May 2013.</ref>


<ref name="Zimov, Schuur, Chapin 2006: Permafrost and Global">{{cite web|title=Permafrost and the Global Carbon Budget|author=Sergey A. Zimov, Edward A. G. Schuur, [[F. Stuart Chapin III|F.S. Chapin III]]|url=http://www.sciencemag.org/content/312/5780/1612.summary|year=2006|publisher=''[[Science (journal)|Science]]'', vol.&nbsp;312, no.&nbsp;5780, pp.&nbsp;1612–1613 16&nbsp;June&nbsp;2006|accessdate=4 February 2015}}</ref>
<ref name="Zimov, Schuur, Chapin 2006: Permafrost and Global">{{cite journal |title=Permafrost and the global carbon budget |journal=Science |volume=312 |issue=5780 |pages=1612–1613 |author=Sergey A. Zimov |author2=Edward A. G. Schuur |author3=[[F. Stuart Chapin III|F.S. Chapin III]] |year=2006 |pmid=16778046 |doi=10.1126/science.1128908|s2cid=129667039 }}</ref>


<ref name="Zimov et al 1997: North Siberian Lakes">S. A. Zimov; Y. V. Voropaev; I. P. Semiletov; S. P. Davidov; S. F. Prosiannikov; F. S. Chapin III; M. C. Chapin; S. Trumbore; S. Tyler (8 August 1997): [https://www.researchgate.net/publication/235234580_North_Siberian_Lakes_A_Methane_Source_Fueled_by_Pleistocene_Carbon “North Siberian Lakes: A Methane Source Fueled by Pleistocene Carbon.] In: ''[[Science (journal)|Science]]'', vol. 277, no. 5327, pp. 800–802. [https://www.researchgate.net/profile/S_Zimov/publication/235234580_North_Siberian_Lakes_A_Methane_Source_Fueled_by_Pleistocene_Carbon/links/56d8761608aebabdb40d0f5c.pdf Full text as pdf]. Retrieved 4 February 2015.</ref>
<ref name="Zimov et al 1997: North Siberian Lakes">S. A. Zimov; Y. V. Voropaev; I. P. Semiletov; S. P. Davidov; S. F. Prosiannikov; F. S. Chapin III; M. C. Chapin; [[Susan Trumbore|S. Trumbore]]; S. Tyler (8 August 1997): [https://www.researchgate.net/publication/235234580_North_Siberian_Lakes_A_Methane_Source_Fueled_by_Pleistocene_Carbon "North Siberian Lakes: A Methane Source Fueled by Pleistocene Carbon."] In: ''[[Science (journal)|Science]]'', vol. 277, no. 5327, pp. 800–802. [https://www.researchgate.net/profile/S_Zimov/publication/235234580_North_Siberian_Lakes_A_Methane_Source_Fueled_by_Pleistocene_Carbon/links/56d8761608aebabdb40d0f5c.pdf Full text as pdf]. Retrieved 4 February 2015.</ref>


<ref name="Zimov et al 2012: Mammoth steppe: a high-productivity phenomenon. QSR">{{cite web|title=Mammoth steppe: a high-productivity phenomenon|author=S.A. Zimov, N.S. Zimov, A.N. Tikhonov, [[F. Stuart Chapin III|F.S. Chapin III]]|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160304103247/http://www.lter.uaf.edu/pdf/1754_Zimov_Zimov_2012.pdf|year=2012|publisher=In: ''[[Quaternary Science Reviews]]'', vol.&nbsp;57, 4&nbsp;December&nbsp;2012, p.&nbsp;42&nbsp;fig.17|accessdate=17 October 2014}}<!--alternative url=http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0277379112003939--></ref>
<ref name="Zimov et al 2012: Mammoth steppe: a high-productivity phenomenon. QSR">{{cite journal |author=S.A. Zimov |author2=N.S. Zimov |author3=A.N. Tikhonov |author4=[[F. Stuart Chapin III|F.S. Chapin III]] |date=4 December 2012 |title=Mammoth steppe: A high-productivity phenomenon |journal=[[Quaternary Science Reviews]] |volume=57 |page=42 fig.&nbsp;17 |doi=10.1016/j.quascirev.2012.10.005 |bibcode=2012QSRv...57...26Z |s2cid=14078430 |url=http://www.lter.uaf.edu/pdf/1754_Zimov_Zimov_2012.pdf |access-date=17 October 2014 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160304103247/http://www.lter.uaf.edu/pdf/1754_Zimov_Zimov_2012.pdf |archive-date=4 March 2016}}</ref>


<ref name="zoologist 37">{{cite web|title=Плейстоценовые парки - Pleistocene Parks|author=zoologist.ru – Зоологический форум (Zoological forum)|publisher=Comments by Nikita Zimov, director of Pleistocene Park, in an online discussion forum|year=2011|url=http://forum.zoologist.ru/viewtopic.php?id=634&p=37|accessdate=27 June 2013}}</ref>
<ref name="zoologist 37">{{cite web |title=Плейстоценовые парки - Pleistocene Parks |author=zoologist.ru – Зоологический форум (Zoological forum) |publisher=Comments by Nikita Zimov, director of Pleistocene Park, in an online discussion forum |year=2011 |url=http://forum.zoologist.ru/viewtopic.php?id=634&p=37 |access-date=27 June 2013}}</ref>


<ref name="zoologist 78">{{cite web|title=Плейстоценовые парки - Pleistocene Parks|author=zoologist.ru – Зоологический форум (Zoological forum)|publisher=Private communication by Nikita Zimov, director of Pleistocene Park, quoted in an online discussion forum|date=8 December 2013|url=http://forum.zoologist.ru/viewtopic.php?pid=352130#p352130|accessdate=18 January 2014}}</ref>
<ref name="zoologist 78">{{cite web |title=Плейстоценовые парки - Pleistocene Parks |author=zoologist.ru – Зоологический форум (Zoological forum) |publisher=Private communication by Nikita Zimov, director of Pleistocene Park, quoted in an online discussion forum |date=8 December 2013 |url=http://forum.zoologist.ru/viewtopic.php?pid=352130#p352130 |access-date=18 January 2014}}</ref>


<ref name="zoologist 84">{{cite web|title=Плейстоценовые парки - Pleistocene Parks|author=zoologist.ru – Зоологический форум (Zoological forum)|publisher=Private communication by Nikita Zimov, director of Pleistocene Park, quoted in an online discussion forum|date=1 November 2014|url=http://forum.zoologist.ru/viewtopic.php?pid=396868#p396868|accessdate=2 April 2015}}</ref>
<ref name="zoologist 84">{{cite web |title=Плейстоценовые парки - Pleistocene Parks |author=zoologist.ru – Зоологический форум (Zoological forum) |publisher=Private communication by Nikita Zimov, director of Pleistocene Park, quoted in an online discussion forum |date=1 November 2014 |url=http://forum.zoologist.ru/viewtopic.php?pid=396868#p396868 |access-date=2 April 2015}}</ref>


}}
}}

== Media ==
{{Commons category}}
* [http://www.pleistocenepark.ru/ Official park website]
* [https://www.patreon.com/ PleistocenePark] (Patreon)
* [https://www.facebook.com/PleistocenePark/ Official facebook site]
* [http://pleistocenepark.org/ Official website of the Pleistocene Park Foundation] <small>(Last update April 2018)</small>
* [http://www.pleistocenepark.ru/files/WILD_FIELD_MANIFESTO_ENGLISH_VERSION.pdf ″Wild Field″ Manifesto] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180510190131/http://www.pleistocenepark.ru/files/WILD_FIELD_MANIFESTO_ENGLISH_VERSION.pdf |date=10 May 2018 }}. Sergey A. Zimov, 2014.

=== Literature ===
* Sergey A. Zimov (2005): [https://www.science.org/doi/full/10.1126/science.1113442 ″Pleistocene Park: Return of the Mammoth's Ecosystem.″] In: ''[[Science (journal)|Science]]'', 6 May 2005, vol. 308, no. 5723, pp.&nbsp;796–798. <small>Accessed 5 May 2013.</small>.
* [[Alexander V. Markov|Aleksandr Markov]] (2006): [http://www.russia-ic.com/travel/ideas/357/#.UY5SkoIw9NQ ″Good Fence for Future Mammoth Steppes.″] Translated by Anna Kizilova. Russia-InfoCentre website, 21 January 2007. <small>Accessed 5 May 2013.</small>.
* Sergei Zimov (2007): [https://web.archive.org/web/20131029211418/http://www.pleistocenepark.ru/files/Science_in_Russia_en.pdf ″Mammoth Steppes and Future Climate.″] In: ''Science in Russia'', 2007, pp.&nbsp;105–112. Article found in: [https://web.archive.org/web/20161103172534/http://www.pleistocenepark.ru/en/materials/ www.pleistocenepark.ru/en/ – Materials.] <small>Accessed 5 May 2013.</small>.
* Adam Wolf (2008): [http://alumni.stanford.edu/get/page/magazine/article/?article_id=31018 ″The Big Thaw.″] In: ''Stanford Magazine'', Sept.–Oct. 2008, pp.&nbsp;63–69. <small>Accessed 7 May 2013.</small>. – [http://www.pleistocenepark.ru/files/Wolf_PleistocenePark_StanMag.pdf PDF of print version], found in: [http://www.pleistocenepark.ru/en/materials/ www.pleistocenepark.ru/en/ – Materials.] <small>Accessed 7 May 2013.</small>.
* Arthur Max (2010): [http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2010/11/27/sergey-zimov-ice-age-ecosystem-siberia_n_788806.html ″Russian Scientist Working To Recreate Ice Age Ecosystem.″] In: ''[[The Huffington Post]]'', 27 November 2010. <small>Accessed 7 May 2013.</small>.
* Martin W. Lewis (2012): [http://geocurrents.info/place/russia-ukraine-and-caucasus/siberia/pleistocene-park-the-regeneration-of-the-mammoth-steppe ″Pleistocene Park: The Regeneration of the Mammoth Steppe?″] and [http://geocurrents.info/place/russia-ukraine-and-caucasus/siberia/pleistocene-re-wilding-environmental-restoration-or-ecological-heresy ″Pleistocene Re-Wilding: Environmental Restoration or Ecological Heresy?″] In: ''GeoCurrents'', 12 respectively 14 April 2012. <small>Accessed 2 May 2013.</small>.
* Sergey A. Zimov, Nikita S. Zimov, [[F. Stuart Chapin III]] (2012): [http://media.longnow.org/files/2/REVIVE/The%20Past%20and%20Future%20of%20the%20Mammoth%20Steppe%20Ecosystem.pdf "The Past and Future of the Mammoth Steppe Ecosystem."] ([https://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-25038-5_10 doi]). In: Julien Louys (ed.), ''Paleontology in Ecology and Conservation'', Berlin Heidelberg, Springer-Verlag 2012. <small>Accessed 4 November 2017.</small>.
* S.A. Zimov, N.S. Zimov, A.N. Tikhonov, [[F. Stuart Chapin III|F.S. Chapin III]] (2012): [https://www.researchgate.net/profile/F_Stuart_Chapin_Iii/publication/257110614_Mammoth_steppe_A_high-productivity_phenomenon/links/0deec53405eb847714000000/Mammoth-steppe-A-high-productivity-phenomenon.pdf ″Mammoth steppe: a high-productivity phenomenon.″] In: ''[[Quaternary Science Reviews]]'', vol.&nbsp;57, 4 December 2012, pp.&nbsp;26–45. <small>Accessed 10 February 2014.</small>.
* Damira Davletyarova (2013): [http://www.ottawalife.com/2013/02/the-zimovs-restoration-of-the-mammoth-era-ecosystem-and-reversing-global-warming/ ″The Zimovs: Restoration of the Mammoth-Era Ecosystem, and Reversing Global Warming.″] In: ''[[Ottawa Life Magazine]]'', 11 February 2013. <small>Accessed 6 June 2013.</small>.
* [[Eli Kintisch]] (2015): [http://www.sciencemagazinedigital.org/sciencemagazine/4_december_2015?pg=24#pg24 "Born to rewild. A father and son's quixotic quest to bring back a lost ecosystem – and save the world."] In: ''[[Science (journal)|Science]]'', 4 December 2015, vol. 350, no. 6265, pp.&nbsp;1148–1151. ([http://pulitzercenter.org/reporting/born-rewild-father-and-son-seek-transform-arctic-and-save-world Alternative version] on the [[Pulitzer Center on Crisis Reporting]] website.) <small>Accessed 26 September 2016.</small>.
* Ross Andersen (2017): [https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2017/04/pleistocene-park/517779/ "Welcome to Pleistocene Park. In Arctic Siberia, Russian scientists are trying to stave off catastrophic climate change—by resurrecting an Ice Age biome complete with lab-grown woolly mammoths."] In: ''[[The Atlantic]]'', April 2017. <small>Accessed 10 March 2017.</small>.
* Adele Peters (2017): [https://www.fastcompany.com/3068929/meet-the-father-son-duo-importing-american-buffalo-to-siberia-to-save-the-planet "Home, home on the ферма. Meet The Father-Son Duo Importing American Bison To Siberia To Save The Planet."] In: ''[[Fast Company (magazine)|Fast Company]]'', 21 March 2017. <small>Accessed 29 March 2017.</small>.
* [[Animal People|Animal People, Inc.]] (2017): [http://animalpeopleforum.org/2017/04/02/an-interview-with-nikita-zimov-director-of-pleistocene-park/ "An Interview with Nikita Zimov, Director of Pleistocene Park."] In: ''Animal People Forum'', 2 April 2017.
* Noah Deich (2017): [http://www.centerforcarbonremoval.org/blog-posts/2017/4/3/mammoths-permafrost-soil-carbon-storagea-qa-about-pleistocene-park "Mammoths, Permafrost & Soil Carbon Storage: A Q&A about Pleistocene Park."] Interview with Dr. Guy Lomax of the Natural Climate Initiative at [[The Nature Conservancy]]. ''Center for Carbon Removal'', 3 April 2017.

=== Video ===
* Pleistocene Park (w/o date): [http://www.pleistocenepark.ru/photos/original/13.jpg 360° panorama view from top of the monitoring tower.] Photo in Pleistocene Park [http://www.pleistocenepark.ru/en/photo/13/ Picture Gallery.] <small>Accessed 20 October 2014.</small>.
* R. Max Holmes (2011): [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vBrFudwiVp0 ''An Arctic Solution to Climate Warming.''] Talk at the [http://www.ted.com/tedx/events/2011 TEDxWoodsHole], 2 March 2011, in [[Woods Hole, Massachusetts|Woods Hole, Mass]]. Video, 9:17&nbsp;min., uploaded 18 November 2011. <small>Accessed 10 March 2017.</small>.
* Eugene Potapov (2012): [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pxsv3DLJ6KA ''Pleistocene Park.''] Video, 7:11&nbsp;min., uploaded 21 October 2012. <small>Accessed 23 April 2013.</small>.
* Panoramio (2012): [https://www.panoramio.com/photo/81042324 A view of the Kolyma River floodplains taken from the surrounding hills above Pleistocene Park.] Photo, uploaded 23 October 2012. <small>Accessed 27 June 2013.</small>.
* Luke Griswold-Tergis (2014): [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wO0wyICAAqg ''Can Woolly Mammoths Save the World?''] Talk at the [http://www.ted.com/tedx/events/12063 TEDxConstitutionDrive 2014] (Menlo Park, CA).] Video, 15:25&nbsp;min., uploaded 29 May 2014. <small>Accessed 20 October 2014.</small>.
* Grant Slater, Ross Andersen (2016): [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=c71Qm5ljmG8 ''Creating Pleistocene Park.''] Video, 26:01&nbsp;min., uploaded 13 March 2017. <small>Accessed 6 April 2017.</small>.
* The Pleistocene Park Foundation, Inc. (2017): [https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/907484977/2038454729?token=1af7c89f ''Pleistocene Park: an ice-age ecosystem to save the world.''] Video, 3:09&nbsp;min. [[Kickstarter]] crowdfunding campaign. <small>Accessed 4 March 2017.</small>.
* ZoominTV (2017) [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=V9bt_NzwpxU ''Jurassic Park IRL: How the mammoth can help our future.''] Video, 3:25&nbsp;min., uploaded 10 July 2017. Note: This video shows [[Wild Field (wilderness reserve)|Wild Field]] footage cut against an interview about Pleistocene Park.<small>Accessed 6 April 2017.</small>.
*Barbara Lohr (2017): [https://www.arte.tv/en/videos/078777-000-A/siberia-raiders-of-the-lost-age/ Siberia: Raiders of the Lost Age]. Video, 36 min. ARTE Reportage.
* Atlas Pro (2021): [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RXAirenteRA The Plan to Revive the Mammoth Steppe to Fight Climate Change]. Video, 20 min.


== External links ==
== External links ==
{{Commons-inline}}
{{Commons-inline}}
* [http://www.pleistocenepark.ru/en/ Official website]
* [https://pleistocenepark.ru/ Official website]
* [http://pleistocenepark.org/ Pleistocene Park Foundation]
* [http://pleistocenepark.org/ Pleistocene Park Foundation]
* [http://reviverestore.org/?s=zimov Revive & Restore. Genetic Rescue for Endangered and Extinct Species. – Search results for “Zimov”]
* [http://reviverestore.org/?s=zimov Revive & Restore. Genetic Rescue for Endangered and Extinct Species. – Search results for "Zimov"]


[[Category:1988 establishments in Russia]]
[[Category:1996 establishments in Russia]]
[[Category:Protected areas established in 1988]]
[[Category:Protected areas established in 1996]]
[[Category:Nature reserves in Russia]]
[[Category:Nature reserves in Russia]]
[[Category:Geography of the Sakha Republic]]
[[Category:Geography of the Sakha Republic]]
[[Category:Protected areas of the Russian Far East]]
[[Category:Protected areas of the Russian Far East]]
[[Category:Wildlife sanctuaries of Asia]]
[[Category:Wildlife sanctuaries of Asia]]
[[Category:Paleoecology]]
[[Category:Pleistocene Asia]]
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[[Category:Global warming]]
[[Category:Permafrost]]
[[Category:Permafrost]]
[[Category:Rewilding]]
[[Category:Siberian Tiger Re-population Project]]
[[Category:Siberian Tiger Re-population Project]]

Latest revision as of 07:50, 29 October 2024

Pleistocene Park
Плейстоценовый парк
Depiction of some mammals common in northern Eurasia during the late Pleistocene, by Mauricio Antón. From left to right: wild horse, woolly mammoth, reindeer, cave lion and woolly rhinoceros.
Pleistocene Park is located in Russia
Pleistocene Park
LocationRussian Arctic, Sakha Republic
Nearest cityChersky
Coordinates68°30′48″N 161°31′32″E / 68.51333°N 161.52556°E / 68.51333; 161.52556
Area20 km2 (8 sq mi)
Established1988 / 1996 (1996)
FounderSergey Zimov
DirectorNikita Zimov
Websitepleistocenepark.de/en/ Edit this at Wikidata

Pleistocene Park (Russian: Плейстоценовый парк, romanizedPleystotsenovyy park) is a nature reserve on the Kolyma River south of Chersky in the Sakha Republic, Russia, in northeastern Siberia, where an attempt is being made to re-create the northern subarctic steppe grassland ecosystem that flourished in the area during the last glacial period.[1][a]

The project is being led by Russian scientists Sergey Zimov and Nikita Zimov,[3][4][5][6][7] testing the hypothesis that repopulating with large herbivores (and predators) can restore rich grasslands ecosystems, as expected if overhunting, and not climate change, was primarily responsible for the extinction of wildlife and the disappearance of the grasslands at the end of the Pleistocene epoch.[8][9]

The aim of the project is to research the climatic effects of the expected changes in the ecosystem. Here the hypothesis is that the change from tundra to grassland will result in a raised ratio of energy emission to energy absorption of the area, leading to less thawing of permafrost and thereby less emission of greenhouse gases.[8][9] It is also thought that removal of snow by large herbivores will further reduce the permafrost's insulation.

To study this, large herbivores have been released, and their effect on the local flora is being monitored. Preliminary results point at the ecologically low-grade tundra biome being converted into a productive grassland biome and at the energy emission of the area being raised.[10]

Research goals

[edit]

Effects of large herbivores on the arctic tundra/grasslands ecosystem

[edit]

The primary aim of Pleistocene Park is to recreate the mammoth steppe (ancient taiga/tundra grasslands that were widespread in the region during the last ice age). The key concept is that animals, rather than climate, maintained that ecosystem. Reintroducing large herbivores to Siberia would then initiate a positive feedback loop promoting the reestablishment of grassland ecosystems. This argument is the basis for rewilding Pleistocene Park's landscape with megafauna that were previously abundant in the area, as evidenced by the fossil record.[8][9][11]

The grassland-steppe ecosystem that dominated Siberia during the Pleistocene disappeared 10,000 years ago and was replaced by a mossy and forested tundra and taiga ecosystem.[8] Concurrently, most of the large herbivores that roamed Siberia during the Pleistocene have vanished from the region.[9] The mainstream explanation for this used to be that at the beginning of the Holocene the arid steppe climate changed into a humid one, and when the steppe vanished so did the steppe's animals.[8] Sergei Zimov points out that in contradiction to this scenario:

  • Similar climatic shifts occurred in previous interglacial periods without causing such massive environmental changes.[8][9][11]
  • Those large herbivores of the former steppe that survived until today (e.g. musk oxen, bison, horses) thrive in humid environments just as well as in arid ones.[8][9][11]
  • The climate (both temperatures and humidity) in today's northern Siberia is in fact similar to that of the mammoth steppe. The radiation aridity index for northern Siberia on Mikhail Budyko's scale is 2 (= steppe bordering on semi-desert).[8][9][11] Budyko's scale compares the ratio of the energy received by the earth's surface to the energy required for the evaporation of the total annual precipitation.

Zimov and colleagues argue for a reversed order of environmental change in the mammoth steppe. Humans, with their constantly improving technology, overhunted the large herbivores and led to their extinction and extirpation.[8][9][11][12] Without herbivores grazing and trampling over the land, mosses, shrubs and trees were able to take over and replace the grassland ecosystem.[8][9][11][12] If the grasslands were destroyed because herbivore populations were decimated by human hunting, then "it stands to reason that those landscapes can be reconstituted by the judicious return of appropriate herbivore communities."[8]

Effects of large herbivores on permafrost and global warming

[edit]

A secondary aim is to research the climatic effects of the expected changes in the ecosystem. Here the key concept is that some of the effects of the large herbivores, such as eradicating trees and shrubs or trampling snow, will result in a stronger cooling of the ground in the winter, leading to less thawing of permafrost during summer and thereby less emission of greenhouse gases.[8][9][11]

Permafrost is a large global carbon reservoir that has remained frozen throughout much of the Holocene.[13] Due to recent climate change, the permafrost is beginning to thaw, releasing stored carbon and forming thermokarst lakes.[13][14] When the thawed permafrost enters the thermokarst lakes, its carbon is converted into carbon dioxide and methane and released into the atmosphere.[15][16][17] Methane is a potent greenhouse gas and the methane emissions from thermokarst lakes have the potential to initiate a positive feedback cycle in which increased atmospheric methane concentrations lead to amplified global climate change, which in turn leads to more permafrost thaw and more methane and carbon dioxide emissions.[16][17]

As the combined carbon stored in the world's permafrost (1670 Gt)[18] equals about twice the amount of the carbon currently released in the atmosphere (720 Gt),[19] the setting in motion of such a positive feedback cycle could potentially lead to a runaway climate change scenario. Even if the ecological situation of the arctic were as it was 400,000 years ago (i.e., grasslands instead of tundra), a global temperature rise of 1.5 °C (2.7 °F) relative to the pre-industrial level would be enough to start the thawing of permafrost in Siberia.[20] An increased cooling of the ground during winter would raise the current tipping point, potentially delaying such a scenario.

Implementation

[edit]

Background: regional Pleistocene ecoregions

[edit]
Saigas are extinct in Europe and are a near threatened species.

It has been proposed that the introduction of a variety of large herbivores will recreate their ancient ecological niches in Siberia and regenerate the Pleistocene terrain with its different ecological habitats such as taiga, tundra, steppe and alpine terrain.

The main objective, however, is to recreate the extensive grasslands that covered the Beringia region in the late Pleistocene.

Proposed procedure

[edit]

In present-day Siberia only a few of the former species of megafauna are left; and their population density is extremely low, too low to affect the environment. To reach the desired effects, the density has to be raised artificially by fencing in and concentrating the existing large herbivores. A large variety of species is important as each species affects the environment differently and as the overall stability of the ecosystem increases with the variety of species[8] (compare Biodiversity and ecological services). Their numbers will be raised by reintroducing species that became locally extinct (e.g., muskoxen). For species that became completely extinct, suitable replacements will be introduced if possible (e.g., wild Bactrian camels for the extinct Pleistocene camels of the genus Paracamelus). As the number of herbivores increases, the enclosure will be expanded.[8][9][21][22]

While this is taking place, the effects will be monitored. This concerns for example the effects on the flora (are the mosses being replaced by grasses, etc.), the effects on the atmosphere (changes in levels of methane, carbon dioxide, water vapor) and the effects on the permafrost.[10][23][24]

Finally, once a high density of herbivores over a vast area has been reached, predators larger than the wolves will have to be introduced to keep the megafauna in check.[8][9]

Progress and plans

[edit]
1988–1996

The first grazing experiments began in 1988 at the Northeast Science Station in Chersky with Yakutian horses.[10]

1996–2004

In 1996 a 50 ha (125 acre) enclosure was built in Pleistocene Park.[9] As a first step in recreating the ancient landscape, the Yakutian horses were introduced, as horses had been the most abundant ungulates on the northeastern Siberian mammoth steppe.[25] Of the first 40 horses, 15 were killed by predators and 12 died of eating poisonous plants. More horses were imported, and they learned to cope with the environment.[23] In 2006 approximately 20 horses lived in the park,[26] and by 2007 more horses were being born annually than died.[23] By 2013, the number had risen to about 30.[27] Moose, already present in the region, were also introduced.[28] The effects of large animals (mammoths and wisents) on nature were artificially created by using an engineering tank and an 8 wheel drive Argo all-terrain vehicle to crush pathways through the willow shrub.[12][29][30][31]

Restored grasslands in Pleistocene Park

The vegetation in the park started to change. In the areas where the horses grazed, the soil has been compacted[24] and mosses, weeds and willow shrub were replaced by grasses.[3][10][22][32] Flat grassland is now the dominating landscape inside the park.[31] The permafrost was also influenced by the grazers. When air temperature sank to −40 °C (−40 °F) in winter, the temperature of the ground was found to be only –5 °C (+23 °F) under an intact cover of snow, but −30 °C (−22 °F) where the animals had trampled down the snow. The grazers thus help keep permafrost intact, thereby lessening the amount of methane released by the tundra.[10][11]

2004–2011

In the years 2004–2005 a new fence was erected, creating an enclosure of 16 km2 (6 sq mi).[22][33]

The new enclosure finally allowed a more rapid development of the project.[22] After the fence was completed, reindeer were brought into the park from herds in the region and are now the most numerous ungulates in the park.[28][34] To increase moose density in the park, special constructions were added to the fence in several places that allow animals outside the fenced area to enter the park, while not allowing them to leave. Besides that, wild moose calves were caught in other regions and transported to the park.[35]

In 2007 a 32 meter (105 foot) high tower was erected in the park that constantly monitors the levels of methane, carbon dioxide and water vapor in the park's atmosphere.[23][36]

In September 2010, 6 male muskox from Wrangel Island were reintroduced,[6] but 2 muskoxen died in the first months: one from unknown causes, and the other from infighting among the muskoxen.[37][23][38] Seven months later, in April 2011, 6 Altai wapiti and 5 wisents arrived at the park, the wapiti were from the Altai Mountains and the wisents from Prioksko-Terrasny Nature Reserve, near Moscow.[39][40] The enclosing fence proved too low for the wapiti, and by the end of 2012 all 6 had jumped the fence and run off.[41]

2011–2016

In the years 2011–2016 progress slowed down as most energy was put into the construction of a 150 ha (370 ac) branch of Pleistocene Park near the city of Tula in Tula Oblast in Europe,[27][42] see below (Wild Field section). A few more reindeer and moose were introduced into Pleistocene Park during this time,[42][43] and a monitoring system for measuring the energy balance (ratio of energy emission and energy absorption)[b] of the pasture was installed.[44][45]

2017–2022

Attention has now been shifted back to the further development of Pleistocene Park. A successful crowdfunding effort in early 2017 provided funding for further animal acquisitions.[46][47][48] Later that year 12 domestic yak[49][50] and 30 domestic sheep[51][52] were brought to the park.[53][54] and the introduction of more muskoxen was planned for 2020.[55][better source needed]

For the near future the focus in animal introductions will generally be placed on browsers, not grazers, i.e., bison, muskoxen, horses, and domestic yaks. Their role in this phase will be to diminish the amount of shrubs and trees and enlarge the grassy areas. Only when these areas have sufficiently increased will grazers like saiga and wild Bactrian camels be introduced.[56][57]

2023

In 2023, 24 plains bison were brought to Pleistocene Park. The animals were sourced from Ditlevsdal Bison Farm, Denmark. Later that year, fourteen musk oxen were brought to the park.[citation needed]

Reception

[edit]

Controversial aspects

[edit]

Critics[who?] admonish that introducing alien species could damage the fragile ecosystem of the existing tundra. To this criticism Sergey Zimov replied: "The tundra is not an ecosystem. Such systems had not existed on the planet [before the disappearance of the megafauna], and there is nothing to cherish in the tundra. Of course, it would be silly to create a desert instead of the tundra, but if the same site would evolve into a steppe, then it certainly would improve the environment. If deer, foxes, bovines were more abundant, nature would only benefit from this. And people too. However, the danger still exists, of course, you have to be very careful. If it is a revival of the steppes, then, for example, small animals are really dangerous to release without control. As for large herbivores – no danger, as they are very easy to remove again."[58]

Another point of concern is doubt that the majority of species can be introduced in such harsh conditions. For example, according to some critics, the Yakutian horses, although they have been living in the park for several generations, would not have survived without human intervention. They normally tolerate –60 °C, but are said to cope poorly with an abundance of snow and possibly would have died of starvation in the first snowy winter. However, horses of much less primitive stock abandoned by the Japanese Army have been living feral on some uninhabited Kuril Islands since 1945. Despite the deep snows (two to three times deeper than in Yakutia), they have successfully survived all the winters without feeding. And in Pleistocene Park, while some of the Yakutian horses accept supplementary feeding, others keep away and survive on their own.[23]

Positive reception

[edit]

The Zimovs' concept of Pleistocene Park and repopulating the mammoth steppe is listed as one of the "100 most substantive solutions to global warming" by Project Drawdown.[59] The list, encompassing only technologically viable, existing solutions, was compiled by a team of over 200 scholars, scientists, policymakers, business leaders and activists;[60][61] for each solution the carbon impact through the year 2050, the total and net cost to society, and the total lifetime savings were measured and modeled.[62][63]

In January 2020, a study co-authored by Nikita Zimov and three University of Oxford researchers assessed the viability of the park's goals when implemented on a larger scale. It was estimated that if three large-scale experimental areas were set up, each containing 1000 animals and costing 114 million US dollars over a ten year period, that 72,000 metric tons of carbon could be held and generate 360,000 US dollars in carbon revenues.[64]

Visitors

[edit]

The park is a hub for international scientists and students, who come from around the world to conduct their own ecological research and experiments.[10] The Polaris Project was a yearly visitor from 2009 to 2015, sending American students on excursions to the park each summer.[65]

Another group of visitors are journalists. The park is steadily gaining more media attention and while most journalists do not come to the park itself the number of visitors is increasing. In 2016 for example, the park was visited by a filmmaker, two print media (Swiss 24 Heures and American The Atlantic), and two TV broadcasting companies (German ARD and American HBO).[66]

The total of visitors for 2016 (summer months only) was 45.[67]

Size and administration

[edit]

Pleistocene Park is a 160 km2 scientific nature reserve (zakaznik) consisting of willow brush, grasslands, swamps, forests and a multitude of lakes.[8][68][c] The average temperature in January is about –33 °C and in July +12 °C; annual precipitation is 200–250 mm.[9]

Pleistocene Park is owned and administered by a non-profit corporation, the Pleistocene Park Association, consisting of the ecologists from the Northeast Science Station in Chersky and the Grassland Institute in Yakutsk.[68] The present park area was signed over to the association by the state and is exempt from land tax.[5] The reserve is surrounded by a 600 km2 buffer zone that will be added to the park by the regional government once the animals have successfully established themselves.[68]

In July 2015 the "Pleistocene Park Foundation". was founded, a non-profit organization (registered in Pennsylvania, US, with 501(c)(3) status)[69] dedicated to acquiring private donations for funding Pleistocene Park.[70] Hitherto Pleistocene Park had been financed solely through the funds of the founders, a practice that grew increasingly insufficient.[70]

In 2019 the "Pleistocene & Permafrost Foundation". 26 April 2023. was founded in Germany by Michael Kurzeja and Bernd Zehentbauer and serves as a bridge between science, politics, companies, and society. It takes care of the project's financing, seeks donations in kind such as tractors, utility vehicles, and pick-ups to build the park, and funds further research projects with the Max Planck Institute. "Dirk Steffens". and "Anabel Ternès". are involved as ambassadors.

Animals

[edit]

Present in the park

[edit]

Herbivores

[edit]
Yakutian horses
  • Reindeer (Rangifer tarandus):[34] Present before the project started (although more are being brought to help simulate Pleistocene conditions). They mainly graze in the southern highlands of the park. This territory is not affected by spring flooding and dominated by larch forests and shrubland. Reindeer rarely visit the flood plain. Besides actively grazing (especially in winter) they browse on willow shrubs, tree moss, and lichens. (Numbers in park in November 2021: 20–30)[71]
  • Elk[BE]/moose[AE] (Alces alces):[35] Present before the project started, although in low numbers. Immigration from neighboring areas is stimulated. Due to poaching the density of moose in the region has substantially decreased in the last 20 years. To increase moose density in the park, special constructions were added to the fence in several places that allow animals outside the fenced area to enter the park, while not allowing them to leave. Besides that, wild moose calves are being caught in other regions and transported to the park.[35] It is the largest extant species of the deer family and one of the largest herbivores in the park today. (Numbers in park in November 2021: 5–15)[72]
  • Yakutian horse (a domestic breed of horse):[73] The first species to be introduced for the project, they were imported from the surrounding Srednekolymsk region beginning in 1988.[73] Yakutian horses have developed a range of remarkable morphologic, metabolic and physiologic adaptions to the harsh environment of Siberia, including an extremely dense and long winter coat, a compact build, a metabolism adjusted to seasonal needs, and an increased production of antifreezing compounds.[74][75] In summer they grow very large hooves, which they wear down in winter scraping away snow to get at food. Despite their size, they proved to be dominant over the wisents, who often fled from them. Yakutian horses are purely grazing animals – they eat only grass species and visit the park's forests only during the spring flood. In the spring of 2015, ten more Yakutian horses were acquired to increase genetic diversity.[76] (Numbers in park in November 2021: approximately 40)[77]
Muskoxen family
  • Muskox (Ovibos moschatus):[78] Muskoxen arrived at the park in September 2010. They were brought from Wrangel Island[78] (itself repopulated with animals from Canada). They are doing well and are now fully grown. Unfortunately only males could be acquired, after an attempt to get both males and females was thwarted during the expedition when a polar bear broke the fence to eat one of them,[37] and the Zimovs are now urgently looking for females.[38] The introduction of more muskoxen was planned for 2019.[55][79] A new expedition to go to Wrangel Island was planned to take place in late 2020, but ultimately cancelled due to various delays by the time they had the boats ready, including by the COVID-19 pandemic.[80] The original muskoxen managed to escape the park several times, eventually escaping it for good, but in July 2023, they would retrieve 14 young muskoxen from the Yamal Peninsula in exchange for several plains bison. (Numbers in park in September 2023: approximately 14)[81]
Domestic yak in Russia
  • Domestic yak (Bos mutus grunniens): Ten domestic yaks acquired in Irkutsk Oblast were introduced in Pleistocene Park in June 2017; two calves were born a few days after the arrival.[49] Another calf was born after that.[82] Yaks are adapted to extreme cold, short growing seasons for grazing herbage, and rough grazing conditions with sedges and shrubby plants. Wild yaks lived in Beringia until the early Holocene.[83][84] (Numbers in park in November 2021: approximately 8)[49][50][82]
  • Edilbaevskaya sheep (a domestic breed of sheep):[85] 30 domestic sheep acquired in Irkutsk Oblast were introduced in Pleistocene Park in October 2017.[51][52] The sheep are from a breed that is adapted to the Siberian cold.[51] They belong to the breed group of fat-tailed sheep; their fatty rump evolved to store fat as a reserve for lean seasons,[86] analogous to a camel's humps.[87] (Numbers in park in November 2021: 18)[88]
  • Kalmykian cattle (a domestic breed of cattle adapted for the Mongolian steppe):[89] A population was introduced to the park in October 2018.[90] (Numbers in park in November 2021: 15)[91]
  • Plains bison (Bison bison bison): Twelve yearling plains bison, nine males and three females,[92] were acquired and would have been introduced in the park once the United States' FAA gave clearance for the flight.[4][93] The plains bison were bought from the Stevens Village Bison Reserve[d] near Delta Junction in Alaska; as the climate there is comparable to that of Siberia, the young bison were expected to thrive.[97] Plains bison are grazers of grasses and sedges. Unlike wisents, plains bison are almost pure grazers, which will consume other plant material mainly in time of need.[98][99][100] While wood bison were the preferred choice of subspecies, they are not easy to acquire;[101][102] plains bison simply are the subspecies that could be brought to the Park most easily.[47][103] They got bison from Denmark, from the Ditlevsdal bison farm. The bison began traveling on 7 May, and officially arrived safely in the park on 9 June. A second expedition to the Ditlevsdal bison farm allowed for another herd to be brought to the park. (Numbers in park in September 2023: 35)[92]
  • Orenburg fur goat (Capra aegagrus hircus): Its presence is necessary due to their ability to eat anything, including plant poisonous to other herbivores.[37] Only difficulty with acquiring them is due to them being only found in Orenburg, due to veterinary services not allowing shipping out of that region. Current plans involve bringing the goats from a farm belonging to a park ranger that formerly worked for Pleistocene Park into the park around May 2021.[104] The trip to acquire them began on May 5, with the goats being loaded on May 8, then the long trek to bring them to Pleistocene Park finished with their arrival at the park on June 18. (Numbers in park in November 2021: 35)[105]
Bactrian camel in winter.
  • Bactrian camel (Camelus bactrianus): Either of the two-humped camel species could act as a proxy for extinct Pleistocene camel species, whose fossils have been found in areas that once formed part of Beringia.[106] [107] The camel evolved in the high arctic as a large boreal browser; its hump presumably evolved to store fat as a resource for the long winter.[87] Bactrian camels will eat almost anything, preferably any plant material such as grass, shrubs, bark, etc., but in times of need also carrion.[108][109] In the winter they will dig under snow to get at forage.[108] Camels are not suitable for wet environments, preferring uplands, and are mainly sought out in order to browse away at plants like willow shrubs, though they do sometimes eat the wet grasses.[104] The trip to acquire them began on May 5, 2021 with the camels being loaded on May 8, and then the expedition would wrap up with the transport truck carrying the camels arriving at Pleistocene Park on June 18. (Numbers in park in November 2021: 10)[105]
  • Several non-ungulate herbivores were already present before establishment of the park and remain resident; these include the mountain hare (Lepus timidus), the black-capped marmot (Marmota camtschatica), the Arctic ground squirrel (Spermophilus parryii),[8][9] the muskrat (Ondatra zibethicus), and diverse species of voles.[110]

Carnivores

[edit]
East Siberian brown bear

Formerly present and considered for introduction

[edit]

Herbivores

[edit]
European bisons in the Altai
  • Wisent (AKA European bison, Bison bonasus):[112] During the last ice age, wisents were the most cold-adapted of the Bison species and thrived in the glacial grassland-steppe biome.[113][e] Their dietary needs are very different from the American bison. Year-round 10% of their diet necessarily consists of trees and shrubs, and they will ignore their main forage (grasses, sedges and forbs) in favour of woody forage to reach this quota.[114] Without supplementary feeding in winter, the yearly average may rise to 20% even in countries with mild winters.[115] Five wisents, one adult male and four juvenile females, were introduced in the park in April 2011. The wisents were brought to the park from the Prioksko-Terrasny Nature Reserve near Moscow.[40][112] The transportation was more complicated and took a longer time than originally thought, but all the animals recovered rapidly after the trip. Unfortunately, the wisents did not sufficiently acclimatize in the first months. They started to moult in November, when temperatures already were down to –30 °C (–35 °F) in Cherskii. The four juveniles died; only the adult bull survived. He is now fully acclimatized.[27][101] (Numbers in park in November 2021: 1 male)[79] The park announced via an Instagram comment that after 12 years of residence, the remaining wisent died sometime during the winter of 2022.[116]
  • Wood bison (Bison bison athabascae): Better adapted to life in the Far North than the plains bison.[47] Mainly a grazer of grasses and sedges,[98][117] seasonally supplements this diet with other plant material like forbs, lichen, and silverberry and willow leaves.[117][118] Wet meadows in bottomlands (like the Kolyma river plain) are an important habitat for wood bison.[117] The original plans for the rewilding of Bison had called for the introduction of wood bison as an ecological proxy for the extinct steppe wisent, Bison priscus.[111][119] These plans did not work out[120] and wisents were acquired instead.
Altai maral
  • Altai wapiti or Altai maral (Cervus canadensis sibiricus): Had been introduced in April 2011.[121] The wapiti made their way to the park all the way from the mountainous regions of Altai in central southern Siberia.[121] Wapiti are very good jumpers and all six escaped within the first two years. The fence has been strengthened to cope with future introductions.[43]

Carnivores

[edit]
  • Siberian tiger (Panthera tigris tigris): Introduction planned for a later stage, when herbivores have multiplied.[8][9][23]

Introductions in the event of de-extinction

[edit]

Despite referencing the Jurassic Park franchise in its name, the park's staff is not involved in species de-extinction research, be it through cloning, genome editing, or other methods[122] (such as breeding back). Nonetheless, Zimov has manifested his willingness to volunteer the park as a location for reintroduction in the event of such animals ever being produced, particularly in regard to the woolly mammoth (Mammuthus primigenius), an extinct ecosystem engineer with no living proxies. Currently the staff uses a vehicle to bulldoze trees too large to be broken by the park's residents but that would be vulnerable to mammoths, opening forest terrain that the animals can turn into grassland through grazing. This vehicle is nicknamed the "baby mammoth".[123]

Southern branch of Pleistocene Park: The Wild Field wilderness reserve

[edit]

In 2012 to 2014 a branch of Pleistocene Park named "Wild Field" (Russian: Дикое поле, Dikoe pole) was constructed near the city of Tula in Tula Oblast in the European part of Russia, approximately 250 km (150 mi) south of Moscow.[27][124]

Unlike Pleistocene Park, Wild Field's primary purpose is not scientific research but public outreach, i.e., it will provide a model of what an unregulated steppe ecosystem looked like before the advent of humans. It is situated near a federal road and a railway station and will be accessible to the general public.[124]

Wild Field comprises 300 ha (740 ac)[124] of which 280 ha have been fenced off and stocked with animals.[125] Already present in the park are nine species of large herbivores and one omnivore species: Bashkir horses (a strain of Equus ferus caballus) from the southern part of the Ural Mountains,[126][127] Altai maral/Altai wapiti (Cervus canadensis sibiricus),[127] Edilbaevskaya sheep (a strain of Ovis orientalis aries),[citation needed] roe deer (Capreolus spec.),[f][124][129] Kalmykian cattle (a strain of Bos primigenius taurus),[7][130] domestic yaks (Bos mutus grunniens),[7][130][131] wild boar (Sus scrofa),[131] one female elk[BE]/moose[AE] (Alces alces),[131] four reindeer (Rangifer tarandus)[132] and 73 domestic Pridonskaya goats (a strain of Capra aegagrus hircus).[125]

See also

[edit]
[edit]

Footnotes

[edit]
  1. ^ During the last ice age northeastern Siberia remained a grassy refuge for scores of animals, including bison and woolly mammoths. Then, about 10,000 years ago, this vast ecosystem disappeared as the Ice Age ended. Now, though, the Ice Age landscape is on its way back, with a little help from the Russian scientists who have established "Pleistocene Park".[2]
  2. ^ Wikipedia has no good basic article, or at least article section on the energy balance (ratio of energy emission and energy absorption) of land surfaces: What it is, what affects it, etc. Some information may be gleaned from the articles
    • Earth's energy budget, though this article deals with the geological energy balance of the whole Earth and not of individual areas,
    • Albedo, which is the scientific term for the fraction of the Sun's radiation reflected from a surface, though this article deals with geological albedo only in passing and more from a physical than from a geological or ecological point of view, and it is one of those articles written in such a way that, if you do not already know the topic beforehand, the introductory paragraph may stymie you.
  3. ^ A newer source talks of "around 14 thousand hectares" (140 km2),[5] but as the two older references[8][68] were written by Sergey Zimov himself, while the newer source was written by a journalist, 160 km2 is more likely to be the correct number.
  4. ^ For information on the Stevens Village Bison Reserve see for example the website of the Stevens Village Community Improvement Corporation, subpage "Stevens Village Bison Reserve";[94] the 2006 article "Stevens Village council launches bison project" in the Juneau Empire;[95] and the 2010 article "Other tribes restore buffalo ties" in the Casper Star-Tribune.[96]
  5. ^ Two bison species are known to have co-existed during that period in Eurasia, the steppe bison (Bison priscus, the ancestor of today's American bison) and the ancestral form of today's wisent. A study on the distribution of these two species in the Urals, the Caucasus and Western Europe found that population replacements between steppe bison and wisent occurred regularly in correlation "with major palaeoenvironmental shifts", with the wisent being "associated with colder, more tundra-like landscapes and absence of a warm summer" while the steppe bison dominated during the warmer interstadials. During the Last Glacial Maximum the steppe bison disappeared from all of the area covered by the study, leaving only the wisent.[113]
  6. ^ These are the roe deer of the Tula region, which were already present on the site of Wild Field reserve. The species is not certain, as roe deer were absent in much of European Russia throughout the 20th century and only reoccupied the area in the last decades. Judging by the IUCN distribution maps,[128] the roe deer of the Tula region should be European roe deer (Capreolus capreolus), with the westernmost extension of the range of the Siberian roe deer (Capreolus pygargus) ending approximately 500 km (300 mi) to the east.

References

[edit]
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