Will de-extinction be forever? Lessons from the re-introductions of Bromus interruptus (Hack.) Druce
This site is not the final version and is currently being tested. Any projects, sites and species data added to the site should be for testing only and will be wiped before the final version is released.
- Monitoring points:
- Species observations:
Test project
Project summary
A brief account of the initiatives undertaken to bring about the re-introduction of the extinct in the wild British endemic grass Bromus interruptus are given. The process has seen various set-backs and failures over a c.20-year period from which lessons have been learnt. Re-introductions have been attempted at 11 locations in 8 hectads within the former range, at only four is the plant extant;
Overall aim
A summary of all reintroduction projects done from Bromus interruptus until 2020.
Name of species translocated
Bromus interruptus
How many species?
1
Monitoring form type
Translocation generic records
Project timeline
8 reintroduction sides (11 areas) were reported in this manuscript - They occurred from 2003 to 2016. The manuscript was published in 2020.
Project team - organisational or group members
Fred Rumsey and Peter Stroh (manuscript authors review on Bromus interruptus reintroduction)
RBG Kew
Cambridge University Botanic Garden (CUBG)
RBG Kew
Cambridge University Botanic Garden (CUBG)
Translocation aims
Species recovery (restoration to all or part of a species’ range)
Additional outcome details
Unsuccessful
Country
England
Images
Species
Species benefits
Improved national status of species
Socioeconomic risk assessment
Insufficient resources may prevent successful implementation of the translocation plan
Site