A Bold Plan to Rewild the Earth — at Massive Scale | Kristine McDivitt Tompkins | TED

30,342 views ・ 2024-09-30

TED


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I'm of the first generation in all of human history
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to witness the decimation of wild nature
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taking place in every corner of the planet.
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This isn't a mystery, we know this.
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At the end of the day, it's simple mathematics.
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We humans expand our footprint,
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habitat on land and sea shrink,
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wildlife numbers fall,
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temperatures rise
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and human communities suffer.
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And this is what keeps me up at night.
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But I'm also busy.
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Edward Abbey, the godfather of environmental activism, once said,
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"Sentiment without action is the ruin of the soul."
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And for me, the antidote to despair is to act.
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And the most direct action at Tompkins Conservation
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is to be part of the global movement of rewilding the Earth.
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So what is rewilding anyway?
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It means allowing ancient nature
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the space and the freedom to heal itself.
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And when that's not possible,
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actively restoring territories
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and bringing back species who have gone missing.
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Rewilding is both simple and miraculous.
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I know this because I have lived it.
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Here's what I think can happen if we take on rewilding the continent
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at a massive scale.
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Because frankly,
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we're kind of running out of time saving the natural world.
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So if there was ever a moment for a Hail Mary pass in conservation,
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I think this is it.
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30 years ago, when my late husband, Doug Tompkins, and I
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began working on land conservation projects,
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we weren't really sure what we were going to do,
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but we knew we would invest everything we had
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in terms of our time and resources
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to slow down the freight train of development
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that we saw destroying the natural world.
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As climbers, ski racers, wildlife people,
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we had long begun to witness with our own eyes,
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and it was time for us to react to those things
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that were oh so clear to us.
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For the two of us,
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that meant making a 180-degree shift of our business lives.
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Doug, as the cofounder of “The North Face” and then “Esprit”
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And for me, it was retiring from Patagonia company after 25 years,
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18 of those years as CEO.
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We moved to a roadless area at the tip of South America,
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at the foot of a very deep fjord in Chile.
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We committed ourselves to saving as much wild habitat as we could,
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at first by simply buying land,
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ultimately acquiring over two million acres
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of key habitat in Chile and Argentina.
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Some of these tracks were still wild,
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but some were deeply degraded
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after a century of livestock overgrazing and deforestation
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and other threats.
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We formed teams on the ground and worked with communities
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and local, regional, national governments.
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And partnering with now 12 presidential administrations in the two countries,
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we gave back everything that we put together
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in terms of conservation lands
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by donating them in the form of new national parks.
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(Applause)
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Yes.
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(Applause)
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So far, we’ve initiated 15 new national parks,
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protecting over 15 million acres.
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We came to know, without a doubt,
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that landscapes can recover,
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even those forests, grasslands, wetlands hardest hit.
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But the more we worked saving and restoring lands and seascapes,
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the more we came to realize
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that you can't have healthy ecosystems
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if keystone species are missing.
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As Lois Crisler said,
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“Landscape without wildlife is just scenery.”
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And we never saw ourselves as being in the scenery business.
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Protecting large-scale territories is essential.
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You can't paint a masterpiece unless you have the canvas.
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But once the territory is secured long-term,
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we had to commit ourselves to go beyond land conservation
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and set our goals to leaving behind fully functioning ecosystems.
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Figuring out what species are missing
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or whose numbers are low and fragile,
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and commit to bringing them back.
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And that's exactly what we're doing.
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Today, Patagonia grasslands,
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temperate rainforests are safe and whole,
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and nearly two million acres of wetlands have been protected.
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A total of 24 native species, which were nearly extinct,
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are again roaming free and reproducing in their rightful territories,
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from apex predators that influence entire ecosystems
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to seed bearers, herbivores,
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smaller predators,
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each playing out their essential role in the theater that we call life.
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In Chile, the population of the nearly extinct huemul deer
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is no longer losing ground.
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And after a century of livestock grazing in the Patagonia grasslands,
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which celebrated the killing of predators such as cougars and foxes,
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they are back and they are thriving.
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But all of this experience has shown us that this is still not enough.
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The speed and power of the climate crisis and the extinction crisis
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demand, I think, that we change our tactics again,
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and this time it's got to be on a massive scale.
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Yes, the parks offer refuge from the forces of industrialization,
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and we know ecosystems can be restored.
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And very importantly, we know that when people reconnect with nature,
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it inspires them to protect it.
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But at the same time, if you think about it, parks,
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even the massive wild parks, are islands.
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They're not connected.
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And this is a huge problem
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because in order to survive and become resilient,
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ecosystems need to be connected.
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Sometimes extensions of territories and sometimes as stepping stones.
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One way or the other,
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flora and fauna have to be able to expand over territories
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as they once did.
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So how is this done?
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It requires expanding strategies into the next 20 years.
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We have to reconnect the wild fabric of South America,
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both from Chile and Argentina.
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Our 30 years of conservation work is radiating up and out now,
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reconnecting habitat and species back into one full continent.
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Luckily, and not surprisingly,
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Mother Nature has already built the literal road map
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to make this possible.
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In Chile, this means going up the entire spine of the Andes
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with endangered species
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and down the currents to Antarctica,
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following marine wildlife systems beyond --
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and this is the point -- human-made borders.
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As an example of this in Argentina,
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rivers are natural wildlife bridges.
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So if we protect the rivers and the land around them,
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we create these continental-scale corridors.
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Think of them as wild highways.
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In our kind of work,
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there's a saying about the role of top predators
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that I think helps make this clearer.
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In our case,
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if jaguars can expand their territory from north to south,
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east to west,
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then everybody else, animals, insects, flora, fauna,
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can "walk under their legs."
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And that's our goal.
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So from Ibera National Park in Argentina,
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we build connections across the borders in Brazil, Paraguay,
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Uruguay, Bolivia,
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and create biodiversity throughout the La Plata River basin,
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the Yungas cloud forest,
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the Chaco forest,
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the Atlantic forest.
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There's no question that this is a very audacious next and new step.
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I'm 73,
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and for the first time in my business and conservation life,
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I know I'm not going to see the end of this new story.
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But that's OK with me.
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In fact, a very wise and good friend of ours, Wes Jackson,
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said to us years ago,
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"If your life's work can be accomplished in your lifetime,
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you're not thinking big enough."
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(Laughter)
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(Applause)
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Today, the original teams we built have become independent organizations
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known as Fundación Rewilding Chile
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and Fundación Rewilding Argentina.
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And they are continuing this work long into the future.
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Sometimes people ask me what Doug would have wanted
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and what I would hope our legacy becomes.
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And I always say the same thing.
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As proud as we are of what we've been able to accomplish thus far,
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none of us spends much time looking backwards.
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Rather, we see all the work that we've done
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as a foundation to build third, fourth generations of team leaders
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who share a common vision with us.
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And that is, we refuse to accept a future without wildness,
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without abundance
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and dignified human communities.
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So what started as a personal journey has become a journey of many.
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From several dedicated individuals to whole teams,
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generations of teams and communities
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who are joining the movement toward regenerative economies,
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followed by their offspring and their descendants.
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And finally,
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this journey is about bringing back large-scale territories,
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keeping them safe
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and finding the species who were long gone missing:
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the jaguars, the huemul deer, the Andean condors,
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giant anteaters, pumas,
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Pampas deer, the bare-faced curacao,
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the Darwin’s rheas, maned wolf,
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marsh deer, macaws, ocelots,
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red footed-tortoises, giant river otters.
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May they thrive long into the future.
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They are the legacy long after our story is told.
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And remember,
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the first step in saving nature
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is the rewilding of our own minds.
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Thank you very much.
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(Applause)
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