USA TODAY US Edition

From the edge of extinction to right on our front doorstep

Predators bounce back — and too close for comfort

- Doyle Rice

We tried to kill them all, but some survived.

Now, after they were pushed to nearextinc­tion, animals such as alligators, mountain lions and sharks are on the rebound. And they are returning to their previous habitats.

The trouble is, we’re there, too. A new study says these and other large predators — on land and in the sea — are recolonizi­ng areas that used to be prime hunting grounds for them, before humans decimated their population­s.

“We can no longer chalk up a large alligator on a beach or coral reef as an aberrant sighting,” said study lead author Brian Silliman of Duke University. “It’s not an outlier or short-term blip. It’s the old norm, the way it used to be before we pushed these species onto their last legs in hard-to-reach refuges.”

The study was published this week in the journal Current Biology.

The return of the animals also comes with an unexpected twist: It turns out they’re far more adaptable to new habitats than had been thought. Instead of living only in a specific habitat — alligators in swamps or orangutans in undisturbe­d forests — they can live and expand into very diverse habitats.

“They’re surprising us by demonstrat­ing how adaptable and cosmopolit­an they really are,” Silliman said. “It tells us these species can thrive in a much greater variety of habitats.”

So animals such as sea otters, gray wolves, coyotes, mountain lions and bobcats are exploring and moving into

“We can no longer chalk up a large alligator on a beach or coral reef as an aberrant sighting. ... It’s the old norm, the way it used to be.” Study author Brian Silliman

places we wouldn’t expect them to.

Keith Somerville of the University of Kent, who was not involved in this research, told Newsweek many species, including predators, are proving very adaptable to changing habitats.

Somerville noted, however, that “the downside, over time, will be when recolonizi­ng predators come into conflict with humans.”

 ?? BRIAN SILLIMAN/DUKE UNIVERSITY ?? Alligators and other large predators, once pushed into out-of-the-way refuges or close to extinction, are on the rebound and returning to their old hunting grounds — where people are.
BRIAN SILLIMAN/DUKE UNIVERSITY Alligators and other large predators, once pushed into out-of-the-way refuges or close to extinction, are on the rebound and returning to their old hunting grounds — where people are.

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