rewild
verb
re·wild
(ˌ)rē-ˈwī(-ə)ld
rewilded; rewilding; rewilds
1
transitive + intransitive
: to return to a more natural or wild state : to make or become natural or wild again
Are there garden beds, growing containers or areas under shrubs and trees where you can leave things a little less tidy? If you are able, rewild these places to support hundreds of native pollinators.—Kara Carleton
[George] Monbiot's thesis is that to halt and reverse climate change and the global extinction crisis, we must drastically reduce the amount of land we farm, and rewild it with forests and wetlands.—Philippa Jamieson
It overlooks what was once part of a golf course, although you would never guess, given how quickly the land has rewilded.—Adam McCulloch
specifically
: to increase biodiversity and restore the natural processes of an ecosystem typically by reducing or ceasing human activity and reintroducing plant and animal species
The reintroduction of jaguars to Iber is part of a larger effort to restore—or rewild—ecosystems in Argentina and Chile. —Elizabeth Alberts
2
transitive
: to return (an animal) to the wild
Today, efforts to conserve, breed, and rewild bison on tribal lands are being led by the InterTribal Buffalo Council …, the National Bison Association, the Wildlife Conservation Society, and the Department of the Interior to name a few.—Kelly Goles
In a first in the state, the Tamil Nadu forest department is all set to rewild a tiger cub at Monombolly forest range …—Times of India
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Merriam-Webster unabridged
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