From extinction to a remarkable population recovery, the milu deer, a species native to China, has flourished thanks to 40 years of conservation efforts.
The milu became extinct in China in the late Qing Dynasty (1644-1911), with only a small number of individuals surviving in captivity in Europe.
China began reintroducing the species in 1985 through cooperation with the United Kingdom. Since then, the milu population has surged from just 77 individuals to around 15,000, including more than 6,000 now living in the wild – the largest wild milu population in the world.
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