Milu deer standing in wetland marsh habitat for an article about milu deer recovery in China

China pulls milu deer back from extinction as population rebounds to 8,200 animals

Forty years ago, a species that had already vanished from the wild once was given a second chance to come home. Today, an estimated 8,200 milu deer — also known as Père David’s deer — live across protected reserves in China, the country where the species originally evolved and where it disappeared entirely before conservationists even had a word for what they were trying to do.

At a glance

  • Milu deer recovery: The global population has grown from a founding herd of just 39 individuals to an estimated 8,200 animals, making this one of the most dramatic species rebounds in recorded conservation history.
  • Extinction in the wild: The milu had already disappeared from China’s wetlands before 1895 C.E., when flooding destroyed the last surviving wild population, leaving a single captive herd on a private English estate as the only animals of their kind on Earth.
  • International reintroduction: Beginning in the 1980s C.E., China and the United Kingdom launched a formal cooperative program to return the deer to Chinese soil, establishing a model that conservation programs around the world now study and apply.

A species that survived on one English estate

By the late 19th century C.E., the milu had already disappeared from the marshy river basins of the Yellow and Yangtze rivers, where it had roamed for thousands of years. What saved the species was not a government program or a scientific institution. It was one man’s private estate.

Herbrand Russell, the 11th Duke of Bedford, gathered surviving milu from European zoos and maintained a herd at Woburn Abbey in England. His recognition that the species faced total extinction was unusual for his era. That herd of 39 animals became the genetic foundation for every milu alive today.

Those animals survived two world wars and a global influenza pandemic on the grounds of a private English country estate — an improbable and historically contingent form of conservation, but one that worked. Without Woburn Abbey, the species would simply be gone.

Decades of breeding, then a journey home

Through the mid-20th century C.E., the Woburn herd grew steadily. Animals were gradually distributed to zoos and reserves across Europe, broadening the gene pool and reducing the risk that a single outbreak or disaster could erase the species a second time.

Then came the pivotal decade. In the 1980s C.E., China and the U.K. launched a formal reintroduction program, transferring animals to dedicated reserves on Chinese soil. The Beijing Milu Ecological Research Center became the anchor institution, where scientists monitored the deer’s adaptation to habitat conditions that resembled their ancestral wetlands.

Reintroduction biology is patient work. Animals must adjust. Habitats must recover. Genetic health must be tracked across generations. But the population held. Then it grew.

Why milu matter in wetland ecosystems

The milu is an ecologically specific animal. Its antlers sweep backward rather than forward. Its hooves are broad and splayed, built for walking on soft, waterlogged ground. It is one of the few deer species genuinely adapted to wetland ecosystems — and that adaptation makes its return more than a symbolic milestone.

In healthy numbers, milu graze marshlands in ways that manage vegetation and support the broader wetland food web. Their presence is a functional ecological event, not just a population number. The IUCN Red List still classifies the species as extinct in the wild, a designation that reflects the ongoing work ahead — reintroduced populations must demonstrate long-term self-sustaining reproduction before that status changes.

China’s coastal and inland wetlands have faced sustained pressure from agriculture and development over the past century. How fully reintroduced milu can restore their historical ecological roles is an active and unresolved research question. But the trajectory is clearly positive, and the animals are back on native ground.

What this recovery teaches conservation science

The milu story is unusually well-documented, which makes it genuinely useful. It demonstrates that captive breeding — even from a catastrophically small founder population of 39 animals — can produce a genetically viable species if the program is sustained across generations and managed carefully for diversity.

It also demonstrates something less technical: that governments can cooperate across political and cultural differences when the goal is concrete and the science is clear. The China-U.K. partnership that produced this recovery operated across decades of shifting diplomatic relationships. The World Wildlife Fund and other international organizations have pointed to this case as a reference point for transnational conservation efforts involving other at-risk species.

The same core principles — early intervention, genetic stewardship, habitat protection, and sustained international coordination — now inform recovery programs for dozens of other species worldwide. The Convention on Biological Diversity’s Kunming-Montreal framework, adopted in 2022 C.E., set a global target of protecting 30% of land and ocean by 2030 C.E., and the milu recovery is exactly the kind of documented success that gives that target scientific credibility.

8,200 animals is a number that would have seemed impossible to the conservationists who watched the last wild milu disappear in 1895 C.E. Population monitoring, habitat expansion, and genetic management are ongoing — this is not a finished story. But the species exists, it is growing, and it is home. That matters.

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For more on this story, see: YouTube — Milu deer recovery

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