A herd of wild horses grazing on an open highland plateau for an article about wild horse rewilding in Spain

Wild horses return to Spain’s Iberian highlands after 10,000 years

For the first time since the end of the last Ice Age, wild horses are roaming the highlands of central Spain. The reintroduction — led by Rewilding Europe and local partners — marks a concrete step forward for large-scale ecosystem restoration on the Iberian Peninsula, and a signal that some of what humanity lost over millennia can, in fact, come back.

At a glance

  • Wild horse rewilding: Primitive Iberian horse breeds, selected for genetics closely tied to ancient lineages, have been released into Spain’s central highlands after an absence stretching back roughly 10,000 years.
  • Ecosystem role: As the horses graze and move, they suppress shrub overgrowth, reduce wildfire fuel loads, open movement corridors through dense vegetation, and disperse seeds — functions no other species currently performs in this region.
  • Community backing: Local governments, landowners, and residents have been part of the planning from the start, with rewilding framed as an opportunity for nature-based tourism and rural economic recovery alongside conservation goals.

Why 10,000 years matters

Wild horses vanished from the Iberian Peninsula at the close of the Pleistocene epoch, part of a continent-wide collapse of large herbivore populations driven by climate shifts and early human hunting pressure. Their absence left a functional gap in the ecosystem — one that persisted through the rise and fall of every civilization on the peninsula since.

The horses now roaming the highlands are not domesticated animals released into unfamiliar terrain. They are descended from primitive Iberian breeds that retain the behavioral traits, social structures, and physical characteristics of their ancient ancestors. Researchers and conservationists selected individuals specifically for their capacity to survive and function as genuinely wild animals.

That distinction matters. Rewilding Europe emphasizes that effective rewilding is not simply releasing animals and hoping for the best. It requires careful species selection, landscape assessment, and ongoing monitoring.

What horses actually do for the land

The ecological case for wild horse rewilding rests on something concrete: large herbivores shape landscapes in ways that cascade outward to benefit many other species.

When horses graze, they reduce the thick accumulation of dry grasses and shrubs that turn Spain’s hot summers into wildfire tinder. The IUCN has documented how large herbivore reintroductions can significantly alter fire regimes in fire-prone ecosystems — a finding with urgent relevance as climate change drives longer and more intense fire seasons across southern Europe.

Beyond fire, the horses open dense vegetation through movement, creating habitat corridors that smaller animals and birds can use. They deposit seeds through their dung across wide territories. They disturb and aerate soil in ways that support plant diversity. The Iberian highlands had been losing biodiversity for decades, largely due to shrub encroachment following rural depopulation and the abandonment of traditional grazing. The horses address that directly.

Building something that lasts

The most striking aspect of this project may be its structure. This was not designed as a top-down conservation intervention imposed on a rural region already struggling with depopulation and economic decline. Landowners, local officials, and residents were part of the effort from the beginning.

That matters because rewilding projects fail when communities feel excluded or threatened. Here, the return of wild horses has been framed as an economic opportunity as well as an ecological one. Nature-based tourism — already growing across rewilded areas of Europe — can generate income for communities that have been losing population for a generation. The United Nations Development Programme has highlighted the connection between community ownership and long-term conservation success, and the Iberian highlands project reflects that lesson.

This is part of a broader movement across the continent. Wolves have expanded into regions where they were absent for a century. Bison have returned to Polish and Romanian forests. Beavers have been reintroduced to British rivers. Each effort tests the same core idea: that ecosystems degraded by human activity can recover meaningful function when key species are restored. Research published in Science has shown that trophic rewilding — restoring animals at multiple levels of the food web — produces cascading benefits far beyond the target species itself.

What remains uncertain

Rewilding is not without friction. Questions remain about livestock predation risk, land use conflicts, and the pace at which released animals can establish stable, self-sustaining populations. Long-term monitoring of the Iberian highlands project will be essential — and will add meaningfully to the global body of knowledge on what ecosystem restoration can actually achieve.

Progress in ecology rarely moves in a straight line. But 10,000 years is a long time to wait, and the horses are back.

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