🏛️ Ex situ conservation (outside the wild)
Big Idea: Ex situ conservation is like moving a rare painting into a museum for safety. It can prevent extinction when the wild habitat is too dangerous.
Common ex situ examples
- Zoos / wildlife parks (captive breeding + education)
- Botanic gardens (living plant collections)
- Seed banks (store seeds for future restoration)
- Captive breeding programmes + later reintroduction
- Tissue culture / cryopreservation (store genetic material)
Ex situ is often used as an emergency backup when in situ is failing.
⚖️ Ex situ: benefits vs limitations
Benefits
- Can stop extinction when wild survival is impossible
- Allows breeding and population growth in safety
- Protects genetic material for the future (seed/gene banks)
- Supports education, research, and funding (tourism/donations)
Limitations
- Expensive: facilities, staff, long-term care
- Often protects few species compared to habitat protection
- Risk of low genetic diversity (small breeding populations)
- Animals may lose survival skills (hunting, avoiding predators)
- Does not solve the original habitat problem
For evaluation: say ex situ can prevent extinction short-term, but without habitat protection, reintroduction may fail.
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🔁 Reintroduction (returning to the wild)
Ex situ programmes often aim to breed a population and then release individuals back into safe habitats.
- Success is more likely when: the original threat is removed (poaching stops), habitat is restored, and there is enough space and food.
- Failure is more likely when: threats continue, habitat is too small/fragmented, or released animals cannot survive.
Reintroduction only works if the ecosystem is ready to support the species again.
IB-style question — Evaluate an ex situ conservation programme
The Sumatran Ground Cuckoo Recovery Programme operates a captive breeding facility holding 18 individuals. Eggs are collected from the few remaining wild nests, hatched under controlled conditions, and juveniles are hand-reared before release into a protected forest patch. Evaluate this ex situ conservation strategy. [3]
How to answer it, step by step
- Strengths (max 2)
• Controlled environment protects eggs and chicks from nest predators and extreme weather — raising survival rate well above the wild baseline.
• Captive stock acts as an insurance population: if wild birds suffer a catastrophic event (disease outbreak, habitat fire), the species is not lost.
• Education and fundraising potential of a facility with living animals raises conservation awareness and funding. - Weaknesses (max 2)
• Small founder population (18 individuals) creates a genetic bottleneck — inbreeding depression may reduce fertility and disease resistance over generations.
• Hand-reared birds may lack foraging skills or fear of predators, reducing survival after release.
• Does not address underlying causes of habitat loss; released birds return to a still-shrinking habitat.
• Expensive and highly dependent on continued human intervention and funding. - Conclusion (1 mark — must make a value judgement)
• Overall, the programme offers a critical short-term lifeline for a critically endangered species, but long-term success requires parallel habitat protection to give released birds a viable wild home.
Final answer
Mark scheme: pros max 2, cons max 2, conclusion max 1 (total [3] possible without a conclusion if both sides addressed). The conclusion MUST contain a value judgement ('overall…', 'on balance…') — a summary without a judgement scores 0 for that mark. Do not give pros only or cons only for full marks.
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📝 Exam tips: ex situ (what IB expects)
Easy marks students often miss: Ex situ answers score higher when you mention genetic diversity and reintroduction conditions.
- Say why it’s used: emergency backup when wild survival is impossible.
- Mention genetic risk: small captive populations → low genetic diversity / bottleneck.
- Say why reintroduction can fail: threats still present or habitat not restored.
Paper 2 evaluation sentence starters: Use these to sound like the markscheme (and keep your judgement clear).
- "Ex situ can prevent extinction in the short term, especially for critically endangered species."
- "However, it does not protect ecosystems, so it cannot replace habitat conservation."
- "Reintroduction is only effective if habitat is suitable and the original threat is removed."
- "Therefore, the most effective approach is often combined, using ex situ as a safety net while restoring habitat in situ."