Jacqueline Howard
Associate Science Editor, The Huffington Post
Posted: 08/27/2015 10:33 AM EDT

DARYL BALFOUR VIA GETTY IMAGES
Wildebeests in the Serengeti.
If humans had never existed, the whole world would look strikingly similar to the Serengeti of Africa. There would be lions in America, and elephants and rhinos roaming Europe.
That's the conclusion of a new study that details how human-driven animal extinctions have influenced the distribution and populations of large mammals around the world.
"The study shows that large parts of the world would harbor rich large mammal faunas, as diverse as seen in protected areas of eastern and southern Africa today, if it was not for historic and prehistoric human-driven range losses and extinctions," Dr. Jens-Christian Svenning, a biologist at Aarhus University in Denmark and a co-author of the study, told NBC News.
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