Both parties agreed to consult a child psychologist to ease the reintroduction.
From the usatoday.com
It also touts the agency's role in the care and reintroduction of native species.
From the denverpost.com
Whitehouse has publicly supported a reintroduction of the Equal Rights Amendment.
From the en.wikipedia.org
Their reintroduction was a success, with the population growing to the thousands.
From the sacbee.com
Charming short about animals rescued and preparing for reintroduction to the wild.
From the guardian.co.uk
The wilderness area is dedicated to the reintroduction of the black-footed ferret.
From the pe.com
It was this that turned the reintroduction of the Large Blue into a success story.
From the sciencedaily.com
Mr Cuno recommends the reintroduction of partage as a way to end the conflict.
From the economist.com
The return of cotton to the Ord scheme follows last year's reintroduction of rice.
From the au.news.yahoo.com
More examples
An act of renewed introduction
(reintroduce) introduce anew; "We haven't met in a long time, so let me reintroduce myself"
Reintroduction is the deliberate release of species into the wild, from captivity or relocated from other areas where the species survives. It usually involves species that are endangered or extinct in the wild (EW). ...
(Reintroduce) To release a captive animalAny living thing that is not a plant. Most animals can move about freely. All use plants or other animals as food. All have sensory organs. back into its native habitatWhere an animal or plant normally lives and grows. in the wild.
An attempt to establish a wildlife species (or taxonomically defined unit within a wildlife species) in an area which was once part of its historical range, but from which it has been extirpated; re-establishment is a synonymy with the added caveat that the attempt has been successful. ...
A wildlife management technique used to place species back into an area where they had disappeared or become dangerously low in numbers.
The introduction of a species or population into a historical habitat from which it had previously been extirpated.
To place members of a species in their original habitat.