Utilizando os dados que colocou na pergunta: 

>     ID  Home range (m)
>     #MB02   156.148
>     #MB03   247.969
>     #MB04   156.148
>     #MB05   92.400
>     #MB06   1022.954
>     #MB07   156.148
>     #MB08   672.731
>     #MB09   156.148
>     #MB10   594.328
>     #MB11   554.670
>     #MB12   672.731
>     #MB13   474.969
>     #MB14   0.000
>     #MB15   0.000
>     #MB16   156.506


**Decrescente**

Você pode utilizar sim o reorder em x:

```
v1 <- c('MB02','MB03','MB04','MB05','MB06','MB07',
        'MB08','MB09','MB10','MB11','MB12','MB13',
        'MB14','MB15','MB16')

v2 <- c(156.148, 247.969,156.148,92.400,1022.954,156.148,
        672.731,156.148,594.328,554.670,672.731,474.969,
        0.000,0.000,156.506)

dados <- data.frame(v1,v2)

library(ggplot2)
ggplot(dados, aes(x = reorder(v1, -v2), y = v2)) +
  geom_bar(stat="identity") +
  labs(x = "ID dos Tags", y = "Home range linear (m)")
```

Saída:

[![histogram][1]][1]


----------
Edit

    library(ggplot2)
    ggplot(dados, aes(x = reorder(v1, v2), y = v2)) +
      geom_bar(stat="identity") +
      labs(x = "ID dos Tags", y = "Home range linear (m)")

Saída: 

[![hist - crescente][2]][2]


  [1]: https://i.sstatic.net/RpLbK.png
  [2]: https://i.sstatic.net/J0vwx.png