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Journal ArticleDOI

Evaluating Ecological Restoration Success: A Review of the Literature

Liana Wortley, +2 more
- 01 Sep 2013 - 
- Vol. 21, Iss: 5, pp 537-543
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TLDR
This article conducted a literature review to determine trends in evaluations of restoration projects and identify key knowledge gaps that need to be addressed, and quantified the extent that key attributes of success, including ecological (vegetation structure, species diversity and abundance, and ecosystem functioning) and socioeconomic, were addressed by these papers along with trends in publication and restoration characteristics.
Abstract
Assessing the success of ecological restoration projects is critical to justify the use of restoration in natural resource management and to improve best practice. Although there are extensive discussions surrounding the characteristics that define and measure successful restoration, monitoring or evaluation of projects in practice is widely thought to have lagged behind. We conducted a literature review to determine trends in evaluations of restoration projects and identify key knowledge gaps that need to be addressed. We searched the Web of Knowledge plus two additional restoration journals not found in the database for empirical papers that assessed restoration projects post-implementation. We quantified the extent that key attributes of success, including ecological (vegetation structure, species diversity and abundance, and ecosystem functioning) and socioeconomic, were addressed by these papers along with trends in publication and restoration characteristics. Encouragingly, we found the number of empirical evaluations has grown substantially in recent years. The increased age of restoration projects and number of papers that assessed ecological functions since previous reviews of the literature is also a positive development. Research is still heavily skewed toward United States and Australia, however, and identifying an appropriate reference site needs further investigation. Of particular concern is the dearth of papers identified in the literature search that included any measure of socioeconomic attributes. Focusing future empirical research on quantifying ecosystem services and other socioeconomic outcomes is essential for understanding the full benefits and costs of ecological restoration and to support its use in natural resource management.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Advances in restoration ecology: rising to the challenges of the coming decades

TL;DR: This review of conceptual developments in restoration ecology over the last 30 years is reviewed in the context of changing restoration goals which reflect increased societal awareness of the scale of environmental degradation and the recognition that inter-disciplinary approaches are needed to tackle environmental problems.
Journal ArticleDOI

Contemporary forest restoration: A review emphasizing function

TL;DR: The science underpinning contemporary approaches to forest restoration practice is synthesized and some major approaches for altering structure in degraded forest stands are presented, and approaches for restoration of two key ecosystem processes, fire and flooding are described.
Journal ArticleDOI

Ecological Restoration of Streams and Rivers: Shifting Strategies and Shifting Goals

TL;DR: In the field of river restoration, a plethora of new studies worldwide provide data on why and how rivers are being restored as well as the project outcomes as mentioned in this paper, and though there is well-accepted theory to support this, research on methods to implement and assess functional restoration projects is in its infancy.

Habitat Restoration - Do We Know What We're Doing? (Review)

TL;DR: There is a need to move to a clearer and more systematic approach to habitat restoration that considers appropriate goals linked to target species or suites of species, as well as the ecological, financial, and social constraints on what is possible.
References
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An estimation of the social benefits of preserving biodiversity

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors evaluate the benefits of biodiversity restoration in the southwest of France, along the Garonne river, using face-to-face interviews with 402 people living in the surrounding region (the "departements" Tarn-et-Garonne and Haute Garonne).
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