2020
DOI: 10.3389/fevo.2020.00050
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Improving Restoration Programs Through Greater Connection With Ecological Theory and Better Monitoring

Abstract: Millions of hectares of land worldwide is in urgent need of restoration. However, many past landscape and ecosystem restoration efforts are likely to have been less than effective. Some of the reasons for these problems include a lack of monitoring, or being subjected to poor quality monitoring practices, or that the restoration efforts are too often not linked with ecological concepts and/or theory. These deficiencies make it difficult to: (1) identify general principles for broader application beyond site-sp… Show more

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Cited by 61 publications
(58 citation statements)
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“…Some restoration sites are multiple decades old, and within a given region or nation, many are similar enough to be compared via natural experiments [95,96]. Already, leading scientists are linking monitoring data with ecological theory to provide increasingly robust guidance for future restoration efforts [97]. Future work should extend such initiatives, and similarly ask whether social benefits are partly predictable from patterns of stakeholder interaction in a given restoration program.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Some restoration sites are multiple decades old, and within a given region or nation, many are similar enough to be compared via natural experiments [95,96]. Already, leading scientists are linking monitoring data with ecological theory to provide increasingly robust guidance for future restoration efforts [97]. Future work should extend such initiatives, and similarly ask whether social benefits are partly predictable from patterns of stakeholder interaction in a given restoration program.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, analysis of monitoring data using MSOM to gauge occupancy trends for declining amphibian species needs to be done concurrently with the development of management plans that identify when early interventions may be warranted to prevent substantial decreases in occupancy (Grant et al 2013). Importantly, monitoring programs for restoration projects should be closely connected to testing ecological concepts and theory, so that the underlying ecological mechanisms giving rise to observed patterns can be identified (Lindenmayer 2020). Here, we present empirical evidence that metacommunity theory provides an appropriate framework for developing monitoring programs for wetland‐dependent taxa such as amphibians.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Genetic monitoring evaluates the success in restoring genetically viable populations and whether the positive effects of the restoration are maintained over time (i.e., across successive generations). Thus, well-designed monitoring programs are required, including also evaluation of changes in environmental conditions of the restored site and referring to comparable time frames for the same species [130]. Monitoring genetic changes in restored populations can be done retrospectively by using pre-disturbance genetic population datasets or for evaluating ongoing changes in their status and persistence (i.e., mid-and long-term restoration outcomes).…”
Section: Genetic Assessment Of Transplantation Successmentioning
confidence: 99%