Restoration ecology

What is restoration ecology?

Fairly new field of science

Society for Ecological Restoration formed in 1987

Ecological restoration

Restoration: to bring back into a former or original state.

Rehabilitation: any repair of elements of structure or function

Reclamation: rehabilitation of severely degraded sites

Re-creation: reconstruction of a system that is so severely disturbed that nothing is left to restore

Ecological recovery: leaving a system alone, to recover on its own

Why has the use of restoration ecology grown over time?

Legislation requires restoration

Clean Water Act and wetland mitigation

Surface Mine Reclamation Act

Endangered Species Act

Growing interest in native landscaping

Sheer level of ecological destruction has made restoration necessary in many places

Endangered Species Act (ESA), 1973

Section 9 prohibits “take”of listed organisms, which includes harassing, harming, pursuing, hunting, shooting, wounding, killing, trapping, capturing, and collecting

Exception to “take” prohibition

Section 10(a): Private citizens can receive an“incidental take” permit if they develop a plan that compensates (“mitigates”) for the taking of individuals by promoting survival of the population or species in some other way

Restorationists...

…recognize that an ecological system has been altered by humans in some way and seek to reverse this influence

...make goal of restoration clear and measurable

…acknowledge that restoration is both an active and passive process.

…are committed to re-creation of entire system in all its aspects

Restoration ecology

Application of principles of evolution and ecology to returning habitat or ecosystems to their former condition

What are we trying to restore?

Ecological structure

Ecological function

Restoration is “returning to a close approximation of a system’s condition prior to disturbance, with both structure and function of the system recreated.” (National Research Council, 1992)

Approaches to restoration

Steps in restoration

Set a realistic, measurable goal

Determine a strategy and methods

Remove source of degradation

Restore the physical environment

Restore the biota

Monitor the restoration, assess success and adapt if necessary

Be patient

The iterative process

Setting goals

Clear and achievable goals are essential

Goals or targets may be set by reference areas, historical data, or compilation from many fragments of an idealized scenario:

Should be forward-looking:

 Desired characteristics of system of future, not what existed in the past (“sensible goals”)

Should consider a range of options:

 - implies societal evaluation of alternatives

Some steps in terrestrial restoration

Stabilize/reconstruct surfaces

Improve aesthetics

Reduce erosion

Steps in terrestrial restoration

Control pollution

Phytoremediation = using plants to remove toxins from soil

Steps in terrestrial restoration

Restore species

Reintroduction, succession, disturbance, invasive control, genetics, etc.

Restore function

Some steps in aquatic restoration

Restore water flow regimes

Reverse channelization

Reduce drainage

Levee breach at ConsumnesRiver

Steps in aquatic restoration

Control pollution

Buffer plantings control thermal pollution, nutrient enrichment and sedimentation

Restore species and function

Size of restoration

Project should be large enough to minimize deleterious effects of boundary conditions and internal dynamics

Project should be “manageable” size

Project should be affordable

Restoring vernal pools in CA

Shallow depression

Poorly drained due to impermeable soil layer

Water source is precipitation

Wet and dry phases

Historical information

“The Great Central Plain of California, during the months of March, April, and May, was one smooth continuous bed of honey-bloom, so marvelously rich that, in walking from one end of it to the other, a distance of more than 400 miles, your foot would press about a hundred flowers at every step… The radiant, honeyful corollas, touching and overlapping, and rising above one another, glowed in the living light like a sunset sky—one sheet of purple and gold…”

John Muir, The Mountains of California (1894)

Vernal pool construction and seeding: December 1999

Winter rains fill pools

Hydrology