Abstract

Simultaneous environmental changes challenge biodiversity persistence and human wellbeing. The science and practice of restoration ecology, in collaboration with other disciplines, can contribute to overcoming these challenges. This endeavor requires a solid conceptual foundation based in empirical research which confronts, tests and influences theoretical developments. We review conceptual developments in restoration ecology over the last 30 years. We frame our review 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. Restoration ecology now encompasses facilitative interactions and network dynamics, trophic cascades, and above‐ and belowground linkages. It operates in a non‐equilibrium, alternative states framework, at the landscape scale, and in response to changing environmental, economic and social conditions. Progress has been marked by conceptual advances in the fields of trait‐environment relationships, community assembly, and understanding the links between biodiversity and ecosystem functioning. Conceptual and practical advances have been enhanced by applying evolving technologies, including treatments to increase seed germination and overcome recruitment bottlenecks, high throughput DNA sequencing to elucidate soil community structure and function, and advances in satellite technology and GPS tracking to monitor habitat use. The synthesis of these technologies with systematic reviews of context dependencies in restoration success, model based analyses and consideration of complex socio‐ecological systems will allow generalizations to inform evidence based interventions. Ongoing challenges include setting realistic, socially acceptable goals for restoration under changing environmental conditions, and prioritizing actions in an increasingly space‐competitive world. Ethical questions also surround the use of genetically modified material, translocations, taxon substitutions, and de‐extinction, in restoration ecology. Addressing these issues, as the Ecological Society of America looks to its next century, will require current and future generations of researchers and practitioners, including economists, engineers, philosophers, landscape architects, social scientists and restoration ecologists, to work together with communities and governments to rise to the environmental challenges of the coming decades.

Highlights

  • We are in an unprecedented era of simultaneous global environmental changes, many unperceived at the founding of the Ecological Society of America (ESA) one hundred years ago (Steffen et al 2011, Barnosky et al 2012, Steffen et al 2015)

  • One long-term, potentially cost-effective, and optimistic solution is the science of restoration ecology and its applied practice of ecological restoration (Dobson et al 1997, Nelleman and Corcoran 2010, Suding et al 2015)

  • Ecological restoration has the potential to improve air quality, reverse forest clearance and desertification, slow biodiversity loss, enhance urban environments and perhaps improve human livelihoods and humanity’s relationships within nature. These examples highlight the opportunity for restoration ecology to develop the tools that will allow people to rise to the environmental challenges of the coming decades, finding solutions that meet both social and environmental goals, when coupled with other disciplines

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Summary

ESA CENTENNIAL PAPER

MICHAEL P. PERRING,1,2, RACHEL J. STANDISH,1,3 JODI N. PRICE,1 MICHAEL D. CRAIG,1,3 TODD E. ERICKSON,1,4 KATINKA X. RUTHROF,3 ANDREW S. WHITELEY,5 LEONIE E. VALENTINE,1 AND RICHARD J. HOBBS1 Citation: Perring, M. P., R. J. Standish, J. N. Price, M. D. Craig, T. E. Erickson, K. X. Ruthrof, A. S. Whiteley, L. E. Valentine, and R. J. Hobbs. 2015. Advances in restoration ecology: rising to the challenges of the coming decades. Ecosphere 6(8):131. http://dx.doi.org/10.1890/ES15-00121.1

INTRODUCTION
RESTORATION MOTIVATIONS AND GOALS
Conceptual advances
Seed addition
Niche concept
Seed collection based on genetic Role of genetic diversity in
Interventions to restore
Notable as a concept that
RESTORING SPECIES COMPOSITION REQUIRES MORE THAN JUST PLANTS
MOVING FROM COMPOSITIONAL TO FUNCTIONAL GOALS IN A CHANGING ENVIRONMENT
MAGNITUDE OF ENVIRONMENTAL CHANGES REQUIRES RESTORATION AT SCALE
CHALLENGES AND OPPORTUNITIES FOR RESTORATION ECOLOGY
LITERATURE CITED
Full Text
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