Abstract

Rewilding is emerging as a promising restoration strategy to enhance the conservation status of biodiversity and promote self-regulating ecosystems while re-engaging people with nature. Overcoming the challenges in monitoring and reporting rewilding projects would improve its practical implementation and maximize its conservation and restoration outcomes. Here, we present a novel approach for measuring and monitoring progress in rewilding that focuses on the ecological attributes of rewilding. We devised a bi-dimensional framework for assessing the recovery of processes and their natural dynamics through (i) decreasing human forcing on ecological processes and (ii) increasing ecological integrity of ecosystems. The rewilding assessment framework incorporates the reduction of material inputs and outputs associated with human management, as well as the restoration of natural stochasticity and disturbance regimes, landscape connectivity and trophic complexity. Furthermore, we provide a list of potential activities for increasing the ecological integrity after reviewing the evidence for the effectiveness of common restoration actions. For illustration purposes, we apply the framework to three flagship restoration projects in the Netherlands, Switzerland and Argentina. This approach has the potential to broaden the scope of rewilding projects, facilitate sound decision-making and connect the science and practice of rewilding.This article is part of the theme issue ‘Trophic rewilding: consequences for ecosystems under global change’.

Highlights

  • Increasing global consumption of natural resources, population growth and rapid environmental changes have led to widespread loss and degradation of ecosystems [1,2,3], with potentially serious consequences for biodiversity and human well-being

  • We devised a bi-dimensional framework for assessing the recovery of processes and their natural dynamics through (i) decreasing human forcing on ecological processes and (ii) increasing ecological integrity of ecosystems

  • We provide a list of potential activities for increasing the ecological integrity after reviewing the evidence for the effectiveness of common restoration actions

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Summary

Introduction

Increasing global consumption of natural resources, population growth and rapid environmental changes have led to widespread loss and degradation of ecosystems [1,2,3], with potentially serious consequences for biodiversity and human well-being. These global changes involve different degrees of simplification and homogenization of natural systems, from defaunation that cascades. Rewilding is emerging as a promising restoration strategy in a human-dominated world to promote self-sustaining ecosystems and enhance the conservation status of biodiversity [6,7,8,9]. Rewilding is viewed as a possible pathway societies can take towards sustainability [11], because it has the potential to generate co-benefits that extend beyond natural heritage conservation (e.g. [12 – 14])

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