Abstract

Abstract Introduction The Regent Honeyeater Project commenced ecological restoration in the Lurg district in 1994, with an aim to restore habitats for the critically endangered Regent Honeyeater Anthochaera phrygia and a range of other threatened and declining species. Within this context, our study aimed to explore whether plant reproduction can be an effective measure of ecological restoration success. Methods Evaluation involved comparing attributes at unrestored, restored and remnant sites to establish whether sites displayed evidence of a clear restoration trajectory. Five age classes (unrestored, 4–6 years old, 8–10 years old, 12–14 years old and remnant areas) and two landforms (upper hills and lower hills) were considered. The diversity of woody plant species—which have easily recognisable reproductive material and which all recruit seedlings—provides easily measured parameters that have the potential to allow the determination of early establishment success and long-term ecological development of restored ecosystems. Results Restoration plantings developed in a hybrid state towards a benchmark in the lower hills; seedling species composition differed significantly among age classes, increasing in similarity with time since restoration, with some divergence from the target pathway. Composition of functional groups with reproductive outputs was also significantly different among age classes; however, a restoration trajectory was only evident in the upper hills where sites converged towards the target goal. Conclusions Divergence or deviation from the restoration trajectory was not deemed to be a restoration failure, as the variety of functional groups with fruits and diversity of seedlings recruiting indicated a potential increase in resilience in the future due to greater variability across the landscape. Plant recruitment was effective in detecting development trends towards a restoration target in this study and therefore may be a useful measure that contributes to determining ecological restoration success.

Highlights

  • The Regent Honeyeater Project commenced ecological restoration in the Lurg district in 1994, with an aim to restore habitats for the critically endangered Regent Honeyeater Anthochaera phrygia and a range of other threatened and declining species

  • The total number of species recruiting differed by age class, ranging from 0 to 18 in the lower hills, and 0 to 20 in the upper hills

  • Most sites are in a hybrid state, developing towards the restoration target and becoming more similar to the remnant site and more distant from unrestored sites with age

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Summary

Introduction

The Regent Honeyeater Project commenced ecological restoration in the Lurg district in 1994, with an aim to restore habitats for the critically endangered Regent Honeyeater Anthochaera phrygia and a range of other threatened and declining species. From a decidedly more pragmatic perspective, these factors underpin the challenges faced by practitioners, academics and regulators attempting to determine how similar field sampling sites should be prior to being deemed veritably or otherwise restored and, whether these sites are natural or novel It appears that comparing sites with similar management histories across different points in time may more effectively establish whether sites are developing towards the restoration target or whether intervention is required to overcome specific ecological thresholds (Suding 2011). The diversity of woody plant species—which have recognisable reproductive material and which all recruit seedlings—provides measured parameters that have the potential to allow the determination of early establishment success and long-term ecological development of restored ecosystems

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