Abstract

Abstract We are living a growing worldwide process of degrading the bases of sustaining life. In Brazil, this threat is intensified by the growing fragility of environmental protection structures. Ecological restoration is an alternative to face the degradation of aquatic environments. It has been employed on a larger scale in the developed regions of the planet, but with little convincing results. In Brazil, the experiences are few and specific, limited mainly by complexity and costs. It is necessary to think in a more agile way and act within the possibilities. The restoration with its classic strategies should give way to an “urgent restoration”. This approach considers that we have the basic ecological information and professionals able to act in the resumption of control of the ecological processes that have been altered. Restoration in the condition of urgency implies beginning to think of protection, as a first step, turning attention to the management of the watershed. The way to regain control of the process where it was lost is the integrated management that involves the rational use and protection of the ecosystem. Brazil’s commitment to the Paris climate agreement to restore 12 million hectares of forests and the restoration liabilities on private properties because of the recent Native Vegetation Protection Law are excellent opportunities to act in the integrated management of the river basin and to promote the protection of freshwaters by the restoration of native forests. The restoration of tropical freshwaters and especially the Brazilian ones is something urgent. However, possible solutions must be thought of and can only be constructed when one get involved most people related to the issue. The idea to be nurtured is that restoration involves thinking about the watershed because the threats are beyond the aquatic environment itself, the restoration then also needs to go beyond the aquatic environment itself.

Highlights

  • When I read the convincing message of the United Nations (UN) warning that damage to the planet is so great that people’s health will be increasingly threatened unless urgent action is taken, it seemed that I was re-entering the 1980s

  • Brazil’s commitment to the Paris climate agreement to restore 12 million hectares of forests and the restoration liabilities on private properties because of the recent Native Vegetation Protection Law are excellent opportunities to act in the integrated management of the river basin and to promote the protection of freshwaters by the restoration of native forests

  • The Bonn Challenge is such a global effort to restore 150 million hectares of the world’s deforested and degraded land by 2020 and 350 million hectares by 2030. This goal is a practical means of realizing many international commitments, including the Aichi Target 15, the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) Reducing Emissions from Deforestation and Forest Degradation in Developing Countries (REDD+) goal, and the Rio+20 land degradation neutrality goal

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Summary

Introduction

When I read the convincing message of the United Nations (UN) warning that damage to the planet is so great that people’s health will be increasingly threatened unless urgent action is taken, it seemed that I was re-entering the 1980s. This was a time when Brown (1985) noted that resource depletion and human alterations of natural systems were adversely affecting the economy, and he considered some of the facets of this relationship, such as population-induced climate change. Those years were democratically fragile with scarce protection of natural resources. Environmental degradation and its consequences to life are occurring all over the world, affecting everyone, but they affect those who are poor much more

Ecological Restoration as an Alternative
Technical Feasibility of Ecological Restoration
Ecological Restoration of Tropical
Ecological Restoration Complexity and
Final Remark
Full Text
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