1 ecological restoration regaining sustainable landscapes

Post on 20-Dec-2015

229 Views

Category:

Documents

0 Downloads

Preview:

Click to see full reader

TRANSCRIPT

1

Ecological Restoration

Regaining Sustainable Landscapes

2

• What is restoration?

• What is conservation?

3

• Conservation preserves valuable ecosystem types.

• It may involve restoring the habitat of threatened and endangered animal species.

4

• Restoration at its most basic is putting plants in the ground, with the intention of creating a desirable vegetation structure.

– In the mitigation process, various kinds of ecosystem functions are measured to determine the success of the restoration.

5

• In a societal context, it may be argued that it is our responsibility to safeguard the integrity of historical ecosystems,

• or protect other parts of the living system of which we are one part.

6

• Common elements of restoration

– 1. Remove invasives– 2. Modify site– 3. Plant natives– 4. Observe and take care of site

7

• A couple of ecological principles

8

Likelihood a sitewill restore itself.

Condition of the neighborhood

Natural Modified

9

• Succession is driven by the plant community.

• External forces modify succession– By changing:

• Site availability• Species availability• Species performance

10

• In restoration, we try to keep a system on a desired successional trajectory by adjusting the three factors.

– Site availability• By designed disturbance

– Species availability• By planting

– Species performance• By species selection and designed disturbance

11

• Examples of Restoration– Kelp– Eelgrass– Wetland– Prairie– Forest

12

Kelp forest

13

14

15

Laura Carney Nereocystis

16

Elliot Bay Marina

17

18

19

20

21

Eelgrass beds

22

23

24

25

26

(Pickerell et al., 2005)(Pickerell et al., 2005)

27

Wetlands

28

29

30

31

32

33

34

Gog-le-hi-te

35

Prairie

36

37

38

39

40

41

42

43

44

45

46

Forest

47

Snag

48

Wildlife tree

49

Deadfall

50

Unthinned ONR

51Thinned ONR

52

Regrowth in thinned forest ONR

53Gaps ONR

54Snags and litter ONR

55

Gap-driven multi-age forest

56

Pit and mound

top related