Ecological restoration and ecological engineering: Complementary or indivisible?
/in Published Articles, UncategorizedPertes écologiques potentielles associées aux actions compensatoires de la restauration écologique
/in BooksEcosystem response to interventions: Lessons from restored and created wetland ecosystems.
/in Published Articles, UncategorizedThe road to confusion is paved with novel ecosystem labels: a reply to Hobbs et al
/in Published ArticlesA ’critique’ to the novel ecosystems concept
/in Published ArticlesThis paper emerged as a result of discussion that the group of authors was having about the concerns of new paradigms proposed in the field of restoration ecology. The proponents of novel ecosystems were aiming to relax the efforts on controlling invasive species and accept many of the ecosystems being heavily transformed by humans as the new normal. We contended that the concept itself was empty given the fact that most of ecosystem on earth have some degree of human influence, so the term ecosystem itself would already capture the idea of novel. Out second and most fearful concerns was that it would be used by managers to cut effort in either controlling invasions or preventing them. We have been found this this has been occasionally the case in management contexts. I am not sure the overall impact of this paper, although it has been heavily cited, on the spread of the novel ecosystem concept, but the reality is that in most of the ecological and restoration for a, the concept is rarely used any more.
Contact
David Moreno-Mateos
dmoreno@gsd.harvard.edu (USA)
david.moreno@bc3research.org (Spain)
Affiliates
Department of Landscape Architecture
Graduate School of Design, Harvard University
Department of Organismic & Evolutionary Biology
Faculty of Arts and Science, Harvard University
Basque Center for Climate Change
Ikerbasque Foundation for Science