Ecological restoration and ecological engineering: Complementary or indivisible?
/in Published Articles, UncategorizedEcosystem response to interventions: Lessons from restored and created wetland ecosystems.
/in Published Articles, UncategorizedNitrate and salt water contamination associated with the transition of an agrarian basin into an irrigated area
/in Published Articles, UncategorizedStructural and functional loss in restored wetland ecosystems
/in Published Articles, UncategorizedThis has been the most impactful and cited paper I have published so far. It was the first global evaluation of the performance of restoration through time. I found that restored wetlands did not match reference undisturbed wetlands for up to 100 years in terms of the abundance and diversity of plant and animal communities and of the cycling of carbon, nitrogen and phosphorus. In particular, I found that animal abundance and diversity could recover within the first decade, while plant abundance and diversity did not fully recover after 100 years. This study did not look into species composition, we are doing that in our current studies. It also found that tropical wetlands and large wetlands (>100 ha) recovered faster than temperate and small wetlands, respectively. This paper has had major discussion in the press and has affected how wetland restoration is planned in terms of temporal and spatial scales. This was my first meta-analysis in a list that is still growing and helped me frame my entire empirical research. Thanks to the patterns found here I could infer what I should look into to understand the mechanisms of recovery. In particular, it helped me realize than looking at diversity or nitrogen cycling would help little to understand ecosystem change, and that we need to focus on more complex ecosystem attributes. It also helped me to understand that the timescale used in these meta-analysis was the right one, and even longer, to understand ecosystem recovery.
Effects of land use type on the nocturnal birds of a Mediterranean agricultural landscape
/in Published Articles, UncategorizedInfluences of constructed wetlands on water quality in a semi-arid catchment degraded by intensive agricultural use
/in Published Articles, UncategorizedEffect of Wetlands on water quality of an agricultural catchment in a semi-arid area under land use transformation
/in Published Articles, UncategorizedContact
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



