Land-Use Chan ges: 2000
Publications
Author:
Ehrenfeld, J.G.
Title: Defining the limits of restoration: The need
for realistic goals.
Publication: Restoration Ecology 8(1): 2-9,
2000.
© Blackwell Science
Notes: The search
for a universal statement of goals for ecological restoration
continues to generate discussion and controversy. I discuss the
diverse roots of restoration ecology, and show how the complex
lineages within the field have led to diverse, and divergent, sets
of goals. I then review the three major themes that currently are
used to develop statements of goals: restoration of species,
restoration of whole ecosystems or landscapes, and the restoration
of ecosystem services, and point out both the advantages and the
limitations and problems associated with each category. Finally, I
suggest that restoration ecology would be better served by
recognizing that the diversity of conditions requiring restoration
demands much flexibility in goal setting, and that restorationists
should seek to develop guidelines for defining the sets of
conditions under which different kinds of goals are appropriate. I
further suggest that goals would be more easily and more
appropriately set if restorationists would set forth at the outset
the true scope and limitations of what is possible in a given
project.
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