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首页> 外文期刊>International journal of plant sciences >TAKING THE LONG VIEW: INTEGRATING RECORDED, ARCHEOLOGICAL, PALEOECOLOGICAL, AND EVOLUTIONARY DATA INTO ECOLOGICAL RESTORATION
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TAKING THE LONG VIEW: INTEGRATING RECORDED, ARCHEOLOGICAL, PALEOECOLOGICAL, AND EVOLUTIONARY DATA INTO ECOLOGICAL RESTORATION

机译:放眼长远:将记录的,考古的,古生态的和进化的数据整合到生态恢复中

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摘要

Historical information spanning different temporal scales (from tens to millions of years) can influence restoration practice by providing ecological context for better understanding of contemporary ecosystems. Ecological history provides clues about the assembly, structure, and dynamic nature of ecosystems, and this information can improve forecasting of how restored systems will respond to changes in climate, disturbance regimes, and other factors. History recorded by humans can be used to generate baselines for assessing changes in ecosystems, communities, and populations over time. Paleoecology pushes these baselines back hundreds, thousands, or even millions of years, offering insights into how past species assemblages have responded to changing disturbance regimes and climate. Furthermore, archeology can be used to reconstruct interactions between humans and their environment for which no documentary records exist. Going back further, phylogenies reveal patterns that emerged from coupled evolutionary-ecological processes over very long timescales. Increasingly, this information can be used to predict the stability, resilience, and functioning of assemblages into the future. We review examples in which recorded, archeological, paleoecological, and evolutionary information has been or could be used to inform goal setting, management, and monitoring for restoration. While we argue that long-view historical ecology has much to offer restoration, there are few examples of restoration projects explicitly incorporating such information or of research that has evaluated the utility of such perspectives in applied management contexts. For these ideas to move from theory into practice, tests performed through research-management partnerships are needed to determine to what degree taking the long view can support achievement of restoration objectives.
机译:跨越不同时间尺度(数十亿到数百万年)的历史信息可以通过提供生态环境以更好地理解当代生态系统来影响恢复实践。生态历史提供了有关生态系统的组装,结构和动态性质的线索,并且此信息可以改进对恢复的系统将如何响应气候,干扰机制和其他因素的预测。人类记录的历史可用于生成基线,以评估生态系统,社区和人口随时间的变化。古生态学将这些基线推后了数百,数千甚至数百万年,从而提供了对过去物种集合如何响应不断变化的干扰制度和气候的见解。此外,考古学可用于重建人类与没有文献记录的环境之间的互动。再往前看,系统发育揭示了在很长的时间内从耦合的进化生态过程中出现的模式。越来越多地,此信息可用于预测组件的稳定性,弹性和将来的功能。我们回顾了已记录的,考古的,古生态的和演化的信息已被或可用于指导目标设定,管理和恢复监测的示例。虽然我们认为,长远的历史生态学可以为恢复提供很多帮助,但是很少有明确包含此类信息的恢复项目或评估了这些观点在应用管理环境中的效用的研究的例子。为了使这些想法从理论上付诸实践,需要通过研究与管理合作伙伴关系进行测试,以确定长远的眼光能在多大程度上支持恢复目标的实现。

著录项

  • 来源
    《International journal of plant sciences 》 |2016年第1期| 90-102| 共13页
  • 作者单位

    Plant Science and Conservation, Chicago Botanic Garden, Glencoe, Illinois, USA,Plant Biology and Conservation, Northwestern University, Evanston, Illinois, USA;

    Herbarium, Morton Arboretum, Lisle, Illinois, USA;

    Ecology, Evolution, and Behavior, Plant Biological Sciences, University of Minnesota, Saint Paul, Minnesota, USA;

    Department of Biology, McGill University, Montreal, Quebec, Canada, Departement des Sciences Biologiques, Universite du Quebec a Montreal, Montreal, Quebec, Canada;

    Department of Botany, University of Wisconsin, Madison, Wisconsin, USA;

    Biology Department, Luther College, Decorah, Iowa, USA;

    Department of Environmental Science, University of San Francisco, California, USA;

    Limnological Research Center, Department of Earth Sciences, University of Minnesota, Twin Cities, Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA;

    Plant Science and Conservation, Chicago Botanic Garden, Glencoe, Illinois, USA;

  • 收录信息
  • 原文格式 PDF
  • 正文语种 eng
  • 中图分类
  • 关键词

    climate change; ecosystem function; phylogeny; resilience;

    机译:气候变化;生态系统功能系统发育弹性;

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