Built on a strong foundation in restoration ecology, this unique handbook provides practitioners, academics, and managers with vital tools needed to plan for ecosystem conservation, to restore degraded ecosystems, to make cost-effective restoration decisions, and to understand important legal issues. Rehabilitation of Damaged Ecosystems, Second Edition boasts three completely new chapters and five major chapter revisions. Coastal wetlands restoration, watershed rehabilitation and management, mined land reclamation, revegetation of disturbed ecosystems, and river and stream restoration are only a few of the critical topics explored in this timely reference handbook. This Second Edition provides valuable, reliable data as well as practical methods and techniques for the ongoing fight to protect natural resources and restore damaged ecosystems.
The species that once inhabited the ecosystem may no longer be available or, if available from other ecosystems, may not be physiologically identical with the race, subspecies, etc. formerly inhabiting the damaged ecosystem The NRC ...
Built on a strong foundation in restoration ecology, this unique handbook provides practitioners, academics, and managers with vital tools needed to plan for ecosystem conservation, to restore degraded ecosystems, to make cost-effective ...
"Built on a strong foundation in restoration ecology, this unique handbook provides practitioners, academics, and managers with vital tools needed to plan for ecosystem conservation, to restore degraded ecosystems, to make cost-effective ...
In this context, this book is the first of its kind in reviewing the different approaches undertaken to restore various damaged ecosystems.
Rehabilitating Damaged Ecosystems
Provides a comprehensive strategy for the ecological restoration of any wildland ecosystem.
This volume contains the papers presented at a conference on "The rehabilitation of severely damaged land and freshwater eco systems in temperate zones", held at Reykjavik, Iceland, from 4th to 11th July, 1976.
Global Ecology and Biogeography 12: 361–71. https://doi.org/10.1046/j.1466822X.2003.00042.x Pearson, R.G., W. Thuiller, M.B. Araújo, et al. 2006. Model-based uncertainty in species range prediction. Journal of Biogeography 33: 1704–11.
In Earth Repair: A Transatlantic History of Environmental Restoration, Marcus Hall explores the answer to this question while offering an alternative to the usual narrative of humans disrupting and spoiling the earth.
With little data to support them , and a clear basis in Clementsian thinking ( Christensen & Peet , 1981 ; Hagen , 1992 ) , Odum's predictions none the less were popular , perhaps because we continually seek generalizations ...